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Subject: [doc-jp 36995] If you want to make a carrier in a successful company - we are proud to invite you in our business.
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A decade ago, Saraswat's research group was the first to begin developing a new kind of chip architecture: the 3-dimensional integrated circuit (3-D IC). Compared to the 2-D planar chips in computers today, 3-D chips can provide the same processing power with a reduced chip surface area. Also, instead of having long, twisting highways of wires, the stacked chips in 3-D ICs allow for short wires much like elevator shafts, as Professor Chidsey puts it-mitigating the problem of delay in the wires. Moreover, 3-D IC architecture allows the integration of all kinds of chips, since chips that require different technologies or materials can be stacked together.

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It's easy to define and describe a nanometer: a nanometer is a billionth of a meter. That's a millionth of a pinhead, a thousandth of a red blood cell diameter, or the length of a line of ten hydrogen atoms rubbing shoulders. If only knowing what nanotechnology really means were as simple: "Have you heard the story of the elephant and the blind man?" Professor Krishna Saraswat chuckles. "Nanotechnology has different meanings to different people, but the conventional definition is the science of material patterned at the 1-100 nm length scale," notes Professor Michael McGehee. Professor Chris Chidsey muses, "Nanotechnology is a concept that is largely designed to capture people's imagination rather than describe a particular type of research. It's largely an attempt to portray a unified vision for a pretty wide-ranging group of activities that might not otherwise get recognized."
A decade ago, Saraswat's research group was the first to begin developing a new kind of chip architecture: the 3-dimensional integrated circuit (3-D IC). Compared to the 2-D planar chips in computers today, 3-D chips can provide the same processing power with a reduced chip surface area. Also, instead of having long, twisting highways of wires, the stacked chips in 3-D ICs allow for short wires much like elevator shafts, as Professor Chidsey puts it-mitigating the problem of delay in the wires. Moreover, 3-D IC architecture allows the integration of all kinds of chips, since chips that require different technologies or materials can be stacked together.
In other applications of carbon nanotubes, Dai has Professor Michael McGehee is developing cheap and efficient nanostructured solar cells.


