Serving the Ramtha School of Enlightenment
International Community of Students and Friends.
We are the Official Lodging & Airport Service Page for RSE!
Lofty Thought of the Day

- Category: Science & Technology
(Credit: Image courtesy of Max-Planck-Gesellschaft) ScienceNews.com - Model of a "Graphene" membrane - only one atom thick. New research findings at MIT could lead to microchips that operate at much higher speeds than is possible with today's standard silicon chips, leading to cell phones and other communications systems that can transmit data much faster.
The key to the super-fast chips is the use of a material called graphene, a form of pure carbon that was first identified in 2004. Researchers at other institutions have already used the one-atom-thick layer of carbon atoms to make prototype transistors and other simple devices, but the latest MIT results could open up a range of new applications.
(Credit: Shivank Garg) A conceptual illustration of an array of single atom-thick graphene transistors.
The MIT researchers built an experimental graphene chip known as a frequency multiplier, meaning it is capable of taking an incoming electrical signal of a certain frequency — for example, the clock speed that determines how fast a computer chip can carry out its computations — and producing an output signal that is a multiple of that frequency.
In this case, the MIT graphene chip can double the frequency of an electromagnetic signal.
(Credit: Image courtesy of University of Manchester) Graphane crystal. This novel two-dimensional material is obtained from graphene (a monolayer of carbon atoms) by attaching hydrogen atoms (red) to each carbon atoms (blue) in the crystal.
Frequency multipliers are widely used in radio communications and other applications. But existing systems require multiple components, produce "noisy" signals that require filtering and consume large power, whereas the new graphene system has just a single transistor and produces, in a highly efficient manner, a clean output that needs no filtering...MORE...

