close
    • chevron_right

      New method gets better performance out of atomically thin transistors

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 21 March, 2023 - 15:55 · 1 minute

    Image of a pile of silvery-grey rocks

    Enlarge / The much-larger-than-2D form of molybdenum disulfide. (credit: RHJ / Getty Images )

    Atomically thin materials like graphene are single molecules in which all the chemical bonds are oriented so that the resulting molecule forms a sheet. These often have distinctive electronic properties that can potentially enable the production of electronics with incredibly small features only a couple of atoms thick. And there have been a number of examples of functional hardware being built from these two-dimensional materials.

    But almost all the examples so far have used bespoke construction, sometimes involving researchers manipulating individual flakes of material by hand. So we're not at the point where we can mass-manufacture complicated electronics out of these materials. But a paper released today describes a method of doing wafer-scale production of transistors based on two-dimensional materials. And the resulting transistors perform more consistently than those made with more traditional manufacturing approaches.

    Better manufacturing

    Most of the efforts made toward easing the production of electronics based on atomically thin materials have involved integrating these materials into traditional semiconductor manufacturing techniques. That makes sense because these techniques allow us to perform incredibly fine-scale manipulations of materials at high volumes. Typically, this has meant that much of the metal wiring needed for the electronics is put in place by traditional manufacturing. The 2D material is then layered on top of the metal, and additional processing is done to form functional transistors.

    Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • chevron_right

      MSI buttons up, launches Summit business laptops with Tiger Lake

      Samuel Axon · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 4 September, 2020 - 21:10

    This week, PC-maker MSI held a "virtual summit" where it announced a plethora of new machines, largely driven by the launch of Intel's 11th-generation CPUs. Much of what was discussed amounts to the usual suspects—various forms and configurations of gaming laptops to compete with Razer and its ilk. But the Taiwanese tech company also introduce the Summit series: slim business laptops that are outside the recent norm for the company.

    MSI's existing Prestige and Modern lines will also get a Tiger Lake refresh, with retail availability expected in October.

    As a laptop vendor, MSI focuses on the higher end, both in gaming and productivity laptops. Until now, all MSI models we're aware of—including the general-purpose laptops not aimed at gamers—have featured Nvidia discrete GPUs. The Tiger Lake refresh of the productivity-oriented Modern line does away with the Nvidia GPU, relying entirely on Intel's integrated Xe graphics instead. Seeing an OEM who has been all-in on discrete GPUs suddenly drop them in existing product lines is another good indicator that Intel's Xe integrated graphics will likely live up to the hype.

    Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    index?i=yAdEgVFWyL8:9-zJFCWac1k:V_sGLiPBpWUindex?i=yAdEgVFWyL8:9-zJFCWac1k:F7zBnMyn0Loindex?d=qj6IDK7rITsindex?d=yIl2AUoC8zA