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Future Trends in Microelectronics: The Nano Millennium
 
 
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Future Trends in Microelectronics: The Nano Millennium [Hardcover]

Serge Luryi (Editor), Jimmy Xu (Editor), Alex Zaslavsky (Editor)

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Book Description

September 2, 2002 0471212474 978-0471212478
A lively and thought-provoking look at the future of microelectronics

Nanotechnology has been named by the U.S. government as one of the most important areas of impending technology. It is a common view among leading professionals in microelectronics that current explosive developments in the field will likely lead to profound paradigm shifts in the near future. Identifying plausible scenarios for the forthcoming evolution of microelectronics presents a tremendous opportunity for constructive action today, especially since our economy and, indeed, our civilization seem destined to be irrevocably shaped by this technology.

Based on ideas and discussions arising from the third meeting in the Future Trends in Microelectronics (FTM) workshop series, held in the summer of 2001, this timely and intriguing contributed volume provides a unique forum for today's leading experts in the semiconductor microelectronics field to discuss the future evolution of their profession. Demonstrating a diversity of opinions, leading professionals in industry, academia, and government address such provocative questions as:
* With CMOS scaling coming to an end, what kind of research does the silicon industry need to continue its expansion?
* What is the future beyond shrinking silicon devices?
* Is there practicality in the fashionable topics like quantum computing, molecular computing, spintronics, and similar research trends?
* What is the most likely future of microelectronics in the near and long term?


In this compilation of original research, contributors from academia, government, and industry provide assessments of important new ideas and approaches. The result is a lively, intelligent presentation of diverse points of view that should be required reading for professionals and students in both the microelectronic industry and academia.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"…well-organized and readable and includes sections by knowledgeable specialists in their fields. It will spur you to think and will help you realize how and why the technologies you are using may differ greatly in five or 10 years.” (EDN.com)

"...lively and thought-provoking book..." (Choice, Vol. 40, No. 6 February 2003)

From the Back Cover

A lively and thought-provoking look at the future of microelectronics

Nanotechnology has been named by the U.S. government as one of the most important areas of impending technology. It is a common view among leading professionals in microelectronics that current explosive developments in the field will likely lead to profound paradigm shifts in the near future. Identifying plausible scenarios for the forthcoming evolution of microelectronics presents a tremendous opportunity for constructive action today, especially since our economy and, indeed, our civilization seem destined to be irrevocably shaped by this technology.

Based on ideas and discussions arising from the third meeting in the Future Trends in Microelectronics (FTM) workshop series, held in the summer of 2001, this timely and intriguing contributed volume provides a unique forum for today’s leading experts in the semiconductor microelectronics field to discuss the future evolution of their profession. Demonstrating a diversity of opinions, leading professionals in industry, academia, and government address such provocative questions as:

  • With CMOS scaling coming to an end, what kind of research does the silicon industry need to continue its expansion?
  • What is the future beyond shrinking silicon devices?
  • Is there practicality in the fashionable topics like quantum computing, molecular computing, spintronics, and similar research trends?
  • What is the most likely future of microelectronics in the near and long term?

In this compilation of original research, contributors from academia, government, and industry provide assessments of important new ideas and approaches. The result is a lively, intelligent presentation of diverse points of view that should be required reading for professionals and students in both the microelectronic industry and academia.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The earliest semiconductor device was the metal-semiconductor contact studied in 1874 to reveal that the resistance of a contact between a metal and a semiconductor depends on the magnitude and polarity of the applied voltage. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
wavelength quantum dot lasers, partial density matrices, parasitic recombination, distinguishable parties, heterobarrier leakage, edge service providers, minimum feature length, rare earth metal oxides, amorphous marks, clocked gates, quantum gate operations, mask usage, coupled quantum dots, dielectric state, quantum dot systems, optical disc systems, nonvolatile semiconductor memory, stupid network, field emitter arrays, sequence disorder, swap process, designed bias, tandem cells, second qubit, dielectric phase
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Electron Dev, New York, Monte Carlo, Electronics Lett, Stony Brook, Solid State Electronics, Year Figure, Photonics Technol, Selected Topics Quantum Electronics, Solid State Commun, Brown University, Dalla Serra, Switching Device Based, Terahertz Emitters Based, World Scientific, Academic Press, Emerging Lithographic Technologies, First-Order Metal-Insulator Transition, Grenoble Cedex, Reduction of Reflection Losses, San Jose, Taming Tunneling, The Evolution of Optical Data Storage, Compound Semicond, Infrared Detectors Based
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