Tags: nanotransistors

Description

 

A nanotransistor is a transistor whose dimensions are measured in nanometers. Transistors are used for switching and amplifying electronic signals. When combined in the millions and billions, they can be used to create sophisticated programmable information processors.

 

Online Presentations (261-280 of 335)

  1. ECE 612 Lecture 33: Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors

    Online Presentations | 11 Dec 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  2. ECE 612 Lecture 32: Heterojunction Diodes

    Online Presentations | 08 Dec 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  3. ECE 612 Lecture 31: Heterostructure Fundamentals

    Online Presentations | 08 Dec 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  4. ECE 612 Lecture 29: SOI Electrostatics

    Online Presentations | 04 Dec 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  5. ECE 612 Lecture 28: Overview of SOI Technology

    Online Presentations | 30 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  6. Design in the Nanometer Regime: Process Variation

    Online Presentations | 28 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Kaushik Roy

    Scaling of technology over the last few decades has produced an exponential growth in computing power of integrated circuits and an unprecedented number of transistors integrated into a single. However, scaling is facing several problems — severe short channel effects, exponential increase in...

  7. Design of CMOS Circuits in the Nanometer Regime: Leakage Tolerance

    Online Presentations | 28 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Kaushik Roy

    The scaling of technology has produced exponential growth in transistor development and computing power in the last few decades, but scaling still presents several challenges. These two lectures will cover device aware CMOS design to address power, reliability, and process variations in scaled...

  8. ECE 612 Lecture 25: CMOS Circuits, Part I I

    Online Presentations | 06 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  9. ECE 612 Lecture 23: CMOS Process Flow

    Online Presentations | 06 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  10. ECE 612 Lecture 24: CMOS Circuits, Part I

    Online Presentations | 05 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  11. ECE 612 Lecture 21: Gate resistance and Interconnects

    Online Presentations | 02 Nov 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  12. ECE 612 Lecture 20: MOSFET Leakage

    Online Presentations | 18 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  13. Nanoelectronics 101

    Online Presentations | 28 Aug 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

    Semiconductor device technology has transformed our world with supercomputers, personal computers, cell phones, ipods, and much more that we now take for granted. Moore's Law, posited by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in 1965, states that the number of transistors (the basic building blocks...

  14. ECE 612 Lecture 19: Series Resistance

    Online Presentations | 17 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  15. ECE 612 Lecture 18: VT Engineering

    Online Presentations | 17 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  16. ECE 612 Lecture 17: Device Scaling

    Online Presentations | 17 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  17. The Limits of CMOS Scaling from a Power-Constrained Technology Optimization Perspective

    Online Presentations | 17 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: David J. Frank

    As CMOS scaling progresses, it is becoming very clear that power dissipation plays a dominant role in limiting how far scaling can go. This talk will briefly describe the various physical effects that arise at the limits of scaling, and will then turn to an analysis of scaling in the presence of...

  18. ECE 612 Lecture 13: Threshold Voltage and MOSFET Capacitances

    Online Presentations | 02 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  19. ECE 612 Lecture 16: 2D Electrostatics, Part II

    Online Presentations | 02 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom

  20. ECE 612 Lecture 15: 2D Electrostatics, Part I

    Online Presentations | 02 Oct 2006 | Contributor(s):: Mark Lundstrom