logo
#

Latest news with #SaptarshiDas

World's first computer devoid of silicon shows it is possible to replace it someday: Researchers
World's first computer devoid of silicon shows it is possible to replace it someday: Researchers

The Print

time30-06-2025

  • Science
  • The Print

World's first computer devoid of silicon shows it is possible to replace it someday: Researchers

'Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor', or CMOS, is widely used in designing electronic circuits. It consumes low power and accommodates more components. Built at a nanofabrication unit at The Pennsylvania State University in the US, the research team has demonstrated the successful working of the world's first CMOS computer made using two-dimensional materials, which are paper-thin, but at the nano-level. It is described in a paper in the journal Nature. New Delhi, Jun 29 (PTI) Researchers have built a computer from scratch without silicon, a 'milestone' in showing that it is possible to one day replace the material that fuelled the bulk of technology advancements over the past half a century, by making devices smaller and faster. The development is acknowledged as pioneering and a starting point in creating not just alternatives to silicon, but a roadmap for a new generation of still smaller, more flexible electronics. Saptarshi Das, professor of engineering science and mechanics at the The Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), and lead researcher on the paper, told PTI, 'In the short term, you would like to augment silicon with these two-dimensional (2D) materials, because they offer new functionalities — including in sensors and memory devices. 'This is why our paper is, I would say, a milestone, because it shows that it is possible in a way to replace silicon one day,' Das said. Silicon, whose conductivity can be manipulated for controlling electricity flow, has been foundational in advancing technology by helping electronics shrink in size, since 1947 when a transistor was first made using the material. A transistor regulates electric signals and acts as a building block for an electronic circuit. But now, nearly seven decades later, as electronic devices continue to become smaller, silicon may have hit a wall — scientists say it may not be able to function as well, if devices are to get tinier. Das said, 'The trajectory of silicon has stalled.' Lead author Subir Ghosh, a doctoral student at Penn State, explains, 'We have used molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) and tungsten diselenide (WSe2) — both quite common in the 2D materials community — to make our semiconductor devices.' 'Here at Penn State, you can grow this material over a large two-inch wafer. They are also scaleable, which means that the industry can also adopt these 2D material,' Ghosh added. The semiconductor industry is said to be governed by Moore's law, according to which the number of transistors in circulation double every 18 months (a year and a half). However, transistors are no longer becoming smaller. This is because silicon is a bulky material — like a brick — which cannot be made any smaller owing to detrimental effects, such as an increased leakage current, power consumption and a reduced performance of the device, Das explained over a video call. 'Now, for example, if we need to construct a multi-storied building, we will use bricks. But now, what if I tell you that the best choice for this building is not bricks — but paper, which is extremely thin. You can then get back all the good qualities you need to make a device very small,' Das said. Research teams around the world, including China, are fiercely working for over a decade in developing 2D materials to initially support silicon in making smaller devices, but eventually transition away from having to use the bulky material itself. Scientists at China's Fudan University have created a RISC-V microprocessor chip by assembling transistors made of 2D materials. The chip, described in a paper published in April in the journal Nature, also used a low power to function. Mayank Shrivastava, professor at the division of electrical, electronics and computer sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and not involved in the study, told PTI, that a successful demonstration of the computer built using 2D materials is pioneering and 'marks a watershed moment in the evolution of semiconductor technology.' 'While we have seen individual devices and simple circuits from 2D materials before, building an actual computer, even one with a single instruction set, completely from 2D semiconductors is a bold leap,' he said. Shrivastava added that these developments are also a 'wake-up call that the silicon race is maturing, and the next race, based on 2D materials, has already begun'. Das from Penn State explained that the 2D computer — a primitive one that present day semiconductor foundries might be building in the 1960s — was designed to perform a single instruction, which on repeat, can do all the basic functions of addition, subtraction and multiplication. Ghosh explained this single instruction, named 'reverse subtract, skip if borrow'. 'In order to subtract, you have two numbers. But while subtracting a bigger number from a smaller one, we need to 'borrow'. So, when a 'borrow' is raised, our computer will skip that instruction and move on to the next,' the lead author said. The computer achieved a high drive current, with a low leakage and power dissipation, enabling 2D-semiconductor circuits to operate below three volts and up to 25 kiloHertz of frequency, the study says. Shrivastava, not involved in the study, said 2D materials hold the promise of pushing electronics beyond what silicon alone can offer. 'With atomic-scale thickness, high mobility, and near-ideal electrostatic control, these materials are natural candidates for continuing Moore's Law in spirit, through performance-per-watt improvements, ultra-low leakage, and unprecedented device scaling,' he said. The field of 2D materials — no longer a 'potential' one, but a strategic imperative — offers a rare opportunity to leapfrog into next-generation semiconductor leadership, he added. However, the Penn State study's limitations need to be considered, the IISc professor said. 'The operating speed of 25 kiloHertz is still far behind silicon, while challenges remain in improving channel mobility, gate oxides, contacts, managing parasitics, reliability, ensuring yield, and achieving top-gate device integration or nanosheet devices for scale,' he said. 'It is also vital to emphasise that while this milestone is academically significant, its commercial translation hinges on building infrastructure — testbeds, fabrication capabilities, tool ecosystems, and skillsets — that don't yet exist in many countries.' Despite the limits, Shrivastava described the 2D computer as a 'foundational milestone that, over time, have historically driven transformative changes.' On Friday, India's electronics and IT Ministry was reported to consider funding research on 2D materials. They plan on floating expressions of interest for selecting which projects to fund, officials said. PTI KRS NB This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

World's first silicon-free computer proves potential for future replacement
World's first silicon-free computer proves potential for future replacement

Business Standard

time29-06-2025

  • Science
  • Business Standard

World's first silicon-free computer proves potential for future replacement

Researchers have built a computer from scratch without silicon, a "milestone" in showing that it is possible to one day replace the material that fuelled the bulk of technology advancements over the past half a century, by making devices smaller and faster. Built at a nanofabrication unit at The Pennsylvania State University in the US, the research team has demonstrated the successful working of the world's first CMOS computer made using two-dimensional materials, which are paper-thin, but at the nano-level. It is described in a paper in the journal Nature. 'Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor', or CMOS, is widely used in designing electronic circuits. It consumes low power and accommodates more components. The development is acknowledged as pioneering and a starting point in creating not just alternatives to silicon, but a roadmap for a new generation of still smaller, more flexible electronics. Saptarshi Das, professor of engineering science and mechanics at the The Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), and lead researcher on the paper, told PTI, "In the short term, you would like to augment silicon with these two-dimensional (2D) materials, because they offer new functionalities -- including in sensors and memory devices. "This is why our paper is, I would say, a milestone, because it shows that it is possible in a way to replace silicon one day," Das said. Silicon, whose conductivity can be manipulated for controlling electricity flow, has been foundational in advancing technology by helping electronics shrink in size, since 1947 when a transistor was first made using the material. A transistor regulates electric signals and acts as a building block for an electronic circuit. But now, nearly seven decades later, as electronic devices continue to become smaller, silicon may have hit a wall -- scientists say it may not be able to function as well, if devices are to get tinier. Das said, "The trajectory of silicon has stalled." Lead author Subir Ghosh, a doctoral student at Penn State, explains, "We have used molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) and tungsten diselenide (WSe2) -- both quite common in the 2D materials community -- to make our semiconductor devices." "Here at Penn State, you can grow this material over a large two-inch wafer. They are also scaleable, which means that the industry can also adopt these 2D material," Ghosh added. The semiconductor industry is said to be governed by Moore's law, according to which the number of transistors in circulation double every 18 months (a year and a half). However, transistors are no longer becoming smaller. This is because silicon is a bulky material -- like a brick -- which cannot be made any smaller owing to detrimental effects, such as an increased leakage current, power consumption and a reduced performance of the device, Das explained over a video call. "Now, for example, if we need to construct a multi-storied building, we will use bricks. But now, what if I tell you that the best choice for this building is not bricks -- but paper, which is extremely thin. You can then get back all the good qualities you need to make a device very small," Das said. Research teams around the world, including China, are fiercely working for over a decade in developing 2D materials to initially support silicon in making smaller devices, but eventually transition away from having to use the bulky material itself. Scientists at China's Fudan University have created a RISC-V microprocessor chip by assembling transistors made of 2D materials. The chip, described in a paper published in April in the journal Nature, also used a low power to function. Mayank Shrivastava, professor at the division of electrical, electronics and computer sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and not involved in the study, told PTI, that a successful demonstration of the computer built using 2D materials is pioneering and "marks a watershed moment in the evolution of semiconductor technology." "While we have seen individual devices and simple circuits from 2D materials before, building an actual computer, even one with a single instruction set, completely from 2D semiconductors is a bold leap," he said. Shrivastava added that these developments are also a "wake-up call that the silicon race is maturing, and the next race, based on 2D materials, has already begun". Das from Penn State explained that the 2D computer -- a primitive one that present day semiconductor foundries might be building in the 1960s -- was designed to perform a single instruction, which on repeat, can do all the basic functions of addition, subtraction and multiplication. Ghosh explained this single instruction, named 'reverse subtract, skip if borrow'. "In order to subtract, you have two numbers. But while subtracting a bigger number from a smaller one, we need to 'borrow'. So, when a 'borrow' is raised, our computer will skip that instruction and move on to the next," the lead author said. The computer achieved a high drive current, with a low leakage and power dissipation, enabling 2D-semiconductor circuits to operate below three volts and up to 25 kiloHertz of frequency, the study says. Shrivastava, not involved in the study, said 2D materials hold the promise of pushing electronics beyond what silicon alone can offer. "With atomic-scale thickness, high mobility, and near-ideal electrostatic control, these materials are natural candidates for continuing Moore's Law in spirit, through performance-per-watt improvements, ultra-low leakage, and unprecedented device scaling," he said. The field of 2D materials -- no longer a 'potential' one, but a strategic imperative -- offers a rare opportunity to leapfrog into next-generation semiconductor leadership, he added. However, the Penn State study's limitations need to be considered, the IISc professor said. "The operating speed of 25 kiloHertz is still far behind silicon, while challenges remain in improving channel mobility, gate oxides, contacts, managing parasitics, reliability, ensuring yield, and achieving top-gate device integration or nanosheet devices for scale," he said. "It is also vital to emphasise that while this milestone is academically significant, its commercial translation hinges on building infrastructure -- testbeds, fabrication capabilities, tool ecosystems, and skillsets -- that don't yet exist in many countries." Despite the limits, Shrivastava described the 2D computer as a "foundational milestone that, over time, have historically driven transformative changes." On Friday, India's electronics and IT Ministry was reported to consider funding research on 2D materials. They plan on floating expressions of interest for selecting which projects to fund, officials said.

Researchers build world's first computer without silicon using 2D materials at Penn State
Researchers build world's first computer without silicon using 2D materials at Penn State

Time of India

time29-06-2025

  • Science
  • Time of India

Researchers build world's first computer without silicon using 2D materials at Penn State

Researchers have built a computer from scratch without silicon , a "milestone" in showing that it is possible to one day replace the material that fuelled the bulk of technology advancements over the past half a century, by making devices smaller and faster. Built at a nanofabrication unit at The Pennsylvania State University in the US, the research team has demonstrated the successful working of the world's first CMOS computer made using two-dimensional materials, which are paper-thin, but at the nano-level. It is described in a paper in the journal Nature. ' Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor ', or CMOS, is widely used in designing electronic circuits. It consumes low power and accommodates more components. The development is acknowledged as pioneering and a starting point in creating not just alternatives to silicon, but a roadmap for a new generation of still smaller, more flexible electronics. Saptarshi Das, professor of engineering science and mechanics at the The Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), and lead researcher on the paper, told PTI, "In the short term, you would like to augment silicon with these two-dimensional (2D) materials, because they offer new functionalities -- including in sensors and memory devices. Live Events "This is why our paper is, I would say, a milestone, because it shows that it is possible in a way to replace silicon one day," Das said. Silicon, whose conductivity can be manipulated for controlling electricity flow, has been foundational in advancing technology by helping electronics shrink in size, since 1947 when a transistor was first made using the material. A transistor regulates electric signals and acts as a building block for an electronic circuit. But now, nearly seven decades later, as electronic devices continue to become smaller, silicon may have hit a wall -- scientists say it may not be able to function as well, if devices are to get tinier. Das said, "The trajectory of silicon has stalled." Lead author Subir Ghosh, a doctoral student at Penn State, explains, "We have used molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) and tungsten diselenide (WSe2) -- both quite common in the 2D materials community -- to make our semiconductor devices." "Here at Penn State, you can grow this material over a large two-inch wafer. They are also scaleable, which means that the industry can also adopt these 2D material," Ghosh added. The semiconductor industry is said to be governed by Moore's law, according to which the number of transistors in circulation double every 18 months (a year and a half). However, transistors are no longer becoming smaller. This is because silicon is a bulky material -- like a brick -- which cannot be made any smaller owing to detrimental effects, such as an increased leakage current, power consumption and a reduced performance of the device, Das explained over a video call. "Now, for example, if we need to construct a multi-storied building, we will use bricks. But now, what if I tell you that the best choice for this building is not bricks -- but paper, which is extremely thin. You can then get back all the good qualities you need to make a device very small," Das said. Research teams around the world, including China, are fiercely working for over a decade in developing 2D materials to initially support silicon in making smaller devices, but eventually transition away from having to use the bulky material itself. Scientists at China's Fudan University have created a RISC-V microprocessor chip by assembling transistors made of 2D materials. The chip, described in a paper published in April in the journal Nature, also used a low power to function. Mayank Shrivastava, professor at the division of electrical, electronics and computer sciences, Indian Institute of Science , Bengaluru, and not involved in the study, told PTI, that a successful demonstration of the computer built using 2D materials is pioneering and "marks a watershed moment in the evolution of semiconductor technology." "While we have seen individual devices and simple circuits from 2D materials before, building an actual computer, even one with a single instruction set, completely from 2D semiconductors is a bold leap," he said. Shrivastava added that these developments are also a "wake-up call that the silicon race is maturing, and the next race, based on 2D materials, has already begun". Das from Penn State explained that the 2D computer -- a primitive one that present day semiconductor foundries might be building in the 1960s -- was designed to perform a single instruction, which on repeat, can do all the basic functions of addition, subtraction and multiplication. Ghosh explained this single instruction, named 'reverse subtract, skip if borrow'. "In order to subtract, you have two numbers. But while subtracting a bigger number from a smaller one, we need to 'borrow'. So, when a 'borrow' is raised, our computer will skip that instruction and move on to the next," the lead author said. The computer achieved a high drive current, with a low leakage and power dissipation, enabling 2D-semiconductor circuits to operate below three volts and up to 25 kiloHertz of frequency, the study says. Shrivastava, not involved in the study, said 2D materials hold the promise of pushing electronics beyond what silicon alone can offer. "With atomic-scale thickness, high mobility, and near-ideal electrostatic control, these materials are natural candidates for continuing Moore's Law in spirit, through performance-per-watt improvements, ultra-low leakage, and unprecedented device scaling," he said. The field of 2D materials -- no longer a 'potential' one, but a strategic imperative -- offers a rare opportunity to leapfrog into next-generation semiconductor leadership, he added. However, the Penn State study's limitations need to be considered, the IISc professor said. "The operating speed of 25 kiloHertz is still far behind silicon, while challenges remain in improving channel mobility, gate oxides, contacts, managing parasitics, reliability, ensuring yield, and achieving top-gate device integration or nanosheet devices for scale," he said. "It is also vital to emphasise that while this milestone is academically significant, its commercial translation hinges on building infrastructure -- testbeds, fabrication capabilities, tool ecosystems, and skillsets -- that don't yet exist in many countries." Despite the limits, Shrivastava described the 2D computer as a "foundational milestone that, over time, have historically driven transformative changes." On Friday, India's electronics and IT Ministry was reported to consider funding research on 2D materials. They plan on floating expressions of interest for selecting which projects to fund, officials said.

Penn State's 2D computer marks breakthrough in post-silicon computing
Penn State's 2D computer marks breakthrough in post-silicon computing

Express Tribune

time16-06-2025

  • Science
  • Express Tribune

Penn State's 2D computer marks breakthrough in post-silicon computing

Engineers at Pennsylvania State University have constructed the world's first computer entirely made from atomically thin two-dimensional materials, bypassing silicon entirely in a step researchers say could pave the way for more compact, efficient electronics. The development process was published in Nature. The new device is a functioning complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) computer built using two 2D materials—molybdenum disulfide for n-type transistors and tungsten diselenide for p-type transistors. These transistors are fundamental to regulating current in CMOS circuits, which underpin nearly all modern computing. 'This marks the first time a computer has been built entirely from 2D semiconductors,' said Dr. Saptarshi Das, a professor of engineering at Penn State and the project's lead. He added that while traditional silicon loses performance at atomic scales, 'two-dimensional materials maintain their exceptional electronic properties at these thicknesses." The fabrication process used metal-organic chemical vapour deposition (MOCVD), a technique that produces ultra-thin material layers. The team produced more than 1,000 of each transistor type and adjusted their threshold voltages to create a fully functional CMOS logic circuit. Though the prototype computer currently operates at modest speeds of up to 25 kilohertz—far slower than commercial silicon chips—it represents a proof of concept. 'Our 2D CMOS computer operates at low voltages with minimal power consumption,' said Subir Ghosh, a doctoral researcher and lead author of the study. Designed as a one-instruction-set computer, the prototype is not aimed at immediate commercial use but lays crucial groundwork for future flexible, lightweight, and energy-efficient devices.

NPS achieves 100% results in Class 10 results
NPS achieves 100% results in Class 10 results

Time of India

time13-05-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

NPS achieves 100% results in Class 10 results

Mysuru: NPS International School of the city achieved a 100% pass percentage in the CBSE Class 10 examinations , the results of which were announced on Tuesday. With a score of 97.6%, Mita Prabhu stood first. She scored 488/500 in the exam. Saptarshi Das secured second place with 97% marks. Thanya Prasad secured third rank with 96.8% marks. According to school authorities, nine students secured centum in various subjects. Thirty-five students scored above 90%, while 52 students scored above 85%.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store