Project could make computers 500 times fasterJune 22, 2006
The University of Bath is to lead a three-year physics project that could make computers 500 times faster.
The research project, led by Dr. Alain Nogaret of the University of Bath's Department of Physics, involves four universities in the UK and a university and research centre in Belgium and France, and will look at cutting out the need for wiring to carry electric currents in silicon chips.
Tony Trueman, from the University of Bath, told Web User, that the speed of your computer is determined by how small its silicon chips are, smaller chips can store more information making your PC more powerful.
Trueman said: ?Wiring has to be of a certain size, if you keep making the chip smaller and keep the same size wiring then there's really a limit to how small you can make the chip.?
He said wireless technology (WiFi) has already been developed for internet systems and mobile phones, but the existing technology is too big to put into chips. Computers would end up being five times the size, so the technology needs to be created on a smaller scale.
The possibility of WiFi for computer chips wouldn't be realized until at least five to ten years after the completion of the research project. If the research is successful, computers could be made from 200 to 500 times quicker and still be the same size.
Yesterday, we reported that IBM claims it has developed the world's fastest silicon-based chip, capable of running around 100 times faster than chips in PCs today.
http://www.bath.ac.uk