HP researchers build intelligent memory
Researchers at Hewlett-Packard
have developed a working unit of a memory circuit that has existed in theory
for 37 years, which could ultimately replace RAM and make computers more intelligent
by tracking data it has retained.
The technology, called memristor, could allow computers to make decisions by
understanding past patterns of data it has collected, similar to human brains
collecting and understanding a series of events.
For example, a memristor circuit could be capable of telling a microwave the
heating time for different food types based on the information it has collected
over time, said Stanley Williams, senior fellow at HP.
A memristor circuit requires lower voltage and less time to turn on than competitive
memory like DRAM and flash, Williams said. "Because it [uses] less voltage
and less time, of course, it uses much less power," Williams said. Denser
cells also allow memristor circuits to store more data than flash memory.
Through prototypes, HP is trying to show circuit designers what memristor is
capable of doing. "What we have done is confirmed a concept for a new electronic
device that was originally proposed nearly 40 years ago," Williams said.
Memristor is the fourth fundamental circuit element, joining the other three
-- resistor, capacitor and inductor -- that had been known for 150 years, Williams
said. The element has properties that cannot be duplicated by any combination
of the other three elements, Williams said.
"It is as fundamental to electronic engineering as a chemical element
is to chemistry or an electron is to physics," Williams said.
In a 1971 academic paper, Leon Chua, a mathematician and professor at the University
of California at Berkeley, wrote that memristor would have properties similar
to a synapse in a brain. The synapse makes connections between two neurons,
and the more often a signal is sent to a synapse, the stronger the synapse gets.
"That is a very different type of behavior than anything that had been
observed before in circuit elements," Williams said.
HP is not going to reproduce all the functions of a brain in memristor, but
the company is trying to build a relatively simple computing machine that operates
on a different principle from today's computers, Williams said.
The scientists created the memory by applying a charge on a circuit with blocks
of titanium dioxide. The actual resistance of the memristor changes depending
on the amount of current flowing through the circuit, Williams said. When the
current is turned off, the memory retains the information it has acquired.
Although the concept of memristor has existed for a while, the memory prototype
is an academic device that will first work its way to academia. It could hit
the commercial semiconductor market in five years, Williams said.
IDG News Service
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