Jamaican Times
JamaicanTimes.com Friday 30th July 2010 Issue 20100730
  • More Breaking International News

  • Unsold gold-plated Frank Lampard iPods to be melted, re-branded as 'Hello Kitty'
  • 'ProBatter', the bowling robot that replicates deliveries of any bowler in the world
  • Hindus and Jews ask European Union intervention to stop dismantling of French Roma camps
  • New super-strong painkiller developed from snail spit
  • Jennifer Love Hewitt finds new lover
  • China leads in outer space pollution: Russian space agency
  • One third of young people suffer from high BP
  • Sound in Hollywood movies could soon be virtual
  • UK Police probing migration racket behind 360 sham marriages
  • Aditya carries India's hope in world junior squash
  • We'll punish WikiLeaks informers: Taliban
  • Jessica Biel paranoid about money matters
    Get Breaking International News headlines emailed to you daily.

    'Magnetic quantum dots' could lead to faster and more efficient computers
    Jamaican Times
    Tuesday 9th March, 2010  
    (ANI)


    Reports indicate that an international team of scientists has developed a new type of semiconductor called 'magnetic quantum dots' that could lead to faster and more efficient computers with over double the average existing hard drive storage capacity.

    According to a report in ABC News, the nano-sized crystals called 'magnetic quantum dots' were first developed about 15 years ago and are used in computer chips, solar cells, LED's and diode lasers.

    Semiconductors act as a switch, altering or moving the movement of electrons in a circuit.

    Quantum dots have the ability to also allow electrons to give off photons on command.

    The new work described a class of quantum dots that not only control electrons, but also have good magnetic properties allowing them to read the electron's spin.

    The research team claims that it's the first successful synthesis of magnetic quantum dots above room temperature.

    They were also able to demonstrate electric field control using the quantum dots at temperatures up to 100 Kelvin.

    According to Professor Jin Zou, Chair in Nanoscience at the University of Queensland's Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis, by detecting electron spin, scientists can find new uses for quantum dots.

    "Quantum dots with magnetic properties have multiple uses both optical and magnetic," said Zou.

    Zou said that the key was getting just the right concentration of manganese mixed in with the germanium matrix of the quantum dot.

    "Manganese has characteristics that in combination with other semiconductor atoms, allows magnetic properties to be achieved," he said.

    "But the amount must be small - just 5 percent - so as not to lose the qualities you're after," he added.

    It's taken the team, which included researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles and computer chip maker Intel, two years of research to achieve their goal.

    Zou said that the research could lead to advances in computer technology.

    "The new technology could lead to faster and larger storage hard drives that use less power, as well as new ways of communications," he said.

    "It could also open up new frontiers like spintronics, a very hot topic internationally," he added. (ANI)

      Email this story to a friend

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (optional)
    Message