semi-conductor

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  • Seoul, Republic of Korea - March 26, 2013: The Samsung logo on the window of one of the South Korean company's offices in Gangnam, central Seoul, with cars and people on the street reflected  in the window.

    Samsung will build a $17 billion semiconductor factory in Texas

    Samsung is building a new factory in Texas for advanced chips.

    Mariella Moon
    11.24.2021
  • Samsung pushes graphene one step closer to silicon supremacy

    Graphene has long-held notions of grandeur over its current silicon overlord, but a few practical issues have always kept its takeover bid grounded. Samsung, however, thinks it's cracked at least one of those -- graphene's inability to switch off current. Previous attempts to use graphene as a transistor have involved converting it to a semi-conductor, but this also reduces its electron mobility, negating much of the benefit. Samsung's Advanced Institute of Technology has created a graphene-silicon "Schottky barrier" that brings graphene this much-needed current-killing ability, without losing its electron-shuffling potential. The research also explored potential logic device applications based on the same technology. So, does this mean we'll finally get our flea-sized super computer implant? Maybe, not just yet, but the wheels have certainly been oiled.

    James Trew
    05.18.2012
  • Intel, Samsung, Toshiba form consortium aiming for 10nm chips by 2016

    There isn't much to say here, so let's just get on with the facts: Intel, Samsung, and Toshiba are joining forces and pooling R&D efforts in a consortium funded in part by the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (an expected 50 percent, or 5 billion yen / US $62 million) and the rest from the members. The goal? Semiconductor chips nearing 10nm by 2016. Ten more companies are expected to be invited once things get sorted out, so major chip-related corporations, please keep checking your mailboxes daily.

    Ross Miller
    10.29.2010