Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab

Exponential improvements in computing performance have impacted and improved nearly every aspect of our lives: from education to transportation to healthcare. And with continued gains, applications which were once science fiction – from fully-autonomous vehicles to personalized healthcare – will soo...

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Main Author: Srimani, Tathagata
Other Authors: Shulaker, Max M.
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/146295
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author Srimani, Tathagata
author2 Shulaker, Max M.
author_facet Shulaker, Max M.
Srimani, Tathagata
author_sort Srimani, Tathagata
collection MIT
description Exponential improvements in computing performance have impacted and improved nearly every aspect of our lives: from education to transportation to healthcare. And with continued gains, applications which were once science fiction – from fully-autonomous vehicles to personalized healthcare – will soon be a reality. Yet at the exact moment these next-generation applications are poised to once again revolutionize our lives, gains in computing performance are slowing. The conventional approaches relied on to improve computing – mainly relentless physical and equivalent scaling of devices – are reaching fundamental limits, and while progress will undoubtedly continue, the rate of gains has already slowed dramatically over the last decade. Therefore, to enable these next-generation applications, new approaches to computing systems are required. Rather than rely on a single approach, coordinated advances across the system stack – from new technologies to new system architectures – are required to overcome today’s challenges. This is embodied by “NanoSystems”, which use emerging nanotechnologies to realize new system architectures to enable new applications. Yet however intellectually compelling or interesting nanosystems are, the problems facing computing today are very real and very current. Unfortunately, despite the promise of nanosystems, nanosystems were exclusively of academic interest. All nanosystem demonstrations were fabricated in academic labs, and there were many challenges that prohibited nanosystems from transferring into industry and thus into the real world. This thesis addresses this critical problem. By demonstrating the world’s first adoption of nanosystems within industry, this thesis provides both a specific path forwards as well as a general approach of how to transform promising nanosystems in theory into practical systems that can impact our daily lives. To transform nanosystems from the “lab” to the “fab”, this thesis must address challenges that span the entire stack: from low-level material optimizations, to semiconductor device engineering, to circuit and system design, up to architectures and application implementation. As a case-study, this thesis focuses on carbon nanotubes and monolithic threedimensional integration as the specific implementation of a nanosystem, yet the lessons and conclusions from this work are applicable to a broad set of emerging nanotechnologies and nanosystems. Beyond technology, this thesis shows unequivocally that nanosystems should – and can - be transferred from academic “labs” into commercial “fabs”, providing a realistic and feasible path forwards for computing to continue to improve and revolutionize the world we live in.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1462952022-11-11T03:00:51Z Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab Srimani, Tathagata Shulaker, Max M. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Exponential improvements in computing performance have impacted and improved nearly every aspect of our lives: from education to transportation to healthcare. And with continued gains, applications which were once science fiction – from fully-autonomous vehicles to personalized healthcare – will soon be a reality. Yet at the exact moment these next-generation applications are poised to once again revolutionize our lives, gains in computing performance are slowing. The conventional approaches relied on to improve computing – mainly relentless physical and equivalent scaling of devices – are reaching fundamental limits, and while progress will undoubtedly continue, the rate of gains has already slowed dramatically over the last decade. Therefore, to enable these next-generation applications, new approaches to computing systems are required. Rather than rely on a single approach, coordinated advances across the system stack – from new technologies to new system architectures – are required to overcome today’s challenges. This is embodied by “NanoSystems”, which use emerging nanotechnologies to realize new system architectures to enable new applications. Yet however intellectually compelling or interesting nanosystems are, the problems facing computing today are very real and very current. Unfortunately, despite the promise of nanosystems, nanosystems were exclusively of academic interest. All nanosystem demonstrations were fabricated in academic labs, and there were many challenges that prohibited nanosystems from transferring into industry and thus into the real world. This thesis addresses this critical problem. By demonstrating the world’s first adoption of nanosystems within industry, this thesis provides both a specific path forwards as well as a general approach of how to transform promising nanosystems in theory into practical systems that can impact our daily lives. To transform nanosystems from the “lab” to the “fab”, this thesis must address challenges that span the entire stack: from low-level material optimizations, to semiconductor device engineering, to circuit and system design, up to architectures and application implementation. As a case-study, this thesis focuses on carbon nanotubes and monolithic threedimensional integration as the specific implementation of a nanosystem, yet the lessons and conclusions from this work are applicable to a broad set of emerging nanotechnologies and nanosystems. Beyond technology, this thesis shows unequivocally that nanosystems should – and can - be transferred from academic “labs” into commercial “fabs”, providing a realistic and feasible path forwards for computing to continue to improve and revolutionize the world we live in. Ph.D. 2022-11-10T14:04:54Z 2022-11-10T14:04:54Z 2022-02 2022-03-04T20:47:53.262Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/146295 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright MIT http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Srimani, Tathagata
Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab
title Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab
title_full Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab
title_fullStr Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab
title_full_unstemmed Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab
title_short Nanosystems: From the Lab to the Fab
title_sort nanosystems from the lab to the fab
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/146295
work_keys_str_mv AT srimanitathagata nanosystemsfromthelabtothefab