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University
of Alberta researchers have designed a computer chip
that uses about 100 times less energy than current
state-of-the-art digital chips.
The greatly reduced energy consumption of this novel
technology offers promise for many small devices with
relatively low power needs. This technology could
one day eliminate the need to recharge cellphones,
help introduce smaller, ultra-high-speed communications
systems, and advance the use of implantable health
care devices, such as drug delivery chips. Research
and development is ongoing before this technology
can be implemented in products.
The team at the iCORE High-Capacity
Digital Communications Laboratory, including Dr. Vincent
Gaudet, Dr. Christian Schlegel, and former graduate
students Dave Nguyen and Chris Winstead, created the
microchip while working in the University of Alberta
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
The communications chip was designed by Nguyen, manufactured
by CMC (the Canadian Microelectronics Corporation)
and tested at the University of Alberta.
This new analog processing
technology has been used by Winstead to build the
largest analog decoder chip fabricated to date, also
built at iCORE's High-Capacity Digital Communications
Laboratory at the University of Alberta. The iCORE
HCDC Laboratory is a recognized world leader in this
novel and promising technology.
"It is well known that
there is a power barrier for future increases in process
speeds and device sizes, and to overcome this, the
world needs a new, disruptive technology," said
Dr. Schlegel. "A fundamental new idea gave our
team the edge, and we have been fortunate to have
maintained a strong group here working on this technology
for the last few years."
The invention employs a new
method of processing digital data, known as analog
decoding, which uses extremely low levels of power
to execute its detection algorithm. The team's research
shows no other reported chip uses a lower amount of
energy consumed per decoded information bit.
The team has published two
conference papers based on this project this year:
one for the International Symposium on Turbo Codes
in Brest, France, and another for the International
Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS) in Vancouver.
The team's research is supported
by iCORE, Science and Engineering Research Canada
(more commonly known as NSERC), CMC (Canadian Microelectronics
Corporation), the Canada Foundation for Innovation
(CFI), and the Alberta Science and Research Authority
(ASRA).
For more information contact:
Sherrell Steele, Communications and Public Relations
Strategist, University of Alberta Faculty of Engineering,
780-492-4514; or Sandra Halme, University of Alberta
Public Affairs, 780-492-0442
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