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One-Billion-Year Carbon Nanotube Memory
Saturday, June 06, 2009 - Anuradha Menon
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A team of physicists led by Alex Zettl of the University of California, Berkeley, has created a carbon nanotube–based electromechanical memory device that they say can store bits safely for up to a billion years. Details of the advance, which is being acknowledged by independent experts as a breakthrough. Zettl and his colleagues constructed their memory device by taking an iron nanocrystal and placing it inside a hollow carbon nanotube. The iron particle is able to shuttle back and forth.    (source: spectrum.ieee.org)


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