|
HP, Hynix Team to Bring
the Memristor to Market
September 1, 2010
HP has entered into a joint
development agreement with Hynix Semiconductor to bring memristor, a new
circuit element first intentionally demonstrated in HP Labs, to market
in future memory products.
An image of a circuit
with 17 memristors captured by an atomic force microscope. Each
memristor is composed of two layers of titanium dioxide sandwiched
between two wires. When a voltage is applied to the top wire of a
memristor, the electrical resistance of the titanium dioxide layers is
changed, which can be used as a method to store a bit of data. Credit:
R. Stanley Williams, HP Senior Fellow and Director, Information and
Quantum Systems Lab, HP Labs
Memristors require less energy to operate, are faster than present
solid-state storage technologies and can retain information even when
power is off. The memristor, short for “memory resistor,” was postulated
to be the fourth basic circuit element by Prof. Leon Chua of the
University of California at Berkeley in 1971 and first intentionally
reduced to practice by researchers in HP Labs, the company’s central
research arm, in 2006.

Dr. S.W. Park, executive vice
president and chief technology officer, Hynix noted “The memristor has
storage capacity abilities many times greater than what competing
technologies offer. By adopting HP’s memristor technology we can deliver
new, energy-efficient products to our customers more quickly.”
Earlier this year, HP announced the discovery that the memristor also
can perform logic, showing that memristor-based devices could change the
standard paradigm of computing by enabling computation to one day be
performed in chips where data is stored, rather than on a specialized
central processing unit.
Bringing research to market
Joint
development agreements are one way in which HP partners with others to
leverage its intellectual property, which includes a portfolio of more
than 30,000 patents. By collaborating with others to bring new
technologies to market through intellectual property licenses and other
technology transfer agreements, HP helps create new markets and
generates a return on its research and development investment.
“This agreement brings together HP’s core intellectual property and a
first-rate supplier with the capacity to bring this innovation to market
in world-class memory on a mass scale. It is the most recent example of
HP’s ability to drive product innovation from the Labs out into the
commercial world. This is discovery and invention with clear purpose,
which differentiates HP and reinforces the value of our research
enterprise to HP as a whole.” added Stan Williams, senior fellow, HP,
and founding director, Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory, HP
Labs. |