[rescue] Re: Drive Reliability (was SCSI drive for sale atbuy.com)
Dave McGuire
mcguire at neurotica.com
Thu May 15 00:41:02 CDT 2003
On Thursday, May 15, 2003, at 01:28 AM, Jonathan C. Patschke wrote:
> O Likely not...those chip packages were around long, long before GaAs
>> chips came into vogue.
>
> Hm. I didn't know that. I guess it's just coincidence that the few
> that I have seen were all GaAs.
Probably so.
>> GaAs is still used for ultra-high-speed semiconductors.
>
> How is it that they can still clock it faster than silicon? I thought
> the silicon clocks were reaching a physical limitation. Or is it just
> that GaAs has less resistance than silicon, so it doesn't heat up as
> quickly?
I don't know much (well, zilch, really) about semiconductor physics,
so I can't really explain this. As I understand it, the speed of the
motion of charge carriers is higher through GaAs...upwards of *twice*
the speed according to some references.
This is, of course, a physics thing which cannot be dicked with by
even the powerful forces of Intel's money or Microsoft's greed.
The most common application for GaAs semiconductors, though, is in
small-signal RF circuitry like the front-ends of cell phones and other
high-sensitivity receivers. GaAs FETs are much, exhibit much, much
lower noise figures than silicon FETs. While GaAs chips are exotic and
expensive, GaAs FETs in RF circuitry is the norm.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire "They live deeply, these vagabonds."
St. Petersburg, FL -Goro
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