New transistors may reduce power leakage during ‘AC to DC conversion’ by a third
July 15th, 2009 - 3:00 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )London, July 15 (ANI): Japanese researchers say that the leakage of power, which results when a gadget converts alternating current to direct current, may be reduced by a third by switching to converters that use gallium nitride transistors rather than silicon ones.
Experts at Fujitsu Laboratories in Kawasaki say that such transistors may also make adaptors small enough to fit inside a laptop, something that may be helpful in doing away with the need to carry a separate adaptor.
They highlight the fact that the circuitry that creates a stable direct current from an AC source relies on transistors that can switch quickly from a state that conducts current to one that blocks it, and that conventional silicon transistors can lose a significant amount of power through current leakage during this process because the material’s properties break down at high voltages.
Gallium nitride (GaN)however, has a much higher breakdown voltage, something that minimises such leaks, say the researchers.
According to them, GaN transistors also operate at a higher frequency, which would allow manufacturers to shrink the size of an adaptor’s transformer coils, and this should allow adaptors to be reduced to one-tenth of today’s size by 2011.
The company has revealed that its first application will be in huge power-guzzling data centres, where the firm will be able to reduce total power consumption by about 12 per cent. (ANI)
- New technique that makes LEDs more efficient developed - Jan 26, 2011
- Green LED TVs and computers 'a step closer to reality' - Apr 26, 2011
- Student develops new alternative to silicon chip - May 14, 2008
- Supercomputers could some day think as fast as human brain - Dec 02, 2010
- Diamond could help design tougher chips - Aug 05, 2011
- Smart lighting may replace common light bulb in coming years - Jan 14, 2009
- Student develops promising new alternative to silicon chip - May 14, 2008
- Soon nanotechnology to make computers faster - Jun 02, 2010
- High-performance, low-cost green LEDs to brighten up the future - Sep 06, 2009
- Finlike design can create smaller transistors and powerful computer chips - Nov 11, 2009
- Improved nanotubes will help transistors shrink smaller than silicon sized ones - Jan 16, 2010
- Green energy to slash power use of computers - Jun 01, 2011
- Micro switch paves way for an ultra-fast computer - May 25, 2010
- Ultrathin silicon substitute to revolutionize future electronics - Nov 23, 2010
- Growing nanolasers on silicon paves way for on-chip photonics - Feb 07, 2011
Tags: ac source, ac to dc, breakdown voltage, circuitry, coils, conventional silicon, converters, dc conversion, fujitsu, fujitsu laboratories, gadget, gallium nitride, higher frequency, japanese researchers, kawasaki, leaks, london, power consumption, power leakage, silicon transistors