22
o puter Chip
Silicon Valley gets its name,
of course, from element 14,
the essential stuff of the
computer chip. In the early
days of computing, the three
parts of a chip—the wafer,
or substrate; the transistors
layered on top; and the
wires connecting to a circuit
board—required only a
handful of elements. Today,
chipmakers draw on a large
swath of the periodic table.A chip just 10millimeters
wide can include billions
of transistors. These
tiny electrical switches,
rapidly signaling 0 or
1, are etched onto the
wafer and made of such
materials as silicon and
gallium arsenide.May contain
or requirePRODUCT COURTESY ADVANCED SCIENCE RESEARCH CENTER AT THE GRADUATE CENTER, CUNYTo increase
processing speeds,
chipmakers have
expanded their
repertoire of elements
to include hafnium
and zirconium, while
improving circuit
design and trying new
etching methods.Silicon, cheap and
ubiquitous, is still
the most common
wafer material. But
gallium arsenide,
aluminum oxide, and
indium phosphide are
alsoused.1
H
Hydrogen2
He
Helium6
C
Carbon7
N
Nitrogen16
S
Sulfur
17
Cl
Chlorine15
P
Phosphorus53
I
Iodine18
Ar
Argon8
O
Oxygen9
F
Fluorine12
Mg
Magnesium13
Al
Aluminum
14
Si
Silicon33
As
Arsenic31
Ga
Gallium22
Ti
Titanium24
Cr
Chromium27
Co
Cobalt29
Cu
Copper74
W
Tungsten78
Pt
Platinum79
Au
Gold
54
Xe
Xenon49
In
Indium
40
Zr
Zirconium41
Nb
Niobium42
Mo
Molybdenum44
Ru
Ruthenium46
Pd
PalladiumPROP STYLIST: ANNA SURBATOVICHBy E. Tammy Kim
Photograph by Daniel Shea