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Institution

IBM

CompanyArmonk, New York, United States
About: IBM is a company organization based out in Armonk, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Layer (electronics) & Cache. The organization has 134567 authors who have published 253905 publications receiving 7458795 citations. The organization is also known as: International Business Machines Corporation & Big Blue.


Papers
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Journal Article
Ronald Cramer1, Victor Shoup2
TL;DR: In this article, a new public key cryptosystem is proposed and analyzed, which is provably secure against adaptive chosen ciphertext attack under standard intractability assumptions. But the scheme is quite practical, and is not provable to be used in practice.
Abstract: A new public key cryptosystem is proposed and analyzed. The scheme is quite practical, and is provably secure against adaptive chosen ciphertext attack under standard intractability assumptions. There appears to be no previous cryptosystem in the literature that enjoys both of these properties simultaneously.

1,228 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Stefan Heinze1, Jerry Tersoff1, Richard Martel1, Vincent Derycke1, Joerg Appenzeller1, Ph. Avouris1 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that carbon nanotube transistors operate as unconventional Schottky barrier transistors, in which transistor action occurs primarily by varying the contact resistance rather than the channel conductance.
Abstract: We show that carbon nanotube transistors operate as unconventional "Schottky barrier transistors," in which transistor action occurs primarily by varying the contact resistance rather than the channel conductance. Transistor characteristics are calculated for both idealized and realistic geometries, and scaling behavior is demonstrated. Our results explain a variety of experimental observations, including the quite different effects of doping and adsorbed gases. The electrode geometry is shown to be crucial for good device performance.

1,225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Dieter Weller1, Andreas Moser
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss thermal effects in the framework of basic Arrhenius-Neel statistical switching models and reveal the onset of thermal decay at "stability ratios" (k/sub u/V/K/sub B/T)/sub 0//spl sime/35 /spl plusmn/ 2.
Abstract: In current longitudinal magnetic recording media, high areal density and low noise are achieved by statistical averaging over several hundred weakly coupled ferromagnetic grains per bit cell. Continued scaling to smaller bit and grain sizes, however, may prompt spontaneous magnetization reversal processes when the stored energy per particle starts competing with thermal energy, thereby limiting the achievable areal density. Charap et al. have predicted this to occur at about 40 Gbits/in/sup 2/. This paper discusses thermal effects in the framework of basic Arrhenius-Neel statistical switching models. It is emphasized that magnetization decay is intimately related to high-speed-switching phenomena. Thickness-, temperature- and bit-density dependent recording experiments reveal the onset of thermal decay at "stability ratios" (K/sub u/V/K/sub B/T)/sub 0//spl sime/35 /spl plusmn/ 2. The stability requirement is grain size dispersion dependent and shifts to about 60 for projected 40 Gbits/in/sup 2/ conditions and ten-year storage times. Higher anisotropy and coercivity media with reduced grain sizes are logical extensions of the current technology until write field limitations are reached. Future advancements will rely on deviations from traditional scaling. Squarer bits may reduce destabilizing stray fields inside the bit transitions. Perpendicular recording may shift the onset of thermal effects to higher bit densities. Enhanced signal processing may allow signal retrieval with fewer grains per bit. Finally, single grain per bit recording may be envisioned in patterned media, with lithographically defined bits.

1,223 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
K. Keiji Kanazawa1, Joseph G. Gordon1
TL;DR: In this article, a simple relationship was derived which expressed the change in oscillation frequency of a quartz crystal in contact with a fluid in terms of material parameters of the fluid and the quartz.

1,222 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper gives an algebraic specification that selects, among all solutions to the data exchange problem, a special class of solutions that is called universal and shows that a universal solution has no more and no less data than required for data exchange and that it represents the entire space of possible solutions.

1,221 citations


Authors

Showing all 134658 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Zhong Lin Wang2452529259003
Anil K. Jain1831016192151
Hyun-Chul Kim1764076183227
Rodney S. Ruoff164666194902
Tobin J. Marks1591621111604
Jean M. J. Fréchet15472690295
Albert-László Barabási152438200119
György Buzsáki15044696433
Stanislas Dehaene14945686539
Philip S. Yu1481914107374
James M. Tour14385991364
Thomas P. Russell141101280055
Naomi J. Halas14043582040
Steven G. Louie13777788794
Daphne Koller13536771073
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202330
2022137
20213,163
20206,336
20196,427
20186,278