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Will quantum physics make smartphones a lot smarter?

By | February 9, 2010, 5:46 AM PST

Peratech, a UK-based technology company, has licensed its Quantum Tunneling Composite technology to a unit of Samsung. The move could signal smarter handsets that can navigate on the amount of pressure applied to a touchscreen.

In a statement, Peratech said Samsung Electro-mechanics will include its Quantum Tunneling Composite (QTC) technology in pressure sensing components for smartphones. See a backgrounder on the science.

Peratech’s QTC switches allow electronic currents to be controlled by the pressure of touch. Typically, these currents are set to just turn on or off. With Peratech’s technology more current flows based on the pressure applied. Scrolling through a list or playing a game may go faster depending on how hard a button and its underlying switch is pressed.

The BBC explains the QTC technology this way:

The composite works by using spiky conducting nanoparticles, similar to tiny medieval maces, dispersed evenly in a polymer.

None of these spiky balls actually touch, but the closer they get to each other, the more likely they are to undergo a quantum physics phenomenon known as tunneling.

Tunneling is one of several effects in quantum mechanics that defies explanation in terms of the “classical” physics that preceded it.

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Larry Dignan

About Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is editor-in-chief of SmartPlanet.

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan

Editor-in-Chief

Larry Dignan is editor-in-chief of SmartPlanet and ZDNet. He is also editorial director of TechRepublic. Previously, he was an editor at eWeek, Baseline and CNET News. He has written for WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, New York Times and Financial Planning. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and the University of Delaware. He is based in New York but resides in Pennsylvania.

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Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan
Larry Dignan does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: Will quantum physics make smartphones a lot smarter?
Fascinating stuff. Our imagination is the only limit to the use of tunneling devices.
Posted by ITOdeed
9th Feb 2010
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QTC is an expensive con, however.
Yes it works, and it works well.

But its not so special. I've been experimenting with conductive and semiconductive compounds mixed with polymers myself.

Its REALLY easy to make your own QTC from natural latex mixed with copper oxide.

For those who dont know, copper oxide is a semiconductor and responds to pressure by tunnelling. Classic touch sensors using the stuff are formed from two plates or wires with a layer of CuO between them, and go from 15-20Mohm under ambient pressure down to under 1Kohm with the pressure one can apply with a thumb.

Making a copper particulate end oxidising it before mixing it with latex is a no-brainer and costs very little, far less than QTC does to buy even in the small bulks that I can make at home.

It works in a similar fashion, the rubber separates most of the particles, but when pressure is applied the particles touch and begin to conduct - more so under more pressure until its conductive.
Its also nearly indestructible...
I've also made another type using graphite that conducts and becomes resistive as its stretched.

Peace!
Posted by SiO2
11th Feb 2010
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QTC smartphones expose you to nanoparticles?
Anybody who have used rubber or polymer particles will be familiar
about the migration of compounding ingrediants to the surface in
time. QTC technology if makes way to smartphones, isnt there a risk
of direct exposure to nanoparticles?

Can I eventually become quantum tunnelling myself if I use these
smartphones?
Posted by bscambell
23rd Feb
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