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From: glen herrmannsfeldt on 16 Jun 2010 15:28 glen herrmannsfeldt <gah(a)ugcs.caltech.edu> wrote: Snip, I wrote: > Now, how many electrons are stored on a typical > capacitor in a DRAM array these days? OK, answering my own question... A google search for dram cell capacitance indicates 25fF for a 256Mbit DRAM in August 2002. I suppose it might have shrunk since then, but... 1fF*1V=1fC=1e-15C/1.6e-19C/electron= about 6250 electrons. One should be able to build analog voltage storage devices with much larger capacitors, though, so sampled analog signal processing could be done with much larger numbers of electrons. It would seem, though, that 24 bit A/D and D/A likely to much better than analog signal processing. -- glen |