Nanofabrication: Next Generation Chip Manufacture?
A new nanotechnology tool that will dramatically cut the cost of leading-edge nano research at the sub-50nm scale has been developed by EU researchers. It could lead to Next Generation Lithography (NGL) technology.
(PRWEB) August 31, 2005 -- The commercially available first generation tool
is low cost compared to sub-50nm alternatives. For example, electron beam
lithography costs €2m per machine, whereas the Soft Ultraviolet (UV) Imprint
machine developed by SOUVENIR project costs in its basic version well below
€200,000. It will be used to produce novel and experimental nanotech
devices.
"In principle, this new technique has the potential to be used
for mass manufacture by the semiconductor industry. One approach we use can
already form patterns down to the 10nm scale," says Dr Markus Bender, researcher
at German company, Applied Micro- and Optoelectronics (AMO), and SOUVENIR
coordinator.
Next Generation Lithography (NGL) is the holy grail of the
semiconductor industry. It will allow rapid, large-scale manufacture of modern
microchips at a sub-50nm scale. Industry giant Intel has spent 15 years and
millions of dollars looking for it. A small but brilliant team of dedicated
researchers in Europe may have found the solution.
Photolithography works
by casting light through a mask to produce a pattern on a chemically-coated
substrate. The light changes the chemical structure of the substrate. Depending
on the type of photolithography, either the lit or shadowed chemical is washed
away in the next step. In either case the result is a pattern etched into the
substrate.
With nanolithography the patterns are invisible to the naked
eye and the vast majority of the world's microscopes. The result is the tiny
circuits in semiconductor chips.
The SOUVENIR project developed a new
technique to create those patterns, one that is low cost and, comparatively, low
tech. In a first step the substrate was coated with a low viscosity, UV-curable
resist. The resist is simply a UV-sensitive chemical layered onto the substrate.
They then used a soft polymer mould, called an elastomer, pressed against the
resist-coated substrate, called imprinting, followed by the UV
photopolymerisation, or curing, of the resist.
This costs less than other
photolithographic techniques. Because the mould is pressed against the resist,
the system does not require the extremely expensive 'deep' UV light sources used
in the semiconductor industry. These light sources can only work properly in a
vacuum. Finally, the elastomer mould is considerably cheaper than those used in
microchip manufacture. The result is a low-cost pattern process at the sub-50nm
scale.
However, the low cost comes at a price. Currently, the system is
too slow and unproven to replace the current industrial photolithography
processes. What's more, the elastomer moulds used in the SOUVENIR process at the
moment need further improvements for high-resolution alignment processes,
essential for mass manufacturing semiconductors.
But ultimately it has
the potential to become the next generation lithography. Thanks to research
completed by the German government's Federal Ministry of Education and Research
(BMBF), it is possible to use the same imprinting technique using a hard mould,
based on quartz, which does have the required precision for semiconductor
manufacture. However, while quartz could address the precision issues the
technique is currently too slow for large-scale semiconductor
companies.
"This is the first generation of the tool we developed and,
with work, we can in principle get much better, faster and more scalable
results," says Dr Bender.
"We are working in close cooperation with an
Austrian company, Electronic Vision Group (EVG) to develop tools for the two
approaches. I think next year we'll have a step and repeat tool for 300mm wafers
on the market," says Dr Bender. This first generation tool is designed for small
volume production, for example for chemical sensors and in biotechnology
applications at small companies and research centres. Right now, small companies
can't afford their own tools for sub-50nm nanotech devices.
But
ultimately, this research could change how the semiconductor industry
works.
"This is a totally new technique and we've got to prove that we
can reliably reproduce the results. That's what we'll be doing now," says Dr
Bender.
PLEASE MENTION IST RESULTS AS THE SOURCE OF THIS STORY AND, IF
PUBLISHING ONLINE, PLEASE HYPERLINK TO: http://istresults.cordis.lu/
Contact:
Tara Morris, +32-2-2861985, tmorris at gopa-cartermill.com
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/8/prweb278111.htm