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Self-Assembling Nano-Electronics Turn a Corner

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MADISON, Wisc., June 3 -- In the time it takes to read this sentence, your fingernail will have grown one nanometer. That's one-billionth of a meter, and it represents the scale at which electronics must be built if the march toward miniaturization is to continue.

An international team of researchers say they have shown how control over materials on this tiny scale can be extended to create complex patterns important in the production of nano-electronics.


Large arrays of bent lines can be formed with perfection by the directed self-assembly process. (Credit: Mark Stoykovich and Paul Nealey)
About two years ago, a team led by Paul Nealey, a professor of chemical and biological engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW), demonstrated a lithographic technique for creating patterns in the chemistry of polymeric materials used as templates for nanomanufacturing. They deposited a film of block copolymers on a chemically patterned surface such that the molecules arranged themselves to replicate the underlying pattern without imperfections.

That technique works well for creating templates that are neatly ordered in periodic arrays, said Nealey, who directs the university's new Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center on Templated Synthesis and Assembly at the Nanoscale, which is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF).

"But one of the challenges of nanofabrication is integrating these self-assembling materials, that naturally form periodic structures, into existing manufacturing strategies," Nealey said. "Engineers create microelectronics under free-form design principles. Not everything fits neatly into an array. This new technique directs the assembly of blends of block copolymers and homopolymers on chemically nanopatterned substrates. The result is the creation of structures with non-regular geometries. We've now potentially harnessed the fine control over structure dimensions, afforded by self-assembling materials, to allow for the production of complex nano-electronic devices."

That kind of control is critical if computer architects are to continue advancing by Moore's Law. In 1965, Gordon Moore noted the exponential growth in the number of transistors per integrated circuit and predicted the trend would continue. It has. About every 18 months, the number of transistors in computer chips doubles. By decreasing the size of these components and, consequently, fitting more of them onto a single chip, computer speed and power improves. But before long, existing technology will run out of room.

Current manufacturing processes employing chemically amplified lithography techniques achieve dimensions as small as 50 to 70 nanometers, but that technology might not be extendable as feature dimensions shrink below 30 nanometers.

By merging the latest principles of lithography and self-assembly block-copolymer techniques, researchers at UW-Madison and the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland developed a hybrid approach that maximizes the benefits and minimizes the limitations of each approach to nanomanufacturing.

"These new self-assembly materials used in conjunction with the most advanced exposure tools may enable the extension of current manufacturing practices to dimensions of 10 nanometers and less," said Mark Stoykovich, a chemical and biological engineering graduate student and co-author of the paper describing the work (Science, June 3).

The team includes Nealey, Stoykovich, graduate student Erik Edwards, former postdoctoral researcher Sang Ouk Kim, UW-Madison Chemical and Biological Engineering Professor Juan de Pablo, UW Physics Associate Professor Marcus Mueller, and Harun Solak of the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland. The group conducted its work at the Center for NanoTechnology at UW-Madison's Synchrotron Radiation Center. It was funded in part by Semiconductor Research Corp. and the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center.

For more information, visit: www.engr.wisc.edu


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Published: June 2005
Glossary
photonics
The technology of generating and harnessing light and other forms of radiant energy whose quantum unit is the photon. The science includes light emission, transmission, deflection, amplification and detection by optical components and instruments, lasers and other light sources, fiber optics, electro-optical instrumentation, related hardware and electronics, and sophisticated systems. The range of applications of photonics extends from energy generation to detection to communications and...
Basic Scienceblock copolymersindustriallithographic techniquenanomanufacturingNews & Featuresphotonicspolymeric materialsUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison

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