INDUSTRY
NEWS
'Round The Circuit
Lab:
films to meet map goals
Thin
barrier films will satisfy the tight requirements defined in the semiconductor
industry's technological roadmap, Infineon Technologies reports. The German
chipmaker says its researchers recently shrunk film thicknesses to nanotechnology
dimensions in order to demonstrate the ability of thin films to meet the
metallization needs of next-generation devices. Specifically, the results
indicate that the films will meet the electrical and functional targets
all the way to the end of the International Technology Roadmap for
Semiconductors in 2016, Infineon says.
In
testing the scaling limits of Ta/TaN barrier technology, a team at Infineon's
Munich Research Labs assessed the integration of metallic films required
to keep copper metal lines from diffusing into the transistors underneath
device wiring. Working at film thicknesses below 2 nm, the researchers
also stretched the capability of current deposition techniques, Infineon
notes.
SEMI
releases 13 standards
Best
practices for welding fluid-distribution systems in fabs and guidelines
for calculating factory efficiency are among a set of 13 new standards
published by SEMI. The technical standards cover areas of both semiconductor
and flat-panel display (FPD) manufacturing. The new benchmarks are part
of the July 2003 publication cycle. SEMI publishes standards three times
per year and has released more than 620 standards over the past 30 years.
The
new releases "will provide further cost savings and economies of scale
for the semiconductor and FPD manufacturing industries," says Bruce Gehman,
SEMI's vice president of standards and CTO.
Participants
from equipment suppliers, device houses, and other companies developed
the 13 standards. The benchmarks also cover a guideline for gas compatibility
with silicon used in gas distribution components, a specification for
round 150-mm polished monocrystalline wafers, and a provisional specification
for equipment self-description. All are available in CD-ROM format. They
also can be downloaded from SEMI's Web site at www.semi.org.
Maskless
tool called success
A
new maskless lithography tool has created patterns at geometries as small
as 50 nm, the tool's manufacturer claims. Mapper Lithography of Delft,
The Netherlands, says the first tests of its multibeam, maskless technology
show that the technique is suitable for making ICs at the 45-nm technology
node. The company unveiled the results of the tests in a technical paper
presented at the 3BEAMS conference in Tampa, FL, in late May.
The
company takes its name from the system it developed, which stands for
multiaperture pixel-by-pixel enhancement of resolution. The system's microlens
array contains at least 13,000 light sources. Launched in 2002, the start-up
plans to introduce a maskless tool by the end of 2005 or the beginning
of 2006.
Motorola
gets 'flash' tool
A
lithography start-up with a new type of technology has shipped its first
working tool to Motorola Labs. Molecular Imprints of Austin, TX, makes
the system, called the Imprio 100, which Motorola will use for advanced
research in areas such as novel devices, compound semiconductors, and
molecular electronics.
Motorola
and Molecular Imprints have worked together for two years in order to
develop a working tool. The step-and-flash imprint system can create images
at the sub-100-nm level, the supplier says. The bilayer technique uses
a low-viscosity liquid etch barrier deposited on an underlying transfer
layer. A rigid and transparent template permits UV curing of the etch
barrier and the use of standard layer-to-layer alignment techniques.
The
step-and-repeat process operates at approximately one-tenth of the cost
of standard projection-based lithography, the company says. The system
works at room temperature and in a low-pressure environment. The first-generation
tool now at Motorola's research arm handles wafers up to 200 mm. A next-generation
system due in 2004 should offer throughputs operating at production volumes,
Molecular Imprints says.
Professors
Grant Wilson and S.V. Sreenivasan of the University of Texas in Austin
developed the step-and-flash imprint technology. Molecular Imprints has
an exclusive license to develop and use the technology. (For more on
nanoimprint litho, see the lead story
in Industry News in MICRO's June 2003 issue.)
IEST
publishes outgassing RP
IEST
has released a new recommended practice (RP) covering outgassed organic
compounds. Method for Characterizing Outgassed Organic Compounds from
Cleanroom Materials and Components (IEST-RP-CC031.1) offers users
a technique for the preliminary screening of the compounds.
The
RP describes a test method for semiqualitative characterization of organic
compounds released from materials or components exposed to air in cleanrooms
and other controlled environments. The practice detects outgassed compounds
using dynamic headspace gas chromatography mass spectrometry. IEST
Working Group WG-CC031 developed the document under the chairmanship of
Victor K. F. Chia. IEST-RP-CC031.1 is available at www.iest.org
or at publicationsales@iest.org.
The institute's number is 847/255-1561.

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