NUGEX mailing list archive
Index Scientists breakthrough on Moore's Law

From: Brian Hingerty (beh_at_email.cind.ornl.gov)
Date: Fri Apr 26 2002 - 17:05:15 PDT


Scientists breakthrough on Moore's Law
By Reuters
Special to ZDNet News
April 26, 2002, 6:00 AM PT
URL: http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1103-892962.html

Scientists at Bell Labs, the research and development arm of Lucent 
Technologies, have found a way to peer deep inside a semiconductor 
and create an image of a single impurity atom in silicon, a 
development that will help scientists understand how impurities 
affect the properties of microchips.

This understanding of semiconductors at the atomic level is critical 
in devising manufacturing technologies needed to shrink the size of 
future generations of high-speed electronics, such as 
microprocessors, in a bid to keep Moore's Law on track.


Moore's Law, observed by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in 1965, 
posits that the number of transistors on a semiconductor doubles 
roughly every 18 months with a 50 percent reduction in area.

This is the first time that an individual impurity has been pictured 
in its undisturbed state within a crystal and was achieved using a 
special electron microscope, Bell Labs said, adding that such a feat 
is as difficult as seeing a footprint on the surface of the moon.

The research is described in an article published Thursday in the 
journal Nature.

The results "are important in understanding the distribution of 
impurities in silicon at an atomic level," wrote Paul Peercy, a 
professor and dean of engineering at the University of Wisconsin at 
Madison. "They will also be important in increasing our understanding 
of a wide range of complex materials."

As chips get ever smaller, it's now important both to image and 
understand the chemical and physical environment within devices, 
because those properties will ultimately determine to what lengths 
engineers will be able to shrink the sizes of transistors and 
interconnections among them in semiconductors, said Elsa Reichmanis, 
director of the materials research department at Bell Labs.

Impurities--or "dopants" as they are known--are purposefully 
introduced into silicon to provide charge carriers that control a 
chip's electrical properties. But as chip components continue to 
shrink in accordance with Moore's Law, the industry is reaching a 
point where just a few atoms of impurities could determine the 
function of a particular device, Bell Labs said.

The Bell Labs technique, which uses scanning transmission electron 
microscopy, enables scientists to view the individual dopants and 
clusters as they exist within actual devices, and will provide 
scientists with an understanding of how these impurity atoms function 
within real devices, Bell Labs said.

Previous techniques had not been able to look inside crystal.

"Now we can look at things hidden inside a solid, in their natural 
environment," said David Muller, a Bell Labs physicist. "It's as 
qualitatively different as seeing how an animal behaves in a zoo and 
how it behaves in its natural habitat."

The Bell Labs technique is extremely sensitive and can be applied to 
almost any material, not just semiconductors, Bell Labs said.

Other members of the research team were Paul Voyles, John Grazul and 
Paul Citrin of Bell Labs, and Hans Gossmann of Agere Systems.

Story Copyright © 2002 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved



-- 

Brian E. Hingerty
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Life Sciences Division
1060 Commerce Park, MS-6480, Rm 132-07
Oak Ridge, TN 37830-6480
Tel: 865-574-0844
Fax: 865-574-0004
e-mail: beh_at_ornl_dot_gov
private e-mail: behingerty_at_worldnet_dot_att_dot_net