Saturday, October 3, 2009

News from Semiconductor International


Intel PMOS Top 5Intel Ramping 32 nm Manufacturing in Oregon
Intel is shipping "large numbers" of 32 nm samples of its Westmere processor to PC vendors for system testing, said Intel Senior Fellow Mark Bohr. "The 32 nm process is certified, and we are loading up our first factory in support of planned Q4 revenue production," he said.more » » » 
Samsung Austin fabSamsung Upgrading Austin NAND Fab
Samsung said it will convert an older 200 mm DRAM fab in Austin into a copper BEOL for the adjacent 300 mm NAND fab. The upgraded Austin fab will be ready for 3X NAND production as early as late 2010.more » » » 
Applied Materials Orders Increased for Wafer Fab EquipmentApplied Sees Jump in Equipment Orders
Applied Materials said orders for wafer fab equipment spiked in the final month of its third fiscal quarter, ending July 26. Foundries increased spending sharply. CEO Mike Splinter said display manufacturers also are looking at better times, driven by flat panel television sales. Sales for the quarter improved to $1.13B. more » » » 
Chartered Fabs Top Graphic (090809Chartered330.jpg)ATIC to Acquire Chartered, Combine It With GlobalFoundries
The Advanced Technology Investment Co. LLC (ATIC, Abu Dhabi) said it will pay ~$3.9B to acquire Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing Ltd. (Singapore). The addition of Chartered comes just six months after the formation of GlobalFoundries, whose CEO Doug Grose will head up the combined operation. more » » » 
HD Microsystems adhesives3-D IC Technology Continues to Advance
Despite the downturn, several companies announced 3-D interconnect-related advances at SEMICON West. NEC Electronics, CEA-Leti, EV Group, Soitec and others had 3-D news at the show.more » » » 
MEMS applications (081909sandia330.jpg)MEMS Packaging Headed to Wafer Level
MEMS packaging may take an evolutionary leap forward into wafer-level packaging, driven by large IDMs and foundries, analysts said. "The big fabs may end up being the ones doing the innovative MEMS packaging," said Ken Gilleo, founder of packaging consultancy ET-Trends. more » » » 
Day 1 Testimony in TSMC vs. SMIC trialTSMC Hears Charges of IP Leaks, FUD Campaign in Trial With SMIC
In the first full day of testimony in the TSMC vs. SMIC intellectual property trial, TSMC was accused of IP leaks to customers and a series of anti-SMIC "FUD" campaign efforts. TSMC North America president Rick Cassidy spent much of the day on the stand, defending TSMC against allegations raised by SMIC attorney Matthew Reed. more » » » 

Alan Allan, IRTSThis Year, Entire Roadmap Changes
The ITRS will see a new edition go online in December. To get ready, participants met in San Francisco for the ITRS Summer Public Conference held during SEMICON West. New materials and devices are being readied to extend CMOS and to prepare the industry for the day when charge-based devices run out of steam. more » » » 
ST's CIS is in full production with TSV 3-D interconnects.ST-Ericsson Taking 3-D to Mobile Phones
ST-Ericsson has a roadmap for commercial wireless products that includes what could be the first true 3-D ICs using TSVs. The memory-logic stack also will move to 3-D interconnects, driven by "the increased bandwidth required by the final application," said Yan Guillou, an ST-Ericsson manager. more » » » 
Nemotek TechnologieWafer-Level Packaging in Africa?
Yes, Africa. Nemotek Technologie is manufacturing wafer-level optics and packaging in its state-of-the-art facility located in Morocco's Rabat Technopolis Park. more » » » 
Intel's dual-core Atom processorOptical Lithography Is Still the Technology to Beat
Although EUV lithography is widely considered the prime candidate for post-optical lithography, the only available option to support 15 nm logic development in 2011-2012 is 193 nm immersion lithography with pitch division, said Yan Borodovsky, Intel's director of advanced lithography. more » » » 
Chipworks, Samsung CISChipworks Inside Angle: DSLR Image Sensor Innovation -- Who Is Challenging Canon and Nikon's Lead?
Chipworks' Image Sensor Sector Analyst Ray Fontaine blogs about teardowns of new image sensors from Panasonic, Pentax and others, which are challenging the twin DSLR giants, Canon and Nikon. more » » » 
Marco Mora deposition in TSMC vs. SMICMora Grilled in TSMC vs. SMIC Deposition
Marco Mora, now the COO at SMIC, was deposed in video testimony taken in Shanghai, China, about alleged transfers of process recipes in 2000 and 2001 from TSMC. The deposition was shown to the jury Monday in the TSMC vs. SMIC civil trial being held in Oakland, Calif.more » » » 
SMIC TS (091009SMIC330.jpg)TSMC vs. SMIC Trial Commences in Oakland
The intellectual property trial between TSMC and SMIC began last Wednesday with opening remarks by attorneys. The two companies entered into a comprehensive legal settlement in 2005, with SMIC paying TSMC $175M to resolve allegations that SMIC obtained TSMC's process recipes and other trade secrets. However, further conflicts between the rival foundries resulted in the current lawsuit. more » » » 
Hitachi MEMS (090309MEMS330.jpg)Hitachi Creates MEMS Sensor Process
Hitachi researchers have developed a method to form cavities in the interconnect layers of CMOS ICs, allowing MEMS sensors to be created in the wiring layers. The technology results in ultrasmall, single-chip solutions, and will be applied to tire pressure sensors and other MEMS devices, Hitachi said. more » » » 
GlobalFoundries Fab 2GlobalFoundries Breaks Ground in Malta
GlobalFoundries held a groundbreaking ceremony for Fab 2 in Malta, N.Y. The foundry's goal is to have the first tool move in by October 2011, with qualification coming in early 2012 and commercial production by the second half of 2012. The event marks "a significant shift in momentum" for chip manufacturing in the United States, said Norm Armour, Fab 2 general manager. more » » » 
3-D Integration - Wafer newsletterEvaluating the Risks and Benefits of 3-D Technology
In this article from Pol Marchal and Mieke Van Bavel of IMEC, the authors show how a pathfinding methodology, a virtual chip design flow and an associated tool chain can be combined to help find the 
3-D manufacturing technology/design sweetspot. more » » » 

Friday, October 2, 2009

Fabrication of low-cost electronic biosensors

aDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stauffer III, 381 North-South Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-5025, USA

bCenter for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM 87185, USA


Available online 25 September 2009. 

The fabrication of miniaturized, low-cost, flexible sensors based on organic electronics via high-throughput techniques (e.g. printing) is expected to provide important benefits for applications in chemical and biological detection. The rapid maturation of synthetic methodology in the field of organic electronics has lead to the creation of new materials at an incredible rate and an increased understanding of semiconductor-analyte interactions. Owing to these advances, we have seen steady improvements in sensitivity, stability, and specificity, in addition to the detection of a wide range of chemical analytes. In this review, we address the fabrication, challenges, and sensor performance of organic transistor-based detection devices with an outlook toward developing sensors capable of operating in biologically relevant media.

Article Outline

Organic thin-film transistors
General OTFT fabrication approaches
OTFT Sensor operation
Material considerations for OTFT sensors
General approaches for sensor selectivity
Towards in-situ biosensors
Conclusions and outlook
References

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

R&D Pushes c-Si Solar Cells Through Hurdles

from Semiconductor International

IMEC i-PERC solar cell TS (092509imecTS330jpg.jpg)
Although crystalline silicon solar cells continue to dominate the photovoltaics market, they face any number of challenges to sustained growth, stemming from increasing pricing pressures. Researchers are working on several novel concepts to meet the challenges. more » » » 

Friday, September 25, 2009

SiC Devices Are a Long Time Coming

from Semiconductor International
SiC Devices TS (092409PR-PV-SiCTS330.jpg)
According to a report released today from Yole Developpement, the power electronics industry is still waiting for silicon carbide-based transistors. Today, the total accessible market for SiC devices is $2.6B, part of the overall $12B silicon-based power discrete business in 2008. The substrate market is dominated by Cree, followed by II-VI and SiCrystal. more » » » 

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

IBM Readies 32 nm eDRAM With Low Latency

News from Semiconductor International

IBM 32 nm (092109IBMeDRAM330.jpg)
IBM unveiled a 32 nm SOI embedded DRAM, and will provide details at the upcoming IEDM in December. Gary Patton, vice president for IBM's SRDC, said the SOI eDRAM has latency and cycle times of less than 2 ns, uses 4 times less standby power, and has "up to a 1000 times lower soft-error rate (SER), better power savings, and reliability comparable to a similar SRAM." more » » » 

Friday, September 11, 2009

Photovoltaics Report

from Semiconductor International

Paula Mints, Navigant ConsultingSolar Outlooks: Doom and Gloom, an Overreaction
In her latest blog, Navigant's Paula Mints reassures readers that, despite what will be a couple slow years ahead, the solar business will continue on its profitable path. more » » » 
showa shell (090909showa.jpg)Showa Shell to Convert Display Fab to Module Manufacturing
Japan-based oil company Showa Shell said it will convert a now-empty Hitachi plasma display factory to CIS module production, investing ~$1.1B to establish its third solar production facility. The converted plant is expected to begin operations in 2H 2011, with 900 MW worth of capacity, making it one of the largest PV fabs worldwide. more » » » 
Wu Bangguo, chairman of the standing committee of the National People's Congress (090809FirstSolar_0908_2.jpg)First Solar Wins Major PV Order in China
In an announcement that is significant on several levels, U.S.-based First Solar Inc. announced a memorandum of understanding (MOU) for what is the world's biggest power plant project to date, to be built in China's Mongolian desert. more » » » 

Teenager Invents $38 Solar Panel Made With Human Hair
A new type of solar panel could provide the world with cheap, green electricity, believes its teenage inventor, Milan Karki, who comes from a village in rural Nepal. The young inventor says human hair is easy to use as a conductor in solar panels, and could revolutionize renewable energy, reports Britain's Daily Mail. more » » » 
Fab2Farm TS (091009Fab2Farm330.jpg)PV Model Provides Local Clean Energy Blueprint
Applied Materials has developed a business model for solar deployment designed to bring cost-effective, utility-scale solar power generation capability to local areas while stimulating economic development. Baptized the fab2farm model, it represents a complete regional ecosystem. more » » » 
GT Solar Opens Asia Headquarters in China
U.S.-based solar equipment provider GT Solar has officially opened an Asia headquarters in Shanghai, China, to better serve a region where business has been growing for the past few years. more » » » 

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Molecular Imprints Takes Template Replication to HDD Production

from Semiconductor International

MII Top Story Shot (090209Imprints330.jpg)Molecular Imprints Inc. today introduced the Perfecta TR1100 template replication system to the hard disk drive industry, providing for significant reductions in the time and cost needed for high-density disk production. Mask and HDD maker Hoya has placed one of two orders received already.more » » » 

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