• Toward ever-more powerful microchips and

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tuesday, March 08, 2022 21:30:38
    Toward ever-more powerful microchips and supercomputers

    Date:
    March 8, 2022
    Source:
    DOE/Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    Summary:
    A look at the process to extend 'Moore's law,' which has doubled
    the number of transistors that can be packed on a microchip roughly
    every two years, and develop new ways to produce more capable,
    efficient, and cost- effective chips.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The information age created over nearly 60 years has given the world
    the internet, smart phones and lightning-fast computers. Making this
    possible has been the doubling of the number of transistors that can
    be packed onto a computer chip roughly every two years, giving rise to
    billions of atomic-scale transistors that now fit on a fingernail-sized
    chip. Such "atomic scale" lengths are so tiny that individual atoms can
    be seen and counted in them.


    ========================================================================== Physical limit With this doubling now rapidly approaching a physical
    limit, the U.S.

    Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL)
    has joined industry efforts to extend the process and develop new ways to produce ever-more capable, efficient, and cost-effective chips. Laboratory scientists have now accurately predicted through modeling a key step in atomic-scale chip fabrication in the first PPPL study under a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with Lam Research Corp.,
    a world-wide supplier of chip-making equipment.

    "This would be one little piece in the whole process," said David Graves, associate laboratory director for low-temperature plasma surface
    interactions, a professor in the Princeton Department of Chemical
    and Biological Engineering and co-author of a paper that outlines
    the findings in the Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B. Insights
    gained through modeling, he said, "can lead to all sorts of good things,
    and that's why this effort at the Lab has got some promise." While the shrinkage can't go on much longer, "it hasn't completely reached an end,"
    he said. "Industry has been successful to date in using mainly empirical methods to develop innovative new processes but a deeper fundamental understanding will speed this process. Fundamental studies take time
    and require expertise industry does not always have," he said. "This
    creates a strong incentive for laboratories to take on the work."
    The PPPL scientists modeled what is called "atomic layer etching"
    (ALE), an increasingly critical fabrication step that aims to remove
    single atomic layers from a surface at a time. This process can be used
    to etch complex three- dimensional structures with critical dimensions
    that are thousands of times thinner than a human hair into a film on a
    silicon wafer.

    Basic agreement "The simulations basically agreed with experiments as a
    first step and could lead to improved understanding of the use of ALE for atomic-scale etching," said Joseph Vella, a post-doctoral fellow at PPPL
    and lead author of the journal paper. Improved understanding will enable
    PPPL to investigate such things as the extent of surface damage and the
    degree of roughness developed during ALE, he said, "and this all starts
    with building our fundamental understanding of atomic layer etching."
    The model simulated the sequential use of chlorine gas and argon plasma
    ions to control the silicon etch process on an atomic scale. Plasma,
    or ionized gas, is a mixture consisting of free electrons, positively
    charged ions and neutral molecules. The plasma used in semiconductor
    device processing is near room temperature, in contrast to the ultra-hot
    plasma used in fusion experiments.

    "A surprise empirical finding from Lam Research was that the ALE process
    became particularly effective when the ion energies were quite a bit
    higher than the ones we started with," Graves said. "So that will be
    our next step in the simulations -- to see if we can understand what's happening when the ion energy is much higher and why it's so good."
    Going forward, "the semiconductor industry as a whole is contemplating
    a major expansion in the materials and the types of devices to be used,
    and this expansion will also have to be processed with atomic scale
    precision," he said.

    "The U.S. goal is to lead the world in using science to tackle important industrial problems," he said, "and our work is part of that." This study
    was partially supported by the DOE Office of Science. Coauthors included
    David Humbird of DWH Consulting in Centennial, Colorado.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    DOE/Princeton_Plasma_Physics_Laboratory. Original written by John
    Greenwald. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Joseph R. Vella, David Humbird, David B. Graves. Molecular
    dynamics study
    of silicon atomic layer etching by chorine gas and argon
    ions. Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B, 2022; 40 (2):
    023205 DOI: 10.1116/ 6.0001681 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220308105151.htm

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