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Saturday, October 25, 2008 : 0330 Hrs       
Sci. & Tech.
Denser, more powerful computer chips possible with plasmonic lenses that 'fly' 

Berkeley: Engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, are reporting a 
new way of creating computer chips that could revitalize optical lithography,
a patterning technique that dominates modern integrated circuits manufacturing, 
according to a press release issued by EurekAlert. 

By combining metal lenses that focus light through the excitation of electrons 
- or plasmons - on the lens' surface with a "flying head" that resembles
the stylus on the arm of an old-fashioned LP turntable and is similar to those 
used in hard disk drives, the researchers were able to create line patterns
only 80 nanometers wide at speeds up to 12 meters per second, with the 
potential for higher resolution detail in the near future. 

"Utilizing this plasmonic nanolithography, we will be able to make current 
microprocessors more than 10 times smaller, but far more powerful," said Xiang
Zhang, UC Berkeley professor of mechanical engineering and head of the research 
team behind this development. "This technology could also lead to ultra-high
density disks that can hold 10 to 100 times more data than disks today." 

Zhang worked jointly on the project with David Bogy, UC Berkeley professor of 
mechanical engineering. The study now appears online in Nature Nanotechnology,
and is scheduled for the journal's December print issue. 

The process of optical lithography shares some of the same principles as film 
photography, which creates pictures by exposing film in a camera to light,
and then developing the film using chemical solutions. In the semiconductor 
industry, optical lithography is a process in which light is transferred through
a mask with the desired circuit pattern onto a photosensitive material, or 
photoresist, that reacts chemically when exposed. The material then goes through
a series of chemical baths to etch the circuit design onto a wafer. 

"With optical lithography, or photolithography, you can instantly project a 
complex circuit design onto a silicon wafer," said Liang Pan, a UC Berkeley
graduate student working with Zhang and Bogy, and one of three co-lead authors 
of the Nature Nanotechnology paper. "However, the resolution possible with
this technique is limited by the fundamental nature of light. To get a smaller 
feature size, you must use shorter and shorter light wavelengths, which
dramatically increases the cost of manufacturing. Also, light has a diffraction 
limit restricting how small it can be focused. Currently, the minimum feature
size with conventional photolithography is about 35 nanometers, but our 
technique is capable of a much higher resolution at a relatively low cost." 

The UC Berkeley researchers chose a different approach to overcome the 
diffraction limit of light. They took advantage of a well-known property of 
metals:
the presence at the surface of free electrons that oscillate when exposed to 
light. These oscillations, which absorb and generate light, are known as 
evanescent
waves and are much smaller than the wavelength of light. 

The engineers designed a silver plasmonic lens with concentric rings that 
concentrate the light to a hole in the center where it exits on the other side.
In the experiment, the hole was less than 100 nanometers in diameter, but it 
can theoretically be as small as 5 to 10 nanometers. The researchers packed
the lenses into a flying plasmonic head, so-called because it would "fly" above 
the photoresist surface during the lithography process. 

Similar flying heads have been developed at UC Berkeley's Computer Mechanics 
Laboratory, which is directed by Bogy. "Flying heads support the phenomenal
advances in data storage in hard disk drives," said Bogy. "They enable the fast 
speeds and nanometer accuracy required in this potentially new approach
to semiconductor manufacturing." 

The researchers said the flying head design could potentially hold as many as 
100,000 lenses, enabling parallel writing for even faster production. 

The researchers compared this flying plasmonic head to the arm and stylus of an 
LP turntable, with the photoresist surface spinning like a record. Instead
of a needle moving along the grooves of a spinning record, however, the flying 
plasmonic head contains a nanometer-scale optical stylus that "writes" onto
the spinning surface of the photoresist without actually touching it. 

Because the light from plasmons decays less than 100 nanometers from the metal 
surface, the photoresist material must be placed very close to the lens.
To accommodate this limitation, the researchers designed an air bearing that 
uses the aerodynamic lift force created by the spinning to help keep the two
surfaces a mere 20 nanometers apart. 

Air bearings are used to create magnetic tapes and disk drives, but this is the 
first application for a plasmonic lens. 

With this innovative setup, the engineers demonstrated scanning speeds of 4 to 
12 meters per second. 

"The speed and distances we're talking about here are equivalent to a Boeing 
747 flying 2 millimeters above the ground," added Zhang. "Moreover, this 
distance
is kept constant, even when the surface is not perfectly flat." 

The researchers pointed out that a typical photolithography tool used for chip 
manufacturing costs $20 million, and a set of lithography masks can run $1
million. One of the reasons for the great expense is the use of shorter light 
wavelengths to create higher resolution circuitry. Shorter wavelengths require
nontraditional and costly mirrors and lenses. 

The system described by the UC Berkeley engineers uses surface plasmons that 
have much shorter wavelengths than light, yet are excitable by typical 
ultraviolet
light sources with much longer wavelengths. The researchers estimate that a 
lithography tool based upon their design could be developed at a small fraction
of the cost of current lithography tools. 

Other alternatives have been developed that can achieve higher resolution than 
conventional photolithography and without the need for a lithography mask.
However, those techniques - electron beam lithography, scanning probe 
lithography and focused ion-beam lithography - work at a snail's pace compared 
to
the flying plasmonic lens system, said the UC Berkeley researchers. 

Zhang noted that the flying head design is not limited to plasmonic lenses. His 
lab has been developing metamaterials - composite materials capable of bending
electromagnetic waves in extraordinary ways - into lenses that can be used for 
nano-optic imaging and other applications. 

"I expect in three to five years we could see industrial implementation of this 
technology," said Zhang. "This could be used in microelectronics manufacturing
or for optical data storage and provide resolution that is 10 to 20 times 
higher than current blu-ray technology." 

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