Hi
Our world is full of integrated circuits. You find several of them in
computers. For example, most people have probably heard about the
microprocessor.
The microprocessor is an integrated circuit that processes all
information in the computer. It keeps track of what keys are pressed and
if the mouse has
been moved. It counts numbers and runs programs, games and the operating
system. Integrated circuits are also found in almost every modern
electrical device
such as cars, television sets, CD players, cellular phones, etc. But
what is an integrated circuit and what is the history behind it?
   
Electric Circuits
   
The integrated circuit is nothing more than a very advanced electric
circuit. An electric circuit is made from different electrical
components such as transistors,
resistors, capacitors and diodes, that are connected to each other in
different ways. These components have different behaviors.
 
The transistor acts like a switch. It can turn electricity on or off, or
it can amplify current. It is used for example in computers to store
information,
or in stereo amplifiers to make the sound signal stronger.
 
The resistor limits the flow of electricity and gives us the possibility
to control the amount of current that is allowed to pass. Resistors are
used, among
other things, to control the volume in television sets or radios.
 
The capacitor collects electricity and releases it all in one quick
burst; like for instance in cameras where a tiny battery can provide
enough energy to
fire the flashbulb.
 
The diode stops electricity under some conditions and allows it to pass
only when these conditions change. This is used in, for example,
photocells where
a light beam that is broken triggers the diode to stop electricity from
flowing through it.
 
These components are like the building blocks in an electrical
construction kit. Depending on how the components are put together when
building the circuit,
everything from a burglar alarm to a computer microprocessor can be
constructed.
 
  
The Transistor vs. the Vacuum Tube
 
The vacuum tube and the transistor.
ENIAC-The first digital computer
Of the components mentioned above, the transistor is the most important
one for the development of modern computers. Before the transistor,
engineers had
to use vacuum tubes. Just as the transistor, the vacuum tube can switch
electricity on or off, or amplify a current. So why was the vacuum tube
replaced
by the transistor? There are several reasons.
 
The vacuum tube looks and behaves very much like a light bulb; it
generates a lot of heat and has a tendency to burn out. Also, compared
to the transistor
it is slow, big and bulky.
 
When engineers tried to build complex circuits using the vacuum tube,
they quickly became aware of its limitations. The first digital computer
ENIAC, for
example, was a huge monster that weighed over thirty tons, and consumed
200 kilowatts of electrical power. It had around 18,000 vacuum tubes
that constantly
burned out, making it very unreliable.
 
When the transistor was invented in 1947 it was considered a revolution.
Small, fast, reliable and effective, it quickly replaced the vacuum
tube. Freed
from the limitations of the vacuum tube, engineers finally could begin
to realize the electrical constructions of their dreams, or could they?
 
  
The Tyranny of Numbers
   
With the small and effective transistor at their hands, electrical
engineers of the 50s saw the possibilities of constructing far more
advanced circuits
than before. However, as the complexity of the circuits grew, problems
started arising.
 
When building a circuit, it is very important that all connections are
intact. If not, the electrical current will be stopped on its way
through the circuit,
making the circuit fail. Before the integrated circuit, assembly workers
had to construct circuits by hand, soldering each component in place and
connecting
them with metal wires. Engineers soon realized that manually assembling
the vast number of tiny components needed in, for example, a computer
would be
impossible, especially without generating a single faulty connection.
 
Another problem was the size of the circuits. A complex circuit, like a
computer, was dependent on speed. If the components of the computer were
too large
or the wires interconnecting them too long, the electric signals
couldn't travel fast enough through the circuit, thus making the
computer too slow to
be effective.
 
So there was a problem of numbers. Advanced circuits contained so many
components and connections that they were virtually impossible to build.
This problem
was known as the tyranny of numbers.
 
  
Jack Kilby's Chip - the Monolithic Idea

In the summer of 1958 Jack Kilby at Texas Instruments found a solution
to this problem. He was newly employed and had been set to work on a
project to build
smaller electrical circuits. However, the path that Texas Instruments
had chosen for its miniaturization project didn't seem to be the right
one to Kilby.
 
Because he was newly employed, Kilby had no vacation like the rest of
the staff. Working alone in the lab, he saw an opportunity to find a
solution of his
own to the miniaturization problem. Kilby's idea was to make all the
components and the chip out of the same block (monolith) of
semiconductor material.
When the rest of the workers returned from vacation, Kilby presented his
new idea to his superiors. He was allowed to build a test version of his
circuit.
In September 1958, he had his first integrated circuit ready. It was
tested and it worked perfectly!
 
Although the first integrated circuit was pretty crude and had some
problems, the idea was groundbreaking. By making all the parts out of
the same block
of material and adding the metal needed to connect them as a layer on
top of it, there was no more need for individual discrete components. No
more wires
and components had to be assembled manually. The circuits could be made
smaller and the manufacturing process could be automated.
 
Jack Kilby is probably most famous for his invention of the integrated
circuit, for which he received the Nobel Prize in Physics in the year
2000. After
his success with the integrated circuit Kilby stayed with Texas
Instruments and, among other things, he led the team that invented the
hand-held calculator.
 
  
Robert Noyce
 
Robert Noyce came up with his own idea for the integrated circuit. He
did it half a year later than Jack Kilby. Noyce's circuit solved several
practical
problems that Kilby's circuit had, mainly the problem of interconnecting
all the components on the chip. This was done by adding the metal as a
final layer
and then removing some of it so that the wires needed to connect the
components were formed. This made the integrated circuit more suitable
for mass production.
Besides being one of the early pioneers of the integrated circuit,
Robert Noyce also was one of the co-founders of Intel. Intel is one of
the largest manufacturers
of integrated circuits in the world.
  
Chip Production Today - in Short
 
Stepping.
  
Chip production today is based on photolithography. In photolithography
a high energy UV-light is shone through a mask onto a slice of silicon
covered with
a photosensitive film. The mask describes the parts of the chip and the
UV-light will only hit the areas not covered by the mask. When the film
is developed,
the areas hit by light are removed. Now the chip has unprotected and
protected areas forming a pattern that is the first step to the final
components of
the chip.
 
Next, the unprotected areas are processed so their electrical properties
change. A new layer of material is added, and the entire process is then
repeated
to build the circuit, layer by layer. When all the components have been
made and the circuit is complete a layer of metal is added. Just as
before, a layer
of photosensitive film is applied and exposed through a mask. However,
this time the mask used describes the layout of the wires connecting all
the parts
of the chip. The film is developed and the unexposed parts are removed.
Next, the metal not protected with film is removed to form the wires.
Finally,
the chip is tested and packaged.
 
When making chips today, a process called "stepping" is often used. On a
big wafer of silicon the chips are made one next to the other. The
silicon wafer
is moved in steps under the mask and the UV-light to expose the wafer.
In this way, chip after chip can be made using the same mask each time.
 
Below is a more sequential description of the process of making a modern
integrated circuit. But let us first take a look at the special place
where integrated
circuits are produced - the clean room.
 
  
The Clean Room

The sizes of the components on chips produced in a modern chip
fabrication plant are extremely small. For a better understanding of how
small they are,
pick a hair from your head and cut it in half. Now look at the cross
section. On this tiny area, hard to see with the bare eye, you can fit
thousands of
modern transistors.
 
With sizes this small, the production of a chip demands precision at an
atomic level. Tiny particles like a hair, a speck of dust, a dead skin
cell, bacteria
or even the single particles in tobacco smoke become huge objects that
are big enough to ruin a chip.
 
Therefore, chip production takes place in a clean room. This is a
specially designed room, where furniture is built from special materials
that don't give
off particles, and where extremely effective air filters and air
circulation systems change the air completely up to ten times a minute.
 
To further prevent contamination, workers wear special suits called
"bunny suits." These protective outfits are made of ultra clean material
and sometimes
have their own air filtering systems.
   
Chip Production Today - in Detail
   
 
Building an integrated circuit like a computer chip is a very complex
process. It is divided into two major parts, front end and back end. In
the front
end, you make the components of the circuit. In the back end, you add
metal to connect the components and then you test and package the chip.
Below is
a simplified description of the steps.
   
Front End - Construction of the Components
  
1.
Just as in building a house, you need a construction plan to construct a
chip. The construction plans for the chip are made and tested with a
computer.
  
2.
>From the construction plans, masks with the circuit patterns are made.
  
3.
Under precisely monitored conditions, a pure silicon crystal is grown.
Circuit manufacturing demands the use of crystals with an extremely high
grade of
perfection.
  
4.
The silicon is sawed into thin wafers with a diamond saw. The wafers are
then polished in a number of steps until their surface has a perfect
mirror-like
finish.
  
5.
The silicon wafer is covered with a layer of insulating silicon oxide.
  
6.
A covering film of protective material is put on top of the insulating
silicon oxide. This material, a bit like the film in any ordinary
camera, is sensitive
to light.
 
 
 
7.
UV-light is shone through a mask and onto the chip. On the parts of the
chip that are hit by light, the protective material breaks apart.
 
 
 
8.
The wafer is developed, rinsed and baked. The development process
removes the parts of the protective material exposed to light.
  
 
9.
The wafer is treated with chemicals in a process called "etching." This
removes the unprotected insulating material, creating a pattern of
non-protected
silicon wafer parts surrounded by areas protected by silicon oxide.
  
 
10.
The wafer is run through a process that alters the electrical properties
of the unprotected areas of the wafer. This process is called "doping."
Steps 5-10
are repeated to build the integrated circuit, layer by layer. Other
layers of conducting or isolating layers may also be added to make the
components.
   
Back End - Adding the Connecting Wires
  
11.
Finally, when all the components of the chip are ready, metal is added
to connect the components to each other in a process called
metalization. This is
done in a way similar to the making of the components. First a
conducting metal like copper is deposited over the chip.
  
12.
On top of the metal a layer of UV-sensitive photo resist is added.
 
 
 
13.
Next, a mask that describes the desired layout of the metal wires
connecting the components of the chip is used. UV-light is shone through
this mask. The
light hits the photo resist that isn't protected by the mask.
 
 
 
14.
In the next step, chemicals are used to remove the photo resist hit by
UV-light.
  
 
15.
Another step of etching removes the metal not protected by photo resist.
  
 
16.
This leaves a pattern of metal that is the same as the one described by
the mask. Now, the chip has a layer of wires that connect its different
components.
  
17.
Today, most integrated circuits need more than one layer of wires.
Advanced circuits may need up to five different layers of metal to form
all the necessary
connections. In the last picture we have added another layer of metal to
our example. As you can see, a layer of insulating material is put
between the
two metal layers to prevent the wires from connecting in the wrong
places. Of course, to add the second layer we had to go through the same
steps as when
adding the first layer of metal.
 
  
18.
When the final layer of connecting metal wires have been added, the
chips on the silicon wafer are tested to see if they perform as
intended.
 
 
 
19.
The chips on the wafer are separated with a diamond saw to form
individual integrated circuits.
  
20.
Finally, each chip is packed into the protective casing and subjected to
another series of tests. The chip is now finished and ready to be
shipped to manufacturers
of digital devices around the world.
 
   
 
The Evolution of the Integrated Circuit
 
J

The integrated circuit has come a long way since Jack Kilby's first
prototype. His idea founded a new industry and is the key element behind
our computerized
society. Today the most advanced circuits contain several hundred
millions of components on an area no larger than a fingernail. The
transistors on these
chips are around 90 nm, that is 0.00009 millimeters*, which means that
you could fit hundreds of these transistors inside a red blood cell.
 
Each year computer chips become more powerful yet cheaper than the year
before. Gordon Moore, one of the early integrated circuit pioneers and
founders
of Intel once said, "If the auto industry advanced as rapidly as the
semiconductor industry, a Rolls Royce would get a half a million miles
per gallon,
and it would be cheaper to throw it away than to park it."**


**********************************************************************
This message and its attachments may contain legally
privileged or confidential information. If you are not the
intended recipient, you must not disclose or use the
information contained in it. If you have received this e-mail
in error, please notify the sender immediately by return
e-mail and delete the e-mail.

Any content of this message and its attachments which
does not relate to the official business of Eraring Energy
must be taken not to have been sent or endorsed by
Eraring Energy. No warranty is made that the e-mail or
attachment(s) are free from computer virus or other defect.
**********************************************************************



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to