MUCH Better than Hafnium, MUCH Better than Zirconium. Higher dielectric 
constant. From Daltonium Isotopics
   
   - Published on May 19, 2019


For years, your company has been making ICs using materials including an 
element, Hafnium, as a replacement for the silicon dioxide (SiO2) previously 
used. You did this because the SiO2 layer was getting too thin (1.2 
nanometers), which led to manufacturability problems and quantum tunnelling 
problems. 1.2 nanometers is only six diameters of a silicon atom. And if the 
insulator gets too thin, the electons go right through it. Not good if you are 
trying to minimize a chip's power consumption. And that's what the customers 
want, because they are often running memory and microprocessors using 
limited-capacity batteries.

Some smart guy figured out that if the dielectric was made employing compounds 
made with Hafnium, the dielectric constant (also called the "relative 
permittivity") could be increased from SiO2's 3.9 to about 24, a major 
improvement. This allowed you to increase the thickness of the gate insulator, 
reducing the quantum tunnelling. It also allowed you to maintain, and even 
increase gate authority over the current in the semiconductor channel: This 
means that changes in voltage of the gate have a bigger effect, changing the 
current through the semiconductor channel. That might allow a lower supply 
voltage, too. Might this drop power consumption even further?

It worked very well. Over time, minimum feature sizes went from about 60 
nanometers to today's 10 nanometers. But you want to go further. Yet, you are 
wondering where the next big material breakthrough is going to come from. Will 
you be able to maintain a semiconductor process down to 3 nanometers? How are 
you going to be able to "out-Hafnium" Hafnium?

All the chemical elements that nature provides are shown in a Periodic Table of 
the Elements. There are 92 elements up to Uranium, and only 81 of them are 
stable. (The rest are radioactive, so we don't use them.) You might imagine 
that each and every one of them has been considered, at one time or another, 
for use in semiconductor and dielectric devices. And probably that's true. If 
an element existed that would help, somebody would have found it by now. You 
think. But they haven't.

I believe you will succeed, but will do so with my help. I have just patented 
an improvement to dielectrics based on an easy-to-do substitution to the atoms 
within a Hafnium-containing dielectric, and quite possibility others as well. 
One that I believe will greatly increase the possible dielectric constant. It 
requires a simple, easy to describe change in the makeup of the chemicals used 
in a deposition machine. And a bit of redesign of your IC process, to take 
advantage of the better characteristics of the Hafnium-containing dielectric 
layer.

I found something that your best scientists and engineers didn't even consider. 
Nobody expected to find an improvement, so nobody looked. The material I found 
was always there, but just well-hidden. Hidden in plain sight, you might say. 
Like a few trees, hidden in a forest. And your people didn't think they needed 
to enter that forest.

Isotopes.

By and large, your people didn't consider isotopes. Well, neither did the rest 
of the semiconductor industry. Most engineers and even scientists usually think 
of isotopes as being atoms with different numbers of particles called 
"neutrons", and that is quite true. But that's not the only difference there is 
with some isotopes. A few special ones.

I would like to discuss this matter with some of your Semiconductor Process 
Scientists and Engineers, under an NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement). Please talk 
to them, and have them contact us. daltoniumisotopics[at]geemail [dotcom]

They, and you, need the improvements this invention can provide. Because if you 
don't use it, maybe your competitors will.

Jim Bell


Reply via email to