Category Archives: Materials and Equipment

(November 19, 2010 – Marketwire)Magnolia Solar Corporation (OTCBB: MGLT) welcomed Professor Zhong Lin (Z. L.) Wang, Distinguished Professor and Director, Center for Nanostructure Characterization at Georgia Tech, to its Technical Advisory Board (TAB). Professor Wang is a world-renowned expert in nanostructure growth and characterization of semiconductor materials and devices for energy harvesting technology.

Professor Wang has done pioneering work on Zinc Oxide (ZnO), Zinc Sulphide (ZnS) and related materials-based nanostructures, i.e. nanowires and nanorods growth technology, growth demonstration and pioneering work in its applications for energy harvesting technology and other optical sensor applications. His pioneering work in nanogenerators for energy harvesting has been recognized worldwide as one of the 10 most impacting technologies for the next 10-30 years by MIT Technology Review, New Scientist and other International publications. He is an inventor or co-inventor of many U.S. patents and has authored or co-authored more than 650 publications. Professor Wang is a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS) and American Association of Advancement of Science (AAAS).

"Magnolia has several government-funded programs in process right now and we’ll use Professor Wang’s expertise in nanostructure materials, growth technology and innovative concepts to help us accelerate the development of the critical technologies required to produce Magnolia’s high efficiency third generation solar cells. Professor Wang will also be advising us on the development of our intellectual property portfolio and in the patent filing process. Programs that Magnolia will be spending considerable effort on during the remainder of this year and throughout 2011," noted Dr. Ashok K. Sood, president and CEO of Magnolia Solar Corporation.

Magnolia is developing solar cell technology to cover the ultraviolet, visible, and infrared part of the solar spectrum with a nano-based thin-film solar cell technology. For more information, please visit www.MagnoliaSolar.com.

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(November 19, 2010) — Optically active semiconductor nanopillar arrays now absorb sunlight better than ever, thanks to research carried out at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California at Berkeley.[1] 

Nanopillar tune-up
"By tuning the shape and geometry of highly ordered nanopillar arrays of germanium or cadmium sulfide, we have been able to drastically enhance the optical absorption properties of our nanopillars," says Ali Javey, one of the researchers.

Javey and his group were the first to demonstrate a technique by which cadmium sulfide nanopillars can be mass-produced in large-scale flexible modules. In this latest work, they were able to produce nanopillars that absorb light as well or even better than commercial thin-film solar cells, using far less semiconductor material and without the need for antireflective coatings.

"To enhance the broadband optical absorption efficiency of our nanopillars, we used a novel dual-diameter structure that features a small (60 nm) diameter tip with minimal reflectance to allow more light in, and a large (130 nm) diameter base for maximal absorption to enable more light to be converted into electricity," Javey says. "This dual-diameter structure absorbed 99% of incident visible light, compared to the 85% absorption by our earlier nanopillars, which had the same diameter along their entire length."

Work has shown that 3D arrays of semiconductor nanopillars with well-defined diameter, length and pitch excel at trapping light while using less than half the semiconductor material required for thin-film solar cells made of compound semiconductors, such as cadmium telluride, and about 1% of the material used in solar cells made from bulk silicon. But until the work of Javey and his research group, fabricating such nanopillars was a complex and cumbersome procedure.

Alumina foil comes in handy
Javey and his colleagues fashioned their dual-diameter nanopillars from molds they made in 2.5-µm-thick alumina foil (see figure). A two-step anodization process was used to create an array of 1-µm-deep pores in the mold with dual diameters. Gold particles were then deposited into the pores to catalyze the growth of the semiconductor nanopillars.

The germanium nanopillars can be tuned to absorb infrared photons for highly sensitive detectors, and the cadmium sulfide/telluride nanopillars are ideal for solar cells. The fabrication technique is highly generic, Javey says; it could be used with numerous other semiconductor materials as well for specific applications. Recently, he and his group demonstrated that the cross-sectional portion of the nanopillar arrays can also be tuned to assume specific shapes–square, rectangle or circle–by changing the shape of the template.

REFERENCE:

1. Zhiyong Fan et al., Nano Letters, 10 (10), p. 3823 (2010).

Energy consumption is a growing problem, driving searches for solutions

by David Hwang, Lux Research

November 18, 2010 – Energy consumption has grown consistently since humans first burned wood to roast meat, and growth in energy usage is robust today: in just 17 years starting from 1990, total primary energy consumption worldwide has grown 31% to 456 quadrillion BTU (quads) in 2007 (see Figure 1). While the faltering of the world economy has depressed industrial production, consumer activity, and travel since 2007, it’s clear from the rise of population and energy needs in emerging economies like Brazil, China, and India that this retreat will just be a temporary hiccup. While growing energy usage has lifted living standards and helped deliver all the goods of modern life, it’s becoming clear that our ever-increasing consumption in energy is unsustainable.

Figure 1: Global primary energy consumption grew 31% between 1990-2007.

Due to the risks posed by swelling energy consumption, inventors, investors, and entrepreneurs have turned their efforts towards ways of improving energy efficiency — whether through better engines, a smarter power grid, or more economical equipment and appliances. Policymakers have thrown their support behind such goals, with efforts such as the US’s Advanced Research Projects Agency — Energy (ARPA-E), Japan’s New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO), and Germany’s National Energy Efficiency Action Plan (NEEAP). Developers of nanomaterial-based technologies are no exception, seeking to turn up ways nanoscale materials’ unique properties can help trim energy needs.

Efficiency is the path of least resistance

To avoid an energy crisis, nations like the US, Japan, and Germany could opt for one of two unpalatable choices. They can try to legally enforce conservation, which irritates many citizens who are accustomed to the benefits they gain from their energy usage. Alternatively, they can build out production capabilities for renewable energy sources, but many of these technologies are still young, and the prices of renewable energy are usually uncompetitive when subsidies are removed from the equation. There’s a third option, however: pursuing energy efficiency, which can shave off consumption without requiring austerity measures from users.

As an enabling technology for many applications, nanotechnology can be a potent tool for enhancing the efficiency of both new and existing devices and processes. While most of the attention given to nanomaterials for energy applications has been devoted to energy production and storage, there has also been much work on improving the energy outlook from the demand side as well. With a decade of serious government, corporate, and venture capital investment under its belt (see the report "Ranking the Nations on Nanotech: Hidden Havens and False Threats"), the field has generated many nano-enabled products that can improve energy efficiency and are already commercial and on the market. In this report we assess the impact of six products in particular (see Figure 2).

Figure 2: Six products rein in energy consumption in all four sectors.

Nanotech’s potential belies its size

We use the examples of the US, Germany, and Japan as three case studies to discuss the impact these nano-enabled products on energy consumption. As a starting point, we set out to quantify the total opportunity these six products posed for reducing energy consumption, assuming they achieve their full potential and 100% adoption. We found that these innovations alone could in principle reduce overall final energy consumption (FEC) in the US, Germany, and Japan by 10.9%, 13.9%, and 9.2% respectively in 2020 (see Figure 3).

Figure 3: Full adoption promises enormous impact.

Full adoption, while useful for quantifying opportunities, is an unrealistic assumption and therefore not a good indicator for the future. To provide a more accurate determination of the impacts of these products, we built reasonable adoption scenarios for the six products by dropping them into buckets for 10%, 25%, and 50% saturation points and 10-year, 20-year, and 30-year adoption cycles, and then reanalyzed their effects on energy consumption. Note that this calculation is not an attempt to precisely forecast the market, but rather to make reasonable assumptions that allowed us to provide a realistic portrait of the future.

Under these new realistic adoption scenarios, all three countries coincidentally reduce FEC by about 1.6% (see Figure 4). As was the case under full adoption assumptions, the US, Germany, and Japan all benefited differently from these six nano-enabled products. Cumulatively, reductions from lighting and from automotive lightweighting through composites had the most effect, constituting about 40% and 27% of the realized energy savings from the three countries respectively.

Figure 4: Savings are severely reduced under realistic adoption scenarios.

Worries about energy needs are growing to a fever pitch, but virtually everywhere in the world energy demand continues to rise. Meeting this demand with cleaner or more secure energy sources can help assuage some worries, but the relentless upward march of energy usage makes for an intimidating challenge. Combined with other energy efficiency measures, from the smart grid to hybrid electric vehicles, nano-enabled products can help trim away at energy needs, dropping CO2 emissions, limiting environmental impacts, and mitigating cost and security concerns around conventional energy sources. Other challenges abound, of course: the developing world’s booming energy demand will be tougher to trim; penetration of renewables will still need to accelerate to seriously dent fossil fuels’ energy dominance. But nano-enabled products that advance energy efficiency will play a strong part in managing looming energy challenges — creating solid business opportunities along the way.


David Hwang received a BSE in Bioengineering from the University of Pennsylvania and is an analyst at Lux Research Inc. His full report on nanotech’s answer to the energy problem is "Nanotech’s Answer Key to the Energy Problem ".

(November 17, 2010) — University of California, San Diego NanoEngineers won a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop the tools to manufacture biodegradable frames around which heart tissues — functional blood vessels included — will grow. Developing methods for growing tissues that mimic nature’s fine-grained details, including vasculature, could lead to breakthroughs in efforts to grow replacement cardiac tissues for people who have suffered a heart attack. The work could also lead to better systems for growing and studying cells, including stem cells, in the laboratory.

Figure 1. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of a scaffold with a honeycomb pore design that Shaochen Chen and colleagues created using an older version of Shaochen Chen’s scaffold manufacturing platform.

Professor Shaochen Chen from the UC San Diego Department of NanoEngineering is the Principal Investigator on the four-year $1.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. The grant is funding development of the manufacturing platform necessary to produce these biodegradable frames or “scaffolds.”

“We are creating biomaterials with nanostructures on the inside,” said Chen. “Scientifically there are so many opportunities at the molecular level, and nanoengineering is a perfect fit for that. We expect our new biofabrication platform will yield tissues that mimic natural tissues much more closely.”

One such opportunity is to add new levels of precision and functionality to the scaffolds produced by the “biofabrication platform” that Chen and his collaborators invented and have been improving over the last five years.

With the improved biofabrication platform, engineers in the Department of NanoEngineering within the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering will be able to produce scaffolds with precisely designed systems of nanoscale pores and other microarchitectural details that control how cells interact with each other and with the environment.

“You need to design the pores so the cell can get nutrition and dump waste…pathways for the cell to survive in the system,” explained Chen. 

Figure 2. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of a scaffold with a triangle pore design that Shaochen Chen and colleagues created using an older version of Shaochen Chen’s scaffold manufacturing platform.

The researchers also plan to create scaffolds with tubes, and then seed those tubes with the cells that line blood vessels — endothelial cells — to try to generate functioning vascular systems. The lack of blood vessels in most tissue regeneration systems results in cell death, loss of function, and limits the maximum size of regenerated tissues.

In addition, the chemical properties of the new scaffolds will change from top to bottom, which will create chemical gradients that drive cell growth.

As in previous versions of Chen’s scaffold-building system, cells will be encapsulated within scaffold walls.

“Usually, when researchers grow tissue, they make a scaffold, put the cells in the scaffold and let the cells grow,” explained Chen. “When we fabricate our scaffolds, the cells are already inside the scaffold walls.” Encapsulating cells within the walls encourages uniform seeding of cells.

The scaffolds will be based on natural materials such as hyaluronic acid, a key component of the “extracellular matrix” that provides structural support, wound healing, and a range of other functions to human and other animal tissues. "The hydrogels for our scaffolds can’t be too soft, too sticky or too rigid. They need to fit the needs of the biological tissue," said Chen. Collaborators at Harvard Medical School will grow and characterize the tissues started on the scaffolds.

To manufacture tissue scaffolds, Chen and colleagues have developed and continue to refine a manufacturing process that uses light, precisely controlled mirrors, and a computer projection system. First, the engineers design a three dimensional model of the structure to be printed. Next, the engineers prepare a solution containing both the cells that will eventually grow into the tissue and the polymers that will solidify into the scaffold. When light shines into the solution using the series of mirrors, the scaffold solidifies according to the exact specifications of the projected image. Following these steps, scaffolds are manufactured and cells are encapsulated in scaffold walls as light solidifies the polymers one layer at a time.

"With our biofabrication platform, we can build arbitrary, three-dimensional shapes, like branches of blood vessels, and tubes — large and small," said Chen. "My focus is on the materials fabrication and devices level. This work is applicable to many different types of cells and tissues."

Learn more at http://www.ucsd.edu/

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(November 17, 2010) — While offering great promise in a host of new applications, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) could be harmful to humans and a new risk review suggests product designers and others should provisionally treat CNTs "as if" they are hazardous.

Because environmental and health information on CNTs is incomplete and sometimes conflicting, an "anticipatory governance" approach to the technology is needed, according to Mark Philbrick of the Center of Integrated Nanomechanical Systems at the University of California, Berkeley. Anticipatory governance is an approach designed to support decision makers where there is uncertainty about safety, a common situation when managing emerging technologies.

Attend the on-demand webcast, "Understanding Nanotechnology Safety" now

Given the "conflicted character of the data," how "relevant actors" should respond is the central question Philbrick asks in developing strategies for utilizing CNTs. He asserts that treating carbon nanotubes "as if" they are hazardous implies limiting exposure throughout product life-cycles. This means implementing strong engineering controls for CNT research and manufacturing, avoiding applications where CNTs would be routinely released to the environment, and planning for recycling at the end of a product’s useful life. The article also argues, "The anticipatory governance approach is particularly important as innovation rates in nanotechnologies exceed our capacity to assess human and environmental consequences of these innovations, especially when deployed at commercial scales…it helps identify uncertainties in our knowledge and focuses future research to address those gaps." 

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and  conclusions are detailed in Philbrick’s article, "An Anticipatory Governance Approach to Carbon Nanotubes," in the November issue of the journal Risk Analysis published by the Society for Risk Analysis. The entire November issue is devoted to risk analysis articles related to nanotechnology.

An anticipatory approach is particularly important until the toxicity and behavior of CNTs in the environment are better understood, especially as they can remain airborne for extended periods, and share some characteristics with asbestos. While a few rodent studies have found similarities between the health effects of inhaling both substances, there is not enough data to draw firm conclusions.

The article notes the promise held out by CNTs is immense: some types conduct electricity and heat better than copper, others are stronger than steel while weighing less than aluminum, and yet others could be used in targeted drug delivery. These properties could find uses in aircraft frames, sensors, and electrical transmission. Nevertheless, treating them "as if" they are hazardous is a prudent course of action given uncertainty about their potential health consequences, the author said. 

Risk Analysis: An International Journal is published by the nonprofit Society for Risk Analysis (SRA). SRA is a multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, scholarly, international society that provides an open forum for all those who are interested in risk analysis. Risk analysis is broadly defined to include risk assessment, risk characterization, risk communication, risk management, and policy relating to risk, in the context of risks of concern to individuals, to public and private sector organizations, and to society at a local, regional, national, or global level. www.sra.org

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(November 16, 2010) — Metallic and semiconducting single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) can be distinguished using a new imaging tool for rapidly screening the structures, researched at the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University. The technology may hasten the use of nanotubes in creating a new class of computers and electronics that are faster and consume less power than those in use today.

Metallic versions form unavoidably during the CNT manufacturing process, contaminating the semiconducting nanotubes. Now researchers have discovered that an advanced imaging technology could solve this problem, said Ji-Xin Cheng, an associate professor of biomedical engineering and chemistry at Purdue University. "The imaging system uses a pulsing laser to deposit energy into the nanotubes, pumping the nanotubes from a ground state to an excited state," he said. "Then, another laser called a probe senses the excited nanotubes and reveals the contrast between metallic and semiconductor tubes."

The technique, called transient absorption, measures the "metallicity" of the tubes. The detection method might be combined with another laser to zap the unwanted metallic nanotubes as they roll off of the manufacturing line, leaving only the semiconducting tubes.

Findings are detailed in a research paper, "Fast Mapping of Metallicity in Individual Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes Using a Transient Absorption Optical Microscope" appearing online this week in the journal Physical Review Letters and authored by Purdue physics doctoral student Yookyung Jung; biomedical engineering research scientist Mikhail N. Slipchenko; Chang-Hua Liu, an electrical engineering graduate student at the University of Michigan; Alexander E. Ribbe, manager of the Nanotechnology Group in Purdue’s Department of Chemistry; Zhaohui Zhong, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science at Michigan; and Yang and Cheng. The Michigan researchers produced the nanotubes.

Single-wall nanotubes are formed by rolling up a one-atom-thick layer of graphite called graphene, which could eventually rival silicon as a basis for computer chips. In spite of the outstanding properties of single-walled carbon nanotubes, the co-existence of metallic and semiconducting SWCNTs as a result of synthesis has hindered their electronic and photonic applications. Researchers in Cheng’s group, working with nanomaterials for biomedical studies, were puzzled when they noticed the metallic nanoparticles and semiconducting nanowires transmitted and absorbed light differently after being exposed to the pulsing laser. Researcher Chen Yang, a Purdue assistant professor of physical chemistry, suggested the method might be used to screen the nanotubes for nanoelectronics.

"When you make nanocircuits, you only want the semiconducting ones, so it’s very important to have a method to identify the metallic nanotubes," Yang said.

The nanotubes have a diameter of about 1 nanometer, or roughly the length of 10 hydrogen atoms strung together, making them far too small to be seen with a conventional light microscope. "They can be seen with an atomic force microscope, but this only tells you the morphology and surface features, not the metallic state of the nanotube," Cheng said.

The transient absorption imaging technique represents the only rapid method for telling the difference between the two types of nanotubes. The technique is "label free," meaning it does not require that the nanotubes be marked with dyes, making it potentially practical for manufacturing, he added.

The researchers performed the technique with nanotubes placed on a glass surface. Future work will focus on performing the imaging when nanotubes are on a silicon surface to determine how well it would work in industrial applications.

"We have begun this work on a silicon substrate, and preliminary results are very good," Cheng said.

Future research also may study how electrons travel inside individual nanotubes.

The research is funded by the National Science Foundation. Learn more at https://engineering.purdue.edu/BME/, Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering

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(November 11, 2010) — Jim Walker, research VP at Gartner, told attendees at the Gartner Semiconductor Briefing (11/4/10, San Jose, CA) that, after declining 14.7% in 2009, the outsourced semiconductor assembly and test services (OSATS) market will expand by 37% this year, and by 6.2% in 2011. Wafer fab equipment expenditures are up over 120%, as are those for packaging, assembly, and test. But 2011 will see much slower growth — maybe 8-9% — and it won’t pick up until 2012.

Listen to Jim Walker’s interview: Download or Play Now

From an OSATS standpoint, both foundry, and packaging, assembly and test will continue to grow faster than the overall semiconductor industry by about 50% per year for the next 4-5 years. Packaging equipment has been an enabler for the industry, commented Walker, particularly 3D, wafer-level packaging (WLP), package-on-package (PoP), and TSV — all enable Moore’s Law. Wafer fab equipment companies are very interested in the backend in the last couple of years and going forward, they see the value of packaging technology.

Figure 1. 3D packaging having an impact on WFE. Source: Gartner

Equipment capex will be driven more and more by backend equipment. Walker noted that for the first time in 2010, two semiconductor packaging and assembly service companies join the top 20 in capex spending (ASE and SiliconWare). “ASE will spend over $900M in 2010,” he said. “What is driving this is the conversion to copper wire bonding as well as 3D packaging, which requires more complex equipment. So packaging is becoming more fab-like in nature — we’re seeing the convergence of the back end of the wafer fab and the front end of packaging, assembly, and test processes overlapping.” 

Figure 2. Forecast growth. Source: Gartner

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by Laura Peters, contributing editor

IEDM Previews:
Intel fabs highest mobility pFET with Ge channel
University of Tokyo first to demo III-V self-aligned source/drain
IBM, Macronix identify phase-change memory failure mode
Record photodiode quantum efficiency from Taiwan lab
How strain can protect devices from ESD
SEMATECH tipping III-V MOSFET, FinFET, and resistive RAM
TSMC anneal for gate-last HKMG process
Imec IEDM presentations to cover More than Moore, ITRS
When do TSV stresses affect device operation?
Multi-threshold-voltage flexibility in FDSOI
CMOS imager works from light to night
Carbon nanotube vias approach production densities
IBM Alliance simplifies pFET HKMG
IM Flash details 25nm NAND

November 11, 2010 – A recent study shows that in many cases, the use of strain engineering has a positive impact on a device’s robustness to electrostatic discharge (ESD). At the upcoming International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM, 12/6-8 in San Francisco, CA), researchers from the U. of California (Santa Barbara), IMEC (Leuven, Belgium), and Infineon Technologies (Munich, Germany) will discuss the impact of strain on different ESD protection devices in bulk silicon and SOI.

In one example, the use of strain in bulk gated diodes can result in a 35% increase in failure voltage using the maximum human body model (HBM). A 20% increase in normalized failure current is possible with SOI-based gate-grounded NMOS devices. This study provides a more comprehensive understanding of ESD sensitivity to strain in nanoscale protection devices.

In bulk gated-diode protection devices (Figure 1), strain is applied using a tensile contact etch stop layer of 1.2GPa. ESD robustness is enhanced with increasing levels of strain because the main current is the forward-biased p-n junction current. The increase in electron mobility is the main mechanism through which strain affects the ESD performance. The researchers determined that the increase in the maximum failure voltage according to the HBM can be 20% to 35%.

Click to Enlarge
Figure 1: In a bulk gated diode, positive pulses are applied to the p+ anode while the n+ cathode is grounded and the gate is floating.

In SOI gate-grounded NMOS devices, enhancement of ~20% in failure current can be obtained due to strain engineering (Figure 2). In these devices, ESD protection is enhanced by a simultaneous increase in electron mobility and decrease in hole mobility by the parasitic bipolar transistor, which turns on at a lower voltage in a strained device.

Click to Enlarge
Figure 2:The average failure current is improved at all gate lengths in the SOI gate-grounded NMOS device.

The ESD robustness of bulk silicon gate-grounded NMOS devices, unlike their SOI counterparts, is little impacted by strain. The researchers also found the impact of strain on bulk gate-tied-high NMOS to be negligible due to a lower effective strain.

This study and others shows that strain will continue to play a significant role in optimizing devices for ESD robustness.

(November 11, 2010) — SUSS MicroTec, equipment and process supplier for the semiconductor industry and related markets, and Fraunhofer for Surface Engineering and Thin Films IST launched SELECT, a technology for bond aligners and mask aligners that selectively activates parts of wafer surfaces through plasma.

Local surface treatment prior to wafer bonding replaces standard process steps and reduces the overall cost per wafer. Selective plasma activation can be applied to a variety of MEMS, optical and solar applications using direct wafer bonding or surface modification for the creation of micro mirror arrays, micro valves, sensors or micro fluidic channels. The SELECT toolkit is an upgrade option of SUSS MicroTec’s MA/BA8 Gen3.

The patent pending technology of Fraunhofer IST is based on atmospheric pressure plasma selectively modifying the molecular level surface. Conventional surface treatment of complete wafers without selection can damage the functionality of micro components or electronics. With selective treatment it is possible to protect those sensitive areas by activating only specific parts of the wafer. Selective plasma activation is used with planar wafers as well as with topography wafers where plasma activation is provided either in the cavities or on the elevated structures.

"While selective plasma treatment in wafer bonding applications significantly reduces the post-bond anneal temperature from 1000°C down to 200°C, it also protects sensitive devices. The technology therefore increases the process window for direct bonding," said Prof. Dr. Günter Bräuer, the director of the Fraunhofer IST. "With SUSS MicroTec’s SELECT toolkit applied in both direct bonding as well as other wafer processing applications, a ground-breaking new approach seems possible for device processing in the semiconductor industry."

"Treatment of selected parts of wafers reduces the costs of producing a device through streamlining processes and increasing throughput at the same time," explained Frank Averdung, President and CEO of SUSS MicroTec AG.

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(November 9, 2010) — ADA Technologies, Inc. received a $100,000 contract from the U.S. Air Force for Phase I research into the development of improved thermal interface materials (TIM) for use in microchips.

Thermal management is a limiting factor in further reduction of microchip size, as well as in the design of more complicated circuits for a variety of applications, including solid state tactical lasers, non-lethal denial technologies, and power metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs).

ADA’s research focuses on developing uniquely treated carbon nanotubes (CNTs) dispersed in a polymer. The research addresses the challenge of interfacial resistance between CNTs and mating surfaces, resulting in higher performing and lower cost TIMs, in comparison to current state-of-the-art.

According to Sayangdev Naha, Ph. D., project principal investigator, "ADA’s approach will enable a TIM with much greater bulk thermal conductivity, a high degree of mechanical compliance and at costs projected to be substantially lower than current state-of-the-art CNT-based TIMs. The commercial potential of the proposed technology is considerable."

ADA’s nanotechnology program was established in 2007 and to date has received over $2M in funding. ADA Technologies Inc. is a research, development, and commercialization company that specializes in creating and converting innovative technologies to commercial successes. For more information, call 303-792-5615.

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