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Melting Microchip Defects May Extend Moore's Law
Posted by
kdawson
on Tue May 06, 2008 07:01 AM
from the moore-the-merrier dept.
from the moore-the-merrier dept.
schliz lets us know about research out of Princeton on melting away defects on microchips using a laser. The new technique, termed Self-Perfection by Liquefaction (SPEL), was published in the May 4 issue of Nature Nanotechnology. Researchers have traditionally approached chip defects by trying to improve the microchip fabrication process, but this eventually reaches fundamental physical limits to do with random behavior of electrons and photons. By focussing on fixing defects, the new method enables more precise shaping of microchip components, and engineers expect to dramatically improve chip quality without increasing fabrication cost. The before-and-after images are remarkable. Here's a diagram of how the process works.
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Before and after pics (Score:5, Funny)
What am I looking at?
read the article (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:read the article (Score:4, Insightful)
It's really quite an impressive difference, the before and after shots.
Parent
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There's an obligatory, "you must be new here" to tack on to that, but it seems the hackneyed old memes are finally growing annoying.
It really never ceases to amaze me how much silicon wants to form into neat geometric shapes. Please don't tell the creationists about this one.
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Sharks (Score:4, Funny)
Where do the frikin' sharks come in to it?
Re:Sharks (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
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Corrected picture link (Score:5, Informative)
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Better Before and After (Score:4, Informative)
Not really fixing... (Score:5, Insightful)
A bit like drying pulp to get paper.
Anonymous Coward (Score:3, Funny)
For instance, death rays.
Re:Anonymous Coward (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Misleading title? (Score:2)
I doubt it could fix a "real" defect, like two neighboring structures that were fused by accident during manufacturing.
Re:Misleading title? (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
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I define "real" defects as "does not work at all".
Re:Misleading title? (Score:5, Insightful)
If a chip is designed to run at a certain speed, but manufacturing flaws make it run slower, then it a very real sense the chip didn't work. The fact that it still is possible to use the chip for some things doesn't mean that it's not broken.
I once rode home a bike that had one of the pedals broken off. It took longer than usual, because I was travelling at a lower speed, but by your definition my bike didn't have a defect. In my opinion, a missing pedal is pretty darn broken.
Parent
Fake !!! (Score:3, Funny)
It's obvious they've just used the BBC testcard and Photoshopped out the girl, clown and blackboard.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/classic/classic/images/640/testcard.jpg [bbc.co.uk]
Stands out a mile, obvious fake
quick explanation (Score:5, Informative)
The images that are given (before and after) are some scanning electron microscope images. Think optical microscope except with electrons. Anyway, there is a serious improvement in the structure - the edges are a lot cleaner and more defined. This is a really simple and beautiful way of letting Nature do the hard work for us. What this is doing is liquifing the material and letting surface tension pull it into the lowest-energy configuration (least amount of surface area locally).
It's really a neat way of doing it, because fabrication is really tough - uses either chemical etching or some method of particle bombardment to remove atoms. There's a big trend in matsci to build down, and build up, at the same time at the nanoscale. Think of this as the "error-correction" process after fabrication.
--This is not the same as annealing - annealing is a solid-state process, putting energy into the material to enable atoms to move and remove stress and other small defects from the material.
Hope that helps
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You could possibly use a metal. The only metal that can be melted and patterned - Aluminum, i
They did it with semiconductor, thats why its cool (Score:2, Informative)
Simple melting by direct heating has previously been shown to smooth out the defects in plastic structures.
This process can't be applied to a microchip for two reasons. First, the key structures on a chip are not made of plastic, which melts at temperatures close to the boiling point of water, but from semiconductors and metals, which have much higher melting points.
Heating the chip to such temperatures would melt not just the structures, but nearly everything else on the chip. Se
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You know how most cookies are round lumpy balls of dough that when you cook them ooze out into a flat circle cookie? It's like that. Big lumpy ball of cpu thingies becomes flat circle cpu thingies.
Mmmm cookies.
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Also, this process is beautifully simple. We do this in my field, too, but using polymers in almost exactly the same process. I haven't seen a picture in my field nearly as convincing as the SEMs in this project, however.
It's like a microchip... (Score:2)
How cool is THAT?
I'm impressed (Score:4, Funny)
Build - Debug - Analyze (Score:5, Funny)
Soon architects will quickly make ten buildings without much previous study, then sell those who don't fall in the first two weeks with the promise that if some fall in the first five years, they'll release a v2.0 shaped as the ones still standing.
I can almost see the changelog:
"v1.5.1142 - The coming of winter discovered a weakness against rain in paper roof. New ice roof installed."
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CS just does it faster and cheaper.
Er um, maybe not so much (Score:4, Interesting)
When fabricating chips, yes, you do want nice clean lines. Whopeee for clean lines. All hail clean lines. By coincidence, surface tension works towards cleaning up lines. Somebody should have patented surface tension. Too late now.
But eventually the nice clean lines end up at a transistor or resistor. There the rules are very different. You don't want surface tension to do its thing on the end of the line, which would be to shorten it. Very conveniently these nice pictures don't show what happens at the end of each line. How convenient.
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I agree they should show the ends, but you could possibly use the directed laser pulse to stay away from the terminals.
Perfects defects too! (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem comes when the random wiggles cause two wires to touch, creating a short. Then you've got an actual dead chip.
But if this self-perfection thing works the way I think it does, it should cause that "bridge" to become stronger, just as two drops of water on a window merge when they touch.
Doesn't sou
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Having worked in manufacturing... (Score:2)
Don't blame me. Deming [wikipedia.org]said it first.
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4. Excuses, such as "Our problems are different."
Getting the laws of physics under control is part of any manufacturing process.
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Before -after, huh? (Score:2)
Testimony: "I was a lousy CPU, i overheated and it was exhausting. But when I tried Self-Perfection by Liquefaction, my life changed".
(Shows picture of before / after)
(public wows and applauds)
And this perfection can only be yours by the mere price of
CALL NOW!
Very Very Impressive (Score:5, Interesting)
Really cool.
Moore's Law is back?! (Score:2)
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The pictures show up larger in the linked article.
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Re:Annealing? (Score:4, Insightful)
People generally ask questions to get answers. You, however, seem to ask questions to make other people feel stupid.
Parent
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I'm pretty sure that annealing changes the microstructure of a piece of metal (it doesn't change the form at a macro scale, but the internal structure changes), and the changes that this process makes seem to be occurring at a similar scale to recrystallization.
As far as why, I think it's interesting to look for parallels in the cutting edge of technology and ancient trade craft.
Here's what annealing does in glass. (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
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But even if it is possible, maybe the techniques us