[TechView: Digital]
New Technologies Enable More Moore
Daniel Harris
ED Online ID #15994
July 19, 2007
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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Is the end near for Moore's Law? Semiconductors are getting harder to scale
due to thinner and closer wires that are
getting hotter with higher impedances. Yet
researchers are using carbon nanotubes
(CNTs) to get around these limits.
James Jiam-Qiang Lu, associate professor of physics and electrical engineering
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
believes 3D wafer technology and the
use of CNTs for interconnects will help
semiconductor development maintain its
current pace. Subhasish Mitra, an assistant professor of electrical engineering
and computer science at Stanford University, likewise believes actual transistors
can be created using CNTs.
3D wafer technology attacks the interconnect problem head-on as the speed of
an IC has become a function of the length of the interconnect. "The global interconnect dominates the speed," as it may
stretch across an entire IC, Lu says.
Bringing transistors closer together by
stacking them would cut the delay time
significantly. The idea is to take a base layer of silicon and layer other wafers on top
in a pancake-stack configuration in which
various circuit elements make up each of
the pancakes. The wafers are then bonded using inter-wafer interconnects.
While copper is the interconnect of
choice now, it too may suffer from scaling
issues. Lu also has researched methods
of growing CNT structures vertically in a
"forest" configuration that could be used
for 3D semiconductor interconnects and
other structures (see the figure).
"Carbon nanotubes are one of the most
promising materials for interconnects in
3D integration," Lu says. He has had to
overcome CNTs' natural tendency to grow
sparsely when configured vertically, which
leads to poor conductivity. Dipped in a liquid organic solvent like isopropyl alcohol,
though, the CNTs become very densely
packed for much better conductivity.
The next part involves the use of CNTs
for the fundamental building block of ICs:
the transistors. Yet CNTs tend to grow with
bends and kinks that can cause short circuits. So, Mitra and his colleagues built a
NAND gate that was immune to the
effects of "bendy" CNTs. Based on the
NAND gate and with the aid of simulators
they designed, they developed an algorithm to create other types of circuit elements, regardless of misalignments.
CNTs were fed into a grid. If a tube
appeared in an unwanted area of the grid,
it was simply etched away or otherwise
rendered useless. The group then could
take things further by building algorithms
that would work for entire circuit functions.
The major remaining hurdle is finding a
way to guarantee a given CNT will always
make a connection.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
www.rpi.edu
Stanford University
www.stanford.edu
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