Skip to content

Biting the hand that feeds IT

The Register ®

Science:


Related Whitepapers

[Print][Mobile][Alerts]

UV breakthrough promises cheaper chips

Sunbeds for silicon

Published Wednesday 28th June 2006 15:52 GMT

Researchers are claiming a breakthrough which could revolutionise how microchips are manufactured, potentially slashing their cost.

A team at UCL says it has developed a new way to induce silicon to oxidise. Silicon oxide layers are a key in microchips, insulating and protecting the silicon, storing charge and controlling currents. It forms very slowly naturally, so chip makers heat their silicon to around 1000°C, a process which costs a lot in energy.

Electronic engineers found a way to use less energy-hungry UV lamps to get the oxide to form by breaking apart oxygen molecules on the material's surface.

Professor Ian Boyd, who led the research, said: "Our finding has the potential to completely overhaul the way that the microelectronic industry processes silicon.

"This finding means that the industry's energy, and subsequent cost savings, could reduce the prices of electronic devices for consumers and, of course, create a positive environmental impact." ®

Track this type of story as a custom Atom/RSS feed or by email.
Previous Article Next Article
whitepaper title

Enabling the Data Center Metamorphosis

This independent analyst paper gives real world advice on transforming your datacenter into a streamlined, dynamic, liquid engine capable of handling growth..
whitepaper title

Gartner Paper: US Data Centers - The Calm Before the Storm

U.S. enterprise data centers face considerable space and energy constraints over the next few years. Download this free independent report to read more..
Whitepapers Jobs

Top 20 storiesAll The Week’s HeadlinesArchiveSearch