New nanotechnique producing small things in large quantities...
http://www.physorg.com/news108147747.html
New nanotechnique producing small things in large quantities
Although relatively new to the market, liquid crystal display (LCD)
televisions may soon be obsolete, thanks to a new technique created by
University of Houston professors.
Vincent Donnelly, Demetre Economou and Paul Ruchhoeft, all of the Cullen
College of Engineering, have developed a technique that allows nanotech
devices to be mass-produced, which could move the television industry away
from the LCD display to the superior field emission display (FED). FEDs use
a large array of carbon nanotubes - the most efficient emitters known - to
create a higher resolution picture than an LCD.
The nanotech fabrication technique that can mass produce an ordered array of
carbon nanotubes and make FEDs happen promises to remove some of the largest
practical barriers to mass-producing nanotech devices, Economou said.
Dubbed nanopantography, the method uses standard photolithography to
selectively remove parts of a thin film and etching to create arrays of
ion-focusing micro-lenses - small round holes through a metal structure - on
a substrate, such as a silicon wafer.
"These lenses act as focusing elements," Donnelly said. "They focus the
beamlets to fabricate a hole 100 times smaller than the lens size."
A beam of ions is then directed at the substrate. When the wafer is tilted,
the desired pattern is replicated simultaneously in billions of many closely
spaced holes over an area, limited only by the size of the ion beam.
"The nanostructures that you can form out of that focusing can be written
simultaneously over the whole wafer in predetermined positions," Economou
said. "Without our technique, nanotech devices can be made with
electron-beam writing or with a scanning tunneling microscope. However, the
throughput, or fabrication speed, is extremely slow and is not suitable for
mass production or for producing nanostructures of any desired shape and
material."
With the right ions and gaseous elements, the nanotech fabrication method
can be used to etch a variety of materials and virtually any shape with
nanosize dimensions. A standard printing technique that can create lenses
measuring 100 nanometers wide could be used to draw features just one
nanometer wide if combined with nanopantography.
"We expect nanopantography to become a viable method for rapid, large-scale
fabrication," Donnelly said. Economou, Donnelly and Ruchhoeft have been
working on the technology for four years and UH filed the patent application
in December 2006.
They hope the technology can become commercially available in five to 10
years and expect it to become a viable method for large-scale production.
Source: University of Houston
--
Ken
"Buddhism elucidates why we are sentient."
"Buddhism follows thought throughout the Universe."
"Karma means that you don't get away with anything."
date: Wed, 5 Sep 2007 18:12:03 -0500
author: Ken Kubos
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