2006 59th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Tuesday–Friday, October 10–13, 2006;
Columbus, Ohio
Session HW: Allis Prize Lecture
10:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Holiday Inn
Room: Salon CD
Chair: Greg Hebner, Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.GEC.HW.1
Abstract: HW.00001 : Nanoelectronics and Plasma Processing---The Next 15 Years and Beyond
10:00 AM–11:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Michael A. Lieberman
(University of California, Berkeley)
The number of transistors per chip has doubled every 2 years
since 1959, and this doubling will continue over the next 15
years as transistor sizes shrink. There has been a 25
million-fold decrease in cost for the same performance, and in 15
years a desktop computer will be hundreds of times more powerful
than one today. Transistors now have 37 nm (120 atoms) gate
lengths and 1.5 nm (5 atoms) gate oxide thicknesses. The smallest
working transistor has a 5 nm (17 atoms) gate length, close to
the limiting gate length, from simulations, of about 4 nm. Plasma
discharges are used to fabricate hundreds of billions of these
nano-size transistors on a silicon wafer. These discharges have
evolved from a first generation of ``low density'' reactors
capacitively driven by a single source, to a second generation of
``high density'' reactors (inductive and electron cyclotron
resonance) having two rf power sources, in order to control
independently the ion flux and ion bombarding energy to the
substrate. A third generation of ``moderate density'' reactors,
driven capacitively by one high and one low frequency rf source,
is now widely used. Recently, triple frequency and combined
dc/dual frequency discharges have been investigated, to further
control processing characteristics, such as ion energy
distributions, uniformity, and plasma etch selectivities. There
are many interesting physics issues associated with these
discharges, including stochastic heating of discharge electrons
by dual frequency sheaths, nonlinear frequency interactions,
powers supplied by the multi-frequency sources, and
electromagnetic effects such as standing waves and skin effects.
Beyond the 4 nm transistor limit lies a decade of further
performance improvements for conventional nanoelectronics, and
beyond that, a dimly-seen future of spintronics, single-electron
transistors, cross-bar latches, and molecular electronics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.GEC.HW.1