Toner News Mobile › Forums › Latest Industry News › *NEWS*INKJET CRANKES OUT MICROCHIPS
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AnonymousInactiveInkjet printers start cranking out microchips
Nanoident Technologies is literally squirting out semiconductors.
The
company has officially opened a factory in Linz, Austria, that produces
organic semiconductors, which are chips made by spraying intricate
patterns of specialized ink onto layers of foil and polymer.The factory
is capable of producing 40,000 square meters of semiconductors a year,
says Wasiq Bokhari, CEO of Bioident, a related company that will market
Nanoident chips to the health market. The initial customers will be
sister companies of Nanoident, but the company has also formed
alliances with water testing companies and other industrial concerns.A
traditional factory that can produce 40,000 square meters of silicon
computer chips would cost about US$1.3 billion and require about 5,000
employees, he said in an interview. The Nanoident factory costs about
US$10 million and can be run by about 50 people.Organic semiconductors,
however, won’t function as memory chips in computers or as processors.
They are far slower and degrade over time. Instead, organic
semiconductors will be targeted at one-time-only applications such as
water purity testers: insert a water drop and the chip will analyze the
chemicals floating inside of the drop. The company has also devised
lab-on-a-chip chips that can extract data about a person’s health
through a blood sample.Organic materials have already crept into some
fields. Cell phone manufacturers already sell phones with screens made
from organic light emitting diodes, or OLEDs, but few other commercial
applications exist. Most of the time, organic chips appear as part of
scientific papers. At University of California at Berkeley, for
instance, researchers have printed an organic semiconductor that can
tell its user if a bottle of wine has gone bad.Traditional silicon
chips are too expensive for these types of applications, which now are
conducted on lab equipment, the company says.The company currently has
yields–a measure of the number of good chips that come out of a
manufacturing run–of about 70 percent and will get to 80 percent,
Bokhari said.
Building the organic beast
One
of the key differences between regular and organic semiconductors is
how transistors get laid down. In standard chips, lithography machines
sketch a circuit pattern. Trenches are then dug into silicon and filled
with metal through a complex series of chemical spraying and
etchings.With organic semiconductors, 128 inkjet nozzles spray a
pattern onto foil or polymer. Researchers, though, have to account for
interactions between the ink and the different layers, and the
performance character of the ink.Printed semiconductors have far larger
features than silicon chips. Nanoident’s first chips will have features
measuring 10 to 100 microns wide. That’s more than 100 times larger
than the features inserted into silicon chips. Current silicon chips
sport 65-nanometer features (a nanometer is one thousandth of a
micron).”We can go below 10 microns, but what are the applications that
would require that?” Bokhari said. “We’d need a compelling reason for
high-speed devices.”Organic semiconductors, however, can come in a
variety of sizes. Nanoident has built some that measure 160 centimeters
a side, or more than 1.5 meters wide. These large devices are used as
sensors.”You can’t do that with silicon,” he said. -
AuthorMarch 19, 2007 at 9:33 AM
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