Work over the past decade to harness the energy-generating mechanism of the sun has now yielded bright high-energy light needed to etch smaller microchips. The microchip industry now uses 193-nm UV light, which cannot etch circuits any smaller than those currently being made. The future standard for making microchips, the industry has determined, is 13.5-nm light. To create such extreme-UV light, high-temperature, electrically charged gases called plasma are necessary; until now, however, scientists have struggled to generate enough power with the extreme-UV light sources that exist. The lab experiment includes a small system that measures plasma for electronics applications, attached to a larger tank containing plasma for energy research. (Images: University of Washington) “Over the past decade, the primary issue with these extreme-UV light sources is they just can’t produce enough power,” said Uri Shumlak, a University of Washington (UW) professor of aeronautics and astronautics. “It’s a stumbling block for the whole semiconductor industry.” The bright high-energy light developed by Shumlak and a colleague at the university is a solution to this decade-long roadblock. The scientists developed an inexpensive fusion reactor model that uses currents flowing through the material, rather than giant magnets, to control the million-degree plasma that generates the high-energy light. The novel technique produces stable, long-lived plasma. The team first conducted the experiment in 1999 and discovered a really bright light when they looked through the glass. They began to explore applications for this light and discovered a need in the microchip industry. Four capacitors supply up to 10,000 V of energy to separate the xenon electrons from their nuclei, creating an electrically charged plasma. Existing technologies used to etch microchips produce sparks with a lifetime of 20 to 50 ns. The beam at the University of Washington lasts 20 to 50 millionths of a second — about 1000 times longer. It also provides more control over the million-degree plasma that produces the light. “That translates directly into more light output, more power depositing on the wafer, such that you can move it through in some reasonable amount of time,” Shumlak said. The research team demonstrated the method’s capability of generating 13.5-nm light with an initial grant from the UW’s Center for Commercialization. They reduced the equipment from the size of a broomstick to the size of a pin that is capable of generating a sharp beam, thanks in part to a Washington Research Foundation grant. They established a startup, Zplasma, to commercialize their technology for the next generation of microchip production. For more information, visit: www.uw.edu