Ultraviolet thermal processing
Ultraviolet thermal processing or UVTP is the name given to the process of using ultraviolet light to stabilize dielectric films used to insulate semiconductors.
Description
Semiconductor films need low dielectric constants (k-values) for optimal thermal conductivity, to ensure semiconductor scaling. Newer dielectric films used to insulate modern chips can be easily damaged, causing them to lose their insulating capacity. Specialized treatments applied with ultraviolet light improve chip performance.[1] Tungsten halogen lamps are the sources used for traditional rapid thermal processing.[2][3]
gollark: Brute force all possible regular expression substitution things to find the shortest working one.
gollark: The bridge doesn't bridge edits, you know.
gollark: * quantity
gollark: Besides, all groups of parents form a unified hive mind.
gollark: See, that's still actually bad and not good.
References
- Gupta, Nishant (December 2012). "Photo-thermal Processing of Semiconductor Fibers and Thin Films". All Dissertations. clemson.edu. Bibcode:2012PhDT.......211G. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- Singh, R.; Cherukuri, K. C.; Vedula, L.; Rohatgi, A.; Narayanan, S. (1996-05-13). "Low temperature shallow junction formation using vacuum ultraviolet photons during rapid thermal processing". Applied Physics Letters. scitation.aip.org. 70 (13): 1700–1702. doi:10.1063/1.118674.
- Rapid Thermal Processing for Future Semiconductor Devices. Elsevier Science B.V. 2003-04-02. ISBN 9780080540269. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.