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Product USA. I. No. 2

OBSERVATION'S Co.'s contact notes that Co. & poly(phenylene)'s supplier Co. are addressing the extendability of poly(phenylene) through an $18 million Advanced Technology Program grant from the National Institute of Standards & Technology . The goal of the program is to develop a porous version of poly(phenylene) with a dielectric constant of 2.0 for 0.10-micro.m semiconductors.
Co.'s contact says poly(phenylene)'s extendability is a big part of the reason that Co. chose it. "We wanted a material that is useful for multiple generations," he says. "We will use poly(phenylene) at 0.13 and we expect to use it at 0.10
TECHNOLOGY However, in September 1997, Co surprised the computer industry by announcing that it had decided on the metal, choosing copper as its circuit material of the future. "Suddenly, everybody's program shifted to copper research from dielectric research. . "Dielectric research was put on hold." Co.'s contact says his company chose the metal before the dielectric precisely because it was the easier decision. "Our strategy is to make one change, then incorporate it commercially. In 1998, Co launched production of semiconductors with 0.22-micro.m copper wiring using a conventional dielectric. However once Co. and other semiconductor manufacturers were able to make copper wiring work, the research focus shifted back to the dielectric. Gradually, the original 150 candidates were whittled down to just a handful.

Like it did with copper, Co. came out first with its material of choice for the new dielectric, announcing in April that it had picked supplier Co.'s poly(phenylene) aromatic hydrocarbon polymer, which has a dielectric constant--what the industry calls k value--of 2.65. Suddenly, supplier Co. , a company with little experience in the semiconductor materials business, was linked up with one of the world's top chip makers.
Co.'s contact acknowledges that choosing a new dielectric was difficult. "Silicon dioxide is a marvelous material," he says. "It has all the characteristics you like--no low-k material can do what it can do." But with a dielectric constant of about 4.2, SiO2 wasn't a good enough insulator to prevent cross talk between the closely spaced wires in the smaller generation of electronic devices.

The criteria that Co. subjected its dielectric candidates to included thermal stability to 450 C, a dielectric constant of less than 3.0, good adhesion, chemical compatibility with other chip components, etchability, and commercial availability. "We looked through a whole host of dielectrics." Co. will start producing 0.13-micro.m semiconductors that employ copper & poly(phenylene) dielectric in the first half of 2001 at an existing plant in Burlington, Vt. A new $2.5 billion plant based on copper and poly(phenylene) - part of Co.'s largest ever capital investment--will then start up in 2003 in East Fishkill.

These applications will mark the commercialization of poly(phenylene)




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