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Research Bits: Aug. 20

EUV mirror interference lithography

Researchers from the Paul Scherrer Institute developed an EUV lithography technique that can produce conductive tracks with a separation of just five nanometers by exposing the sample indirectly rather than directly.

Called EUV mirror interference lithography (MIL), the technique uses two mutually coherent beams that are reflected onto the wafer by two identical mirrors. The beams then create an interference pattern whose period depends on both the angle of incidence and the wavelength of the light. In addition to the 5nm resolution, the conductive tracks were found to have high contrast and sharp edges.

“Our results show that EUV lithography can produce extremely high resolutions, indicating that there are no fundamental limitations yet. This is really exciting since it extends the horizon of what we deem as possible and can also open up new avenues for research in the field of EUV lithography and photoresist materials,” said Dimitrios Kazazis of the Laboratory of X-ray Nanoscience and Technologies at PSI in a statement.

The method is currently too slow for industrial chip production and can produce only simple and periodic structures. However, the team sees it as a resource for early development of new photoresists and plans to continue research to improve its performance and capabilities. [1]

Artificial sapphire dielectrics

Researchers from Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology created artificial sapphire dielectric wafers made of single-crystalline aluminum oxide (Al2O3).

“The aluminum oxide we created is essentially artificial sapphire, identical to natural sapphire in terms of crystal structure, dielectric properties and insulation characteristics,” said Tian Zi’ao, a researcher at SIMIT, in a release.

“By using intercalation oxidation technology on single-crystal aluminum, we were able to produce this single-crystal aluminum oxide dielectric material,” added Di Zengfeng, a researcher at SIMIT, in a release. “Unlike traditional amorphous dielectric materials, our crystalline sapphire can achieve exceptionally low leakage at just one-nanometer level.”

The researchers hope the improved dielectric properties could lead to more power-efficient devices. [2]

Accelerating computation on sparse data sets

Researchers from Lehigh University and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory developed specialized hardware that enables faster computation on data sets that have a high number of zero values, frequent in the fields of bioinformatics and physical sciences. The hardware is portable and can be integrated into general-purpose multi-core computers.

“The accelerating sparse accumulation (ASA) architecture includes a hardware buffer, a hardware cache, and a hardware adder. It takes two sparse matrices, performs a matrix multiplication, and outputs a sparse matrix. The ASA only uses non-zero data when it performs this operation, which makes the architecture more efficient. The hardware buffer and the cache allow the computer processor to easily manage the flow of data; the hardware adder allows the processor to quickly generate values to fill up the empty matrices,” explained Berkely Lab’s Ingrid Ockert in a press release. “Once these values are calculated, the ASA system produces an output. This operation is a building block that the researcher can then use in other functions. For instance, researchers could use these outputs to generate graphs or they could process these outputs through other algorithms such as a Sparse General Matrix-Matrix Multiplication (SpGEMM) algorithm.”

The ASA architecture could accelerate a variety of algorithms. Microbiome research is presented as an example, where it could be used to run metagenomic assembly and similarity clustering algorithms such as Markov Cluster Algorithms that quickly characterize the genetic markers of all of the organisms in a soil sample. [3]

References

[1] I. Giannopoulos, I. Mochi, M. Vockenhuber, Y. Ekinci & D. Kazazis. Extreme ultraviolet lithography reaches 5 nm resolution. Nanoscale, 12.08.2024 https://doi.org/10.1039/D4NR01332H

[2] Zeng, D., Zhang, Z., Xue, Z. et al. Single-crystalline metal-oxide dielectrics for top-gate 2D transistors. Nature (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07786-2

[3] Chao Zhang, Maximilian Bremer, Cy Chan, John M Shalf, and Xiaochen Guo. ASA: Accelerating Sparse Accumulation in Column-wise SpGEMM. ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization (TACO) Volume 19, Issue 4, Article No.: 49, Pages 1-24 https://doi.org/10.1145/3543068

The post Research Bits: Aug. 20 appeared first on Semiconductor Engineering.

Skyrim, Shadr's Debt To Sapphire Paid » Kabalyero

IN THIS VIDEO: Sapphire was speaking to Shadr. She was collecting her money from Shadr but Shadr was not able to pay Sapphire because Sapphire did something bad that affected Shadr's financial status.

In the dimly lit room, Sapphire faced Shadr with a mixture of anticipation and trepidation. The air was thick with tension, as the moment of reckoning had arrived. Sapphire, with her hands clasped tightly in front of her, was there to collect the debt owed to her, a sum that had been agreed upon under much different circumstances.

Shadr, on the other hand, sat slumped in his chair, his eyes avoiding Sapphire's steady gaze. The room was silent except for the ticking of the clock, marking the seconds that felt like hours to both of them. Shadr's financial situation had taken a turn for the worse, a direct consequence of an indiscretion committed by Sapphire. It was an act that she had thought inconsequential at the time, but its ripples had extended far and wide, eventually crashing into Shadr's life with the force of a tsunami.

The money that Sapphire sought was no longer within Shadr's grasp. His business, once thriving and prosperous, was now a shadow of its former self. The clients had disappeared, the contracts had been canceled, and the steady stream of income had dried up to nothing more than a trickle. All because Sapphire, in a moment of weakness, had made a choice that now haunted both their lives.

Sapphire remembered the day all too well. It was a decision made in haste, a solution to a problem that seemed insurmountable at the time. But the solution had been a poison, one that had seeped into the foundation of Shadr's enterprise and eroded it from within. She had not meant to cause harm, yet the damage was done, and the cost was more than just monetary.

As they sat in silence, the weight of guilt pressed heavily on Sapphire's shoulders. She knew that demanding payment from Shadr was futile, yet she was bound by her own needs, her own debts that clamored for attention. The cycle of cause and effect, of action and consequence, was playing out before her, and she was powerless to stop it.

Shadr finally looked up, his eyes meeting Sapphire's. There was no anger there, only resignation and a deep, unspoken understanding. Words were unnecessary; their shared history spoke volumes more than any conversation could. Sapphire slowly unclasped her hands and placed them on her lap, her posture softening.

"I'm sorry," she whispered, the words barely audible. It was an apology for more than just the current predicament. It was an acknowledgment of the pain she had caused, the trust she had broken, and the friendship she had jeopardized.

Shadr nodded, a gesture of forgiveness that was as much for himself as it was for Sapphire. They both knew that some debts went beyond money, beyond the tangible. They were debts of the heart, of the soul, and those were the ones that took the longest to repay.

In the end, Sapphire left without the money she had come for, but with something much more valuable. She left with the hope of redemption and the possibility of rebuilding what had been broken. And as she stepped out into the fading light of the day, she made a silent vow to right the wrongs of the past, not with words, but with actions.

For Shadr, the path ahead was uncertain, but he was not alone. The bonds that had been strained were not broken, and in the darkness that surrounded him, he found a glimmer of light. It was the light of forgiveness, of second chances, and of new beginnings. And with that light to guide him, he knew that the road to recovery, though long and arduous, was one he was ready to travel.

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Skyrim, Shadr's Debt To Sapphire Paid » Kabalyero

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