24 August 2009

£2.5million funding for Surrey NanoSystems

  • £2.5million funding for Surrey NanoSystems

Surrey NanoSystems has secured second round funding of £2.5million, which will help in the commercialisation of innovative low temperature growth process for carbon nanotubes.

Among the investors are Octopus Ventures, IP Group, the University of Surrey, with the funds being targeted for use as interconnection technology in semiconductor devices.

According to Surrey NanoSytems, the innovation will help silicon integrated circuit manufacturers to overcome a critical problem that threatens the evolution to next generation geometry sizes, speeds and power conservation. The traditional use of copper to provide the vertical interconnections required for integrated circuit (ic) fabrication, is running into technical difficulties as the geometry sizes of ics shrink. Carbon nanotubes can be structured to act as highly efficient conductors, but their adoption as a replacement for copper has been hindered by the fact that conventionally grown carbon nanotubes require temperatures of around 700°C, too high for semiconductor processing. However, Surrey NanoSystem's fabrication system and process allows the structures to be grown at temperatures of 350°C or less.

The new funding will allow the company to extend its engineering and development capabilities with a new technology laboratory and extra staff.
Ben Jensen, cto of Surrey NanoSystems, said: "The semiconductor industry urgently needs a new interconnection technology. If you can solve the problem of growing precision carbon nanotubes at silicon friendly temperatures - and we have - it opens up a massive potential market. We expect to be the company that is able to offer a viable new interconnection process for high volume semiconductor fabrication, one that really exploits the incredible performance properties of carbon nanotubes."

Author
Chris Shaw

Supporting Information

Websites
http://www.surreynanosystems.com/

This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.

Do you have any comments about this article?

Add your comments

Name
 
Email
 
Comments
 

Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Please view our Terms and Conditions before leaving a comment.

 

Related Articles

Graphene breakthrough

Scientists from the University of Manchester have opened a third dimension in ...

UK invests in graphene

Full details of how an additional £50million will be spent to help keep the UK ...

Elastic electronics

A researcher is developing an electronic tattoo that has the potential to ...

Cutting out the middle man

High performance computing systems by necessity pack as many boards in an ...

Crystal clear solution

The perceived wisdom is that diamonds are a girl's best friend. But the highly ...

Lighting up time

The 21st Century is experiencing a data avalanche. Not long ago, a terabyte ...

XMOS XS1 Architecture

An XS1 combines a number of XCore processors, each with its own memory, on a ...

Altium's Innovation Station

An introduction to the Altium Innovation Station. It includes an overview of ...

Eclipse-based embedded IDE combines best of ...

Software development tools for embedded systems have evolved in an interesting ...

FCI connector system

Connector and interconnect manufacturer, FCI has announced the PwrBlade+ ac/dc ...

Wire to board connectors

CamdenBoss has launched two new series of wire to board connectors designed to ...

Hermetically sealed connectors

Interconnect component specialist, NYK Component Solutions has signed an ...

embedded world 2012

Taking place from 28 February to 1 March 2012.

Touch interface innovation

A new contact microphone, when connected to a system, is able to process sound ...

The Ben Heck Show (New series)

In this season 2 premiere of 'The Ben Heck Show', modding guru Ben Heck puts ...

Ben Heck builds LAN computer

In this episode of The Ben Heck Show, Ben builds a retro inspired portable LAN ...

Bionic lenses and rabbits

A Terminator style bionic contact lens has been developed by researchers in a ...

Richard Noble's Bloodhound Project diary

I apologise – my web updates always seem to be late and I feel I am letting you ...

The worm hasn't turned

Every once in a while, you look at the results of a research project and ask ...

Brent Hudson, Sagentia

Sagentia's ceo tells Graham Pitcher how the consulting company is anticipating ...

Prof Donal Bradley, Imperial

Graham Pitcher talks to a researcher who was 'there at the start' of the ...

Geoff Halls, Roke Manor

Roke Manor continues to be a world leader in communications research, but ...