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Media
Contacts:
Mick Kulikowski,
NC State News Services, 919/515-3470
Mike McFarland,
UNC News Services, 919/962-8593
Darlene Taylor,
research associate, UNC Dept. of Chemistry, 919/962-6839
Jan.
20, 2004
Nanotechnology
Center Advances Triangle as High-Tech Hub
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
A
state-of-the-art tool delivered to North Carolina State
University’s Centennial
Campus will allow faculty and students at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and NC State to take
a huge step forward in nanofabrication, or the fabrication
of very small things.
Leaders from the two universities, the
University of North Carolina system, industry and government
today witnessed the official opening of the Triangle
National Lithography Center (TNLC) at NC State’s
Engineering and Graduate Research Center. Attendees
toured the new facility and viewed its high-tech gem
– a 193-nanometer lithography stepper. The tool
will allow nearly 100 students and faculty members from
both campuses, as well as industry, government and other
academic users, to conduct cutting-edge nanotechnology
research.
It is believed that no other institute
of higher education has such a state-of-the-art tool
for nanofabrication. University officials say that gaining
experience with the stepper will give students a big
advantage in the nanotechnology workforce.
“As we open the doors to this
new, world-class center, we open a new era in nanotechnology
research in North Carolina,” said NC State Chancellor
Marye Anne Fox. “This center represents an unprecedented
partnership between the state’s flagship universities
and our industry partners, and is an investment in the
future of higher education and economic development.”
Said
UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor James Moeser, “This
innovative center shows just how powerful the partnerships
between two great research universities can be on behalf
of the people of North Carolina. The cutting-edge approach
both campuses are taking with the center will help address
practical environmental and economic issues facing our
state and nation.”
The lithography stepper will be used
to produce patterns on different substrates for use
as electronic devices. Computer chips, molecular electronics
devices, and opto-electronics devices are just a few
of the items that can be produced with the stepper,
researchers say. Other nanoscale technology that can
be produced by the tool includes “lab-on-a-chip”
devices that can, for example, screen biologically active
reagents like anthrax.
The
stepper will also be used to support research in environmentally
safe lithography, polymers and polymer processing as
part of the National Science Foundation Science and
Technology Center’s “Dry Fab of the Future”
research program. That program – which works to
develop sustainable, “dry” manufacturing
methods based on the carbon dioxide technology platform
– is headed by Dr. Joseph DeSimone, Kenan Distinguished
Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering who
has joint appointments at UNC-Chapel Hill and NC State,
and Dr. Ruben Carbonell, KoSa Professor of chemical
engineering at NC State.
“As a multi-user facility, the
TNLC is available to local industrial partners and academic
institutions to further the understanding of matter
and processes at the nanometer-length scale,”
DeSimone said. “The facility represents unmatched
capabilities to advance nanofabrication equipment and
expertise.”
“The opening of this facility
is an important milestone for the nanotechnology research
community and the state,” said Dr. Robert McMahan,
an event speaker and science advisor to Gov. Mike Easley,
and a research professor of physics and astronomy at
UNC-Chapel Hill.
The center will provide local industrial
partners the infrastructure necessary to compete on
the international stage in advanced applications in
microelectronics, officials say. The TNLC is an affiliate
of the National Nanofabrication Infrastructure Network
(NNIN).
The stepper has a market value of about
$12 million. NC State and UNC-Chapel Hill invested about
$4 million in purchase and start-up costs.
Other major facilities under construction
at UNC-Chapel Hill will complement the new center at
NC State. A new Institute for Advanced Materials, Nanoscience
and Technology directed by DeSimone will be housed in
the Carolina Physical Science Complex, part of a public-private
partnership.
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kulikowski -
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