We report the first realization of a biomolecular AND gate function with double-sigmoid response (sigmoid in both inputs). Two enzyme biomarker inputs activate the gate output signal which can then be used as indicating liver injury, but only when both of these inputs have elevated pathophysiological concentrations, effectively corresponding to logic-1 of the binary gate functioning. At lower, normal physiological concentrations, defined as logic-0 inputs, the liver-injury output levels are not obtained. High-quality gate functioning in handling of various sources of noise, on time scales of relevance to potential applications is enabled by utilizing "filtering" effected by a simple added biocatalytic process. The resulting gate response is sigmoid in both inputs when proper system parameters are chosen, and the gate properties are theoretically analyzed within a model devised to evaluate its noise-handling properties.
A slurry with a non-Prestonian dependence on the polishing pressure can help in minimizing dishing and erosion during shallow trench isolation chemical mechanical planarization. Here, we show that ceria-based slurries containing diallyldimethylammonium chloride (DADMAC) yield a non-Prestonian blanket film polish rate with a low threshold pressure (1-2 psi) when polishing plasma-enhanced chemical vapor (PECVD) tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) deposited oxide as well as thermal oxide films. The polishing mechanism of this non-Prestonian slurry was investigated by a series of experiments involving zeta potential measurements, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and UV-vis spectroscopy and it was shown that more DADMAC molecules are adsorbed on silica particles (as oxide film representatives) than on ceria particles and the binding strength between DADMAC and silica is much higher than that with ceria surface. Shallow trench isolation (STI) is an ubiquitous complimentary metal-oxide semiconductor isolation process technology. Deposition of an isolation stack that contains 3 to 10 nm thick 1,2 thermally grown pad oxide on top of a silicon substrate followed by the deposition of either plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) or low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) nitride layer (10 to 30 nm) 1 is the first step in the STI process. In the next step, active areas and isolation fields are determined by patterning the silicon nitride and silicon dioxide pad layers on the silicon substrate, followed by etching of trenches into the silicon substrate using the oxide/nitride stack as a mask. The trenches are then filled with oxide, employing high density plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) process using tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) as the source of silicon, because of its high gap-filling capacity. The deposited oxide not only fills the trenches but also generates an overfill, which needs to be removed. This is achieved through planarization of the oxide film topography by chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) using a slurry that produces a high oxide and very low nitride removal rates (RRs).In this STI process, major concerns include dishing within the oxide features resulting from over-polish as well as the erosion of the underlying nitride film and, in some cases, the details of the corner rounding near active areas. Therefore, optimization of the CMP process is crucial in order to achieve complete removal of the oxide on top of the nitride film with good planarity and uniformity and to avoid erosion and dishing during the CMP process. 3,4 One method that can be used to minimize dishing and erosion during STI CMP is to control the polishing performance by using a slurry that shows a non-Prestonian polishing behavior. Non-Prestonian behavior occurs when there is a non-linear relationship between applied polishing pressures and resulting polishing rates. Here we consider only the effect of pressure and not that of the rotational velocity on the blanket film polish rates.Several models were di...
In this paper, we propose an optical method for observation and determination of individual nanosized particles that adhere to an interface by applying an evanescent field. Subsequently, we developed a portable (∼350 mm in length) experimental apparatus equipped with an optical microscopy system for particle observation. The observed intensity is consistent with that calculated using a light scattering model of sub-100-nm particles in the evanescent field.
Through-Co self-forming-barrier (tCoSFB) metallization scheme is introduced, with Cu gap-fill capability down to 7 nm-node dimensions. Mn atoms from doped-seedlayer diffuse through CVD-Co wetting layer, to form TaMn x O y barrier, with integrity proven by vertical-trench triangular-voltage-sweep and barrier-oxidation tests. tCoSFB scheme enables 32% and 45% lower line and via resistance, respectively at 10 nm node dimensions, while achieving superior EM performance to competitive TaN/Co and TaN/Ru-based barriers.
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