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ROCKWELL
SCIENTIFIC AND UMC DEVELOP ULTRA LARGE CMOS
READOUT IC FOR INFRARED ASTRONOMY APPLICATIONS
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif., and HSINCHU TAIWAN, AUGUST 22, 2002 - Rockwell
Scientific Company LLC (RSC) and UMC (NYSE: UMC) today announced
the successful development of the HAWAII-2RG, a readout integrated
circuit (ROIC) designed by RSC and fabricated by UMC based on its
cutting edge mixed-mode CMOS process and precision stitching technique.
The project was funded by the NASA Ames Research Center through
a contract with the University of Hawaii.
The 40 mm x 40 mm chip is being used with infrared
detectors developed by RSC to produce astronomy focal plane arrays
(FPAs) with a base resolution of 4.2 million pixels and mosaic resolution
of 16.8 million pixels. Applications that will utilize the infrared
imaging sensor include several of the world's largest ground-based
telescopes; the arrays are also one of the candidates for NASA's
Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST).
RSC produces the FPA by bonding the HAWAII-2RG
readout to a matching 2048 by 2048 infrared detector array fabricated
in Mercury Cadmium Telluride (HgCdTe). The result is one of the
world's largest and highest performance infrared sensors, with 60
percent larger area than 35 mm film.
"UMC did a fantastic job of fabricating
the HAWAII-2RG, which is one of the largest single chips ever produced
with high yield. More impressively, the device worked successfully
upon its first silicon pass. We are committed to further efforts
with UMC as the foundry continues to enable the evolution of our
large imaging sensors that require many millions of pixels for ground-
and space-based astronomy," commented Kadri Vural, vice president
of the imaging division at Rockwell Scientific. RSC already has
several orders for the Hawaii-2RG sensors from the world's most
advanced ground-based observatories.
NASA is also seeking a way to produce infrared
sensor mosaics for its Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST). The
NGST, the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, is planned for
launch in 2010. The project will orbit a six-meter class telescope
at the Lagrangian L-2 point, far beyond the moon's orbit. If selected
for flight, sets of four HAWAII-2RG infrared FPAs would be closely
butted to make 4096 x 4096 mosaics for NGST, the most advanced infrared
mosaics ever made.
Because state-of-the-art CMOS wafer foundries
can only fabricate ICs that are about a quarter of the area of the
HAWAII-2RG, UMC's engineers "stitch" the large CMOS readout
using a series of exposures, each of which captures a section of
the entire readout. The result is a 40 mm x 40 mm die with an ultra-precise
alignment of the sub-micron electrical lines between adjacent sections
to seamlessly transmit signals across the many stitching boundaries.
While large CCDs and CMOS ICs have been made
using less sophisticated forms of photolithographic stitching, UMC
used its deep submicron expertise and tools to achieve alignment
accuracy better than 0.1 micron with unprecedented production yield.
Scanning electron microscopy confirmed the astoundingly accurate
and precise alignment achieved by UMC. Each 200 mm silicon wafer
holds only twelve of the very large ICs.
"UMC is committed to expanding its foundry
business with emerging products such as CMOS-based imaging sensors
with innovators such as RSC. In fact, we have already engaged with
RSC on technical developments for its potential involvement in the
Next Generation Space Telescope, and CMOS sensors for HDTV cameras,"
said Fu Tai Liou, chief officer of worldwide marketing and sales
at UMC.
About Rockwell Scientific
Rockwell Scientific is an independent, privately owned high technology
enterprise with unique technical strengths in electronics, imaging,
optics, materials, and information science. Its range of activities
includes contract research and development services for the U.S.
government and private sector companies, as well as commercialization
of select technologies through licensing and the manufacturing and
sale of high value products closely related to its R&D efforts.
Additional information can be obtained at www.rockwellscientific.com.
Contacts:
UMC
KJ Communications
Eileen Elam
(650) 917-1488
kjcome@cs.com
In Taiwan:
Alex Hinnawi
(886) -2-2700-6999 ext. 6958
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RSC
Jerry Risto
(805) 373-4538
gristo@rwsc.com
Paula Ross
(805) 373-4558
pross@rwsc.com
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