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Engineers Create Tiny Wires WIth Old Technique

Gamp writes with this interesting snippet: "As microprocessors have shrunk, the wiring between them hasn't always kept up. But engineers at the University of Illinois are changing that with a decades-old metalworking technique. It's called electrodeposition. It's basically the same process used in electroplating, but instead of depositing metal on a surface, as when trying to make a gold-plated piece of jewelry, the metal is deposited in a wire. 'People weren't thinking about how to fabricate a wire in three dimensional space,' said Min-Feng Yu, a professor of mechanical science and engineering."

2 of 27 comments (clear)

  1. link to (unfortunately, paywalled) paper by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Informative

    I hate it when news articles don't either link to the original scientific paper, or at the very least tell me what issue of what journal it was published in! Given the state of journalism-about-scientific-research, I like checking up on the original paper, either for more details, or for a better "related work" section (often the actual papers will be much more honest than the press releases about which parts of the work are new and which parts aren't, and how it relates to existing work).

    Anyway, it's this:

    Jie Hu and Min-Feng Yu (2010). Meniscus-Confined Three-Dimensional Electrodeposition for Direct Writing of Wire Bonds. Science 329(5989): 313-316.

  2. Article with pictures by simula · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For anyone interested in seeing what the results of this technique create, check out the NewScientist article that covers the same topic:

    http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19181-growyourown-approach-to-wiring-3d-chips.html