Michael Miller
发布日期
22 二月 2022
概览
PhD in Physical Chemistry, Intermolecular®, CDP002, CDP182
Michael Miller
Tell us a bit about yourself?
I am a sixth generation Californian with roots going back to the Gold Rush. I received my B.S. in Chemistry from UCI and my PhD in Physical Chemistry from the California Institute of Technology. I joined Intermolecular® over 14 years ago
when it was still a startup. I started on CDP002, and I am currently working on CDP182. Prior to joining Intermolecular® I worked at Applied Materials and two other startups.
What kind of scientist are you at Intermolecular®, and what do you do? My areas of scientific expertise are in growth (including PVD, ALD, & CVD), characterization (including XRD, XRR, XPS, XRF), spectroscopic ellipsometry, Rs, e-test, DRAM capacitor device integration and computational analysis, including thermodynamics calculations of DG° for many reactions and lattice matching/crystalline templating.
What is your favorite part about being a scientist, and how did you get interested in science? Every problem we try to solve in research and development is like a new kind of puzzle. Each are uniquely difficult and require strategy and creativity to discover workable solutions, and I really enjoy solving puzzles. I was one of those odd kids that wanted to be a scientist from elementary school. I was very curious and wanted to understand the how and why of the way things work.
How does your work contribute to material innovation for the future of technology? I’ve developed a PVD process for growing a superconductor with close to its maximum Tc in HVM semiconductor equipment (that didn’t exist previously) for a customer that is now using it to manufacture quantum computers. I have also developed ALD deposition of 2D TMD layers, invented new RRAM stacks and multiple new DRAM device stacks to meet our customer’s KPIs.
Tell us about a current project you are working on and how this is an example of materials innovation? I recently presented at SEMICON West on a portion of the 2D materials project that I led. We scaled ALD 2D transition metal
dichalcogenide channel materials down to atomically thin monolayers and few layer stacks of these 2D layers, enabling semiconductor channel scaling down to atomic dimensions for both logic and memory.