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Absolute x-ray photodiode
    International Radiation Detectors, Inc.
Ace Glass introduces new 2008 Glassware Catalog
    Ace Glass, Inc.
Are You Getting The Most From Your Water System?
    Siemens Water Technologies
Ashland Analytical Services & Technology
    Ashland Specialty Chemical Company
Chillers/Heaters from Tek-Temp Instruments
    Tek-Temp Instruments, Inc.
COST DOES MATTER!!!
    Exergen Corp.
Custom Diffraction Gratings
    Fastener Speciaty, Inc.
DON’T HAVE A COW! APROTININ is still available!?
    Centerchem, Inc.
Dual Clad Optical Fiber for High Power Medical Lasers
    Polymicro Technologies, LLC
Expanded Line of Sputtering Targets
    Goodfellow Corp.
FASTENER SPECIALTY CONNECTOR HARDWARE
    Fastener Speciaty, Inc.
Finite Element Solutions for Partial Differential Equations
    PDE Solutions, FlexPDE
FLOYD BELL PIEZO ALARMS
    Floyd Bell Inc.
FREE Electronics Packaging Catalog
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Hermetic Electrical Seals
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
HIGH VOLTAGE INSULATION TESTER
    Ross Engineering Corp.
Industrial Controls
    Infitec, Inc
Innovative Thin-Film Coatings
    Guernsey Coating Laboratories, Inc
Laboratory Fume Hood Catalog
    HEMCO Corporation
LFI-3751 ANALOG OR DIGITAL TEMPERATURE CONTROL ?WITH PID AUTOTUNE IMPROVES DIAGNOSTIC PERFORMANCE
    Wavelength Electronics
Low Cost SDD Detector
    Amptek, Inc.
Make Your Own Thermocouples
    DCC Corporation
MICRO-METALLIZER PLATING PENS
    Hunter Products
N. Wood Counter Laboratory, Inc. – Since 1949 –
    N. Wood Counter Laboratory, Inc.
NEW Ultra-Mini Stage and “Stick” Drive!!
    National Aperture, Inc.
NEW Cole-Parmer® Fluid Handling System Sourcebook
    Cole-Parmer
New Hitachi SU6600 Schottky Variable Pressure FESEM
    Hitachi High Technologies America, Inc.
New Portaspec® X Series Bench Top X-RAY Analyzer
    Cianflone Scientific Instruments Corp.
NEW QUICK DISCONNECT COUPLINGS CATALOG
    Colder Products Co.
NOREN PRODUCTS INC. : The Compact Cabinet Cooler
    Noren Products Inc.
Optical Sensors & Digital USB Electronics
    Spectrum Detector
Photomultipliers for low light level detection
    Electron Tubes, Inc.
Plasma Surface Cleaning & Surface Treatment
    Harrick Plasma
Plastic Fasteners
    Micro Plastics, Inc.
Pre-Owned Laboratory Equipment
    Photomachining Inc.
Quartz Crystal Film Thickness Monitor Crystals
    Tangidyne Corp.
Seastrom Manufacturing Materials
    Seastrom Manufacturing
Solve QC & Formulation Problems
    SensaDyne Instrument Div.
The Next Generation XP-Plus Series
    Ambios Technology Inc.
The Piranha II Tungsten Grinder
    Diamond Ground Products
Thermal Components
    Tempco Electric Heater Corp.
Tunable Laser System
    Triad Technology
Ultrameter II™ Fast, Accurate, Simple-to-Use
    Myron L Company
USB-BASED TEMPERATURE AND VOLTAGE MODULE
    Measurement Computing Corp.
Ventilated Lab Bench, Evolution in Fume Containment
    Lab Crafters, Inc.


Recent Product Showcase


Editor's Take
EUV may prove irresistable
July 2, 2008

Last Thursday, the R&D Daily made one of its occasional forays into the fast-paced world of semiconductor technology, specifically extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL). According to new measurements from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the photoresists designed for use with this hotly-anticipated new technology are twice as effective is previously thought.

The discrepancy was caused by an older measurement method. Unfortunately, it’s not great news for EUV developers because it strongly indicates existing optics are only half as effective as previously thought.

However, judging from a recent conversations with technical leaders at Cymer, a major U.S. maker of radiation sources for semiconductor lithography, the rolling ball that is EUVL won’t be stopped anytime soon.

Cymer is one of just a few companies at the forefront of a race to develop a viable EUV scanner to replace existing 193 nm argon-fluoride-based devices which now dominate the semiconductor industry. Like other companies, it pushing to design a powerful light source in the about 13 nm wavelength range. So far, it has achieved 25 W of continuous power and intends to break 100 W by year’s end. And, like other companies, it must deal with the intense heat generated by such light and design robust optics which are efficient enough to achieve conversion goals.

Only with adequate conversion efficiency will developers of EUVL be in a position to deliver the performance needed when the market wants it.

It remains to be seen whether EUVL is the new standard in 2012 (the target date for widespread adoption of new scanners). But R&D Magazine will be closely following the progress of this and other technologies aimed at the next-generation of microchips; the push to keep us on the path of that oft-cited economic law of Gordon Moore will continue to surprise us.

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