Applied Materials Advances Semiconductor Research at UC Berkeley With
Significant Equipment Donation
SANTA CLARA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Applied Materials (Nasdaq:AMAT) is advancing semiconductor research with
an equipment and service donation to the University of California,
Berkeley’s Nanofabrication Laboratory in the
Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society
(CITRIS). CITRIS is a center of excellence for graduate students,
faculty and industrial researchers to create nanotechnology solutions
for many of the world’s most pressing social,
environmental and health care issues.
“We
thank Applied Materials for its continued support as these tools will be
valuable to the University’s programs.”
“In order to accelerate breakthrough
technologies, we believe it is important for students to work on
advanced equipment and gain hands-on experience working on semiconductor
devices,” said Om Nalamasu, Deputy CTO and
Vice President of Advanced Technologies at Applied Materials. “We
are pleased to be part of CITRIS and look forward to working together
with students and faculty, and to a stronger affiliation with the
University.”
Applied Materials’ gift consists of processing
equipment and a service contract valued in excess of $5 million. The
systems complement Applied Materials equipment that was donated to the
university in 2002.
“These advanced systems will be used by our
engineering students to accelerate groundbreaking research in
semiconductor and related nanofabrication technology that may fuel an
array of new discoveries,” said Shankar
Sastry, Dean of the College of Engineering. “We
thank Applied Materials for its continued support as these tools will be
valuable to the University’s programs.”
CITRIS will foster work on novel semiconductor devices and their
integration with nanowires/nanotubes, microelectomechanical systems
(MEMS), optoelectronics, and bioelectronics. The systems donated by
Applied will be used to deposit two of the most critical thin films that
are part of next-generation integrated circuits: epitaxy and gate
dielectrics.
In addition, as a result of Applied Materials’
investment and continued support, UC Berkeley will dedicate a
collaborative laboratory within CITRIS, known as a “Collaboratory,”
to Applied Materials and it will be devoted to energy research. The
Collaboratory is a key feature of CITRIS, providing faculty, students
and industrial researchers with spaces for project-driven collaboration.
The capability of The Collaboratory combines well with Applied Materials’
solar
strategy to bring significant change to the industry by developing
new technologies that enable lower cost-per-watt solutions for solar
cell manufacturing — with the goal of making
solar power a significant alternative source of global energy.
Applied Materials Inc. (Nasdaq:AMAT) is the global leader in
Nanomanufacturing Technology™ solutions with
a broad portfolio of innovative equipment, service and software products
for the fabrication of semiconductor chips, flat panel displays, solar
photovoltaic cells, flexible electronics and energy efficient glass. At
Applied Materials, we apply nanomanufacturing technology to improve the
way people live.