Chester Kennedy Archives | ŮAV News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Fri, 21 Aug 2020 16:53:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Chester Kennedy Archives | ŮAV News 32 32 New Tools Give BRIDG More Options for Industry /news/new-tools-give-bridg-more-options-for-industry/ Fri, 16 Feb 2018 14:49:28 +0000 /news/?p=80909 A growing array of tools is filling the BRIDG wafer-fabrication facility in Osceola County, making the center increasingly useful to high-tech industries.

The ŮAV is a founding supporter of BRIDG (Bridging the Innovation to Development Gap), together with Osceola County and the Florida High Tech Corridor Council.

Since the opening of the state-of-the-art, 109,000-square-foot advanced manufacturing facility last March, BRIDG has acquired more than 35 high-tech 200mm wafer-processing tools to enable researchers to push the limits of advanced sensors, optics, photonics and advanced-system miniaturization manufacturing in order to offer industry solutions for next-generation nanoscale production.

The tools are made possible through multi-million-dollar investments from partners that also include the state and local government.

“Together, the partners in Central Florida built an amazing state-of-the-art facility that will support industry partners and also provide a robust platform to boost the competitiveness of our university partners in their pursuit of funded research projects”, said Chester Kennedy, BRIDG CEO.

“The key to maximizing the facility’s value is to continue adding tools that support leading-edge technology development. Each high-value tool, when installed and characterized, opens up new market potential from industry and enables additional research options, all while attracting more companies to have an enduring presence at NeoCity. These fully operational tools are the key to unlocking the economic transformation of the region,” he said.

Included in the BRIDG arsenal are tools for photolithography, etching, doping (implanting ions in materials), cleaning and dicing, which will allow manufacturers to create silicon chips for semiconductors and other nanoscale devices.

Semiconductor chips are the mainstay in the production of electronic circuits, which enable all our computerized devices and systems.

The fundamentals of creating chips boil down to tools that will either add or take away nanoscale-thin layers of specialized materials from an ultra-flat 200mm-diameter wafer of silicon, said Brett Attaway, director of business development for BRIDG. After a wafer has been processed with the tools, it is then cut into small chips that can be integrated into a system or product.

All that work requires not only state-of-the-art tools but also a facility with the necessary computer systems, gas and electric lines, hazardous materials systems, high quality water and airpurification systems, and anti-vibration technology to protect against any contamination or defect that could flaw the production process.

“We are operating a world-class fabrication facility, and it is imperative that we have a wide assortment of tools with the proper facilities infrastructure so our talented staff can make them dance together to create the desired chip recipes,” Attaway said.

There are many different chip technologies or kinds of chips. Many chips are comprised of integrated circuits created on the wafers to transfer and guide electrical currents to perform desired functions such as processing and transmitting data or storing information.

One of the first chip technologies that BRIDG is focusing on is Resistive Random Access Memory (ReRAM) that is designed to allow arrays of data memory bits that are made of a programmable resistive element instead of the typical transistor-based memories.

While ReRAM has been a hot topic among some chip makers in recent years because of its ability to offer memory capability at a lower cost and in a smaller package than other high-end computer memories, BRIDG is working with partners that have a different use in mind for ReRAM. This new area focuses on using the ReRAM technology for creating arrays of Physically Unclonable Functions, which can be used to help protect computerized data by creating a unique fingerprint or encryption method that is of particular interest to the Department of Defense and systems companies.

BRIDG is also acquiring tools to enable Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems technologies that are used extensively in biotechnology, medical and communications fields among others because of its ability to create microsensors capable of determining temperature, pressure, chemistry, position and the presence of magnetic fields, radiation and other energy forms.

The tools at BRIDG can also be used for wafer-level system miniaturization schemes as well as silicon photonics, the design and fabrication of devices that generate, manipulate and detect light for use in high-performance computing and sensing.

While BRIDG plans to acquire additional tools during the next year to make it even more attractive for manufacturers from health, aerospace, defense and other industries, most of the core tools will be installed and qualified for use by this summer, said Fran Korosec, chief operating officer.

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Florida Approves $15 Million for Research Consortium /news/florida-approves-15-million-research-consortium/ Thu, 17 Mar 2016 18:21:06 +0000 /news/?p=71286 A $15 million Florida appropriation for the International Consortium for Advanced Manufacturing Research will enable the partnership to increase its momentum in capturing a part of the next-generation sensor industry for Florida, leaders said Thursday.

ICAMR will use the one-time $10 million appropriation to purchase tools and equipment for manufacturing. The $5 million in continuing funds puts the consortium in a strong strategic position to pursue federal contracts, attract industry, and proceed with plans for a design center that will strengthen consortium’s ability to capitalize on the burgeoning sensor economy for years to come.

ICAMR leaders and partners thanked supporters including the Central Florida legislative delegation, led by Senate President Andy Gardiner and House Speaker Steve Crisafulli, Gov. Rick Scott, and the many industry and community leaders who wrote letters and advocated for the project during the past several years.

“We are thankful for all who have so diligently carried the flag for ICAMR and we are looking forward to the returns this investment will bring to the state of Florida,” Chester Kennedy, ICAMR CEO said.

Osceola County, the ŮAV, the Florida High Tech Corridor Council, Enterprise Florida and others have dedicated more than $162 million to develop the center that will be housed in a 109,000-square-foot advanced-manufacturing facility under construction in Osceola County.

Industry will use the facility to develop the tools and processes to manufacture sensors that connect people and their devices to the Internet of Things and enable devices of all kinds to communicate.

“We’ve assembled a great team that not only understands this project but is very capable of sharing that vision and getting decision-makers excited about the significance of what we are going to accomplish,” said Osceola County Manager Don Fisher. “This funding shows that the state is vested in the success of the project. Its commitment will play a key role in our efforts to continue to build our partnerships by bringing in top-flight companies and research organizations from around the world.”

UCF President John C. Hitt also thanked supporters and said ICAMR is “a game changer” poised to give Florida a global competitive advantage in advanced manufacturing.

“Here, in our nation’s fast-growing, third-largest state, our alliance stands to reinvent the future of nano-electronics research and development in this country and beyond,” Hitt said. “We will position Central Florida to be a high-tech magnet for 21st century international industry.”

Randy Berridge, president of the Florida High Tech Corridor Council, said: “The corridor connects 23 counties and their tech clusters to our three great universities (UCF, USF and UF) and ICAMR promises to exponentially expand this technology economy.”

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