Patents by Inventor Malcolm R. Howells

Malcolm R. Howells has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 6815363
    Abstract: A nanomachining method for producing high-aspect ratio precise nanostructures. The method begins by irradiating a wafer with an energetic charged-particle beam. Next, a layer of patterning material is deposited on one side of the wafer and a layer of etch stop or metal plating base is coated on the other side of the wafer. A desired pattern is generated in the patterning material on the top surface of the irradiated wafer using conventional electron-beam lithography techniques. Lastly, the wafer is placed in an appropriate chemical solution that produces a directional etch of the wafer only in the area from which the resist has been removed by the patterning process. The high mechanical strength of the wafer materials compared to the organic resists used in conventional lithography techniques with allows the transfer of the precise patterns into structures with aspect ratios much larger than those previously achievable.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 9, 2001
    Date of Patent: November 9, 2004
    Assignee: The Regents of the University of California
    Inventors: Wenbing Yun, John Spence, Howard A. Padmore, Alastair A. MacDowell, Malcolm R. Howells
  • Publication number: 20020034879
    Abstract: A nanomachining method for producing high-aspect ratio precise nanostructures. The method begins by irradiating a wafer with an energetic charged-particle beam. Next, a layer of patterning material is deposited on one side of the wafer and a layer of etch stop or metal plating base is coated on the other side of the wafer. A desired pattern is generated in the patterning material on the top surface of the irradiated wafer using conventional electron-beam lithography techniques. Lastly, the wafer is placed in an appropriate chemical solution that produces a directional etch of the wafer only in the area from which the resist has been removed by the patterning process. The high mechanical strength of the wafer materials compared to the organic resists used in conventional lithography techniques with allows the transfer of the precise patterns into structures with aspect ratios much larger than those previously achievable.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 9, 2001
    Publication date: March 21, 2002
    Applicant: THE REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
    Inventors: Wenbing Yun, John Spence, Howard A. Padmore, Alastair A. MacDowell, Malcolm R. Howells
  • Patent number: 5455850
    Abstract: A non-contact X-ray projection lithography method for producing a desired X-ray image on a selected surface of an X-ray-sensitive material, such as photoresist material on a wafer, the desired X-ray image having image minimum linewidths as small as 0.063 .mu.m, or even smaller. A hologram and its position are determined that will produce the desired image on the selected surface when the hologram is irradiated with X-rays from a suitably monochromatic X-ray source of a selected wavelength .lambda.. On-axis X-ray transmission through, or off-axis X-ray reflection from, a hologram may be used here, with very different requirements for monochromaticity, flux and brightness of the X-ray source. For reasonable penetration of photoresist materials by X-rays produced by the X-ray source, the wavelength X, is preferably chosen to be no more than 13.5 nm in one embodiment and more preferably is chosen in the range 1-5 nm in the other embodiment.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 1, 1991
    Date of Patent: October 3, 1995
    Assignee: The Regents of the Univerity of Calif.
    Inventors: Malcolm R. Howells, Chris Jacobsen
  • Patent number: 5214685
    Abstract: A polished aspheric mirror focusses a fan X-ray beam from a point source onto a work piece as a straight image line. The work piece can be efficiently exposed to the X-ray beam by simply tilting the aspheric mirror about a rotational axis, causing the focused image line to sweep across the workpiece. The aspheric mirror is designed to collimate the beam in one direction, e.g., the horizontal direction, and focus the beam in the other direction, e.g., the vertical direction, thereby creating the focused image line at the workpiece. This process is achieved by representing the mirror surface as at least a fourth order Maclaurin series polynomial, and by adjusting the coefficients of such Maclaurin series to create and maintain the desired straight image line. The mirror surface is then polished using computer controlled polishing techniques to realize the designed shape.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 8, 1991
    Date of Patent: May 25, 1993
    Assignee: Maxwell Laboratories, Inc.
    Inventor: Malcolm R. Howells