Home > Press > SMI announces sale of Nitride to Oxide Conversion
SMI announces sale of Nitride to Oxide Conversion
Posted on July 05, 2006
Structured Materials Industries, Inc. (SMI) announced today that it had successfully converted an Emcore D180 nitride reactor to deposit oxide (ZnO) films. "This system conversion marks a continuing trend of converting and upgrading the many surplus MOCVD reactors in the field. SMI has now converted or upgraded systems from Thomas Swan and Emcore, among others. Further, we believe it is good for technology development in general, allowing researchers and producers alike to address new MOCVD markets without incurring the massive costs of buying a whole new MOCVD system," stated Dr. Gary S. Tompa, CEO and President of SMI. SMI has a history of adapting and modifying MOCVD reactors and systems, including updating control system and gas panels to advance customer capabilities.
####
About Structured Materials Industries:
Structured Materials Industries, Incorporated is focused on being the leader in Metal Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition (MOCVD) and related technologies. SMI offers for sale: systems, components, materials, and process development services. SMI has an in-house applications laboratory featuring multi-reactor deposition systems and analytic capabilities, has developed a range of strategic partnerships to develop and implement MOCVD technology and looks forward to continuing to grow and expand upon mutually advantageous relationships.
For more information, please click here.
For general and technical information about this release, contact:
Dr. Gary S. Tompa
gstompa@structuredmaterials.com
Structured Materials Industries, Inc.
Unit 102/103, 201 Circle Drive N.
Piscataway, New Jersey 08854
Phone: 732.302.9274
Fax: 732.302.9275
Copyright ©
Structured Materials Industries
If you have a comment, please
Contact us.
Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
Bookmark:
Announcements
Artificial Forest for Solar Water-Splitting: Berkeley Lab Researchers Report First Fully Integrated Artificial Photosynthesis Nanosystem May 17th, 2013
Moth-Inspired Nanostructures Take the Color Out of Thin Films May 17th, 2013
NIA Public Briefing: Nanotechnology and the Council of Europe May 17th, 2013
Scientists capture first direct proof of Hofstadter butterfly effect May 17th, 2013
Tools
Beautiful "flowers" self-assemble in a beaker: Elaborate nanostructures blossom from a chemical reaction perfected at Harvard May 17th, 2013
Scientists capture first direct proof of Hofstadter butterfly effect May 17th, 2013
DNA-Guided Assembly Yields Novel Ribbon-Like Nanostructures: Approach could be useful in fabricating new kinds of materials with engineered properties May 16th, 2013
RUB physicists let magnetic dipoles interact on the nanoscale for the first time: 'Of great technical interest for future hard disk drives' May 15th, 2013