Arab Times

Tech ‘Nobel’ for Suntola:

Discovery

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Finnish materials physicist Tuomo Suntola, who developed a groundbrea­king technology to reduce the size of complex devices, on Tuesday won Finland’s take on the Nobel science prizes.

The 74-year-old was awarded the Millennium Technology Prize worth one million euros ($1.18 million).

“Suntola’s prize-winning ALD (atomic layer deposition) innovation is a nanoscale technology in use all over the world,” the Technology Academy Finland, which awards the biennial prize, said in a statement.

His technology is used to manufactur­e ultra-thin material layers for a variety of devices such as computers, smartphone­s, microproce­ssors and digital memory devices, enabling high performanc­e in small size.

“The extremely thin isolating or conducting films needed in microproce­ssors and computer memory devices can only be manufactur­ed using the ALD technology developed by Tuomo Suntola,” the academy said.

He developed the technology in 1974 to initially replace bulky monitors in hospitals with flat and electro-luminescen­t screens.

“In the beginning we did not have a laboratory but I had the periodic table of chemical elements on my wall and looking at it, I got the idea of building a compound from its components,” Suntola told AFP ahead of the award ceremony organised in Helsinki.

A global breakthrou­gh for the technology came in the 1990s when it was adopted by the semiconduc­tors industry, to manufactur­e ultra-thin material layers for all kinds of high technology devices.

“ALD has made it possible to increase the density of components significan­tly. In other words, we would not have the current capacities in our smartphone­s or computers without the ALD technology,” the scientist explained. (AFP)

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