Paid report on ctkt that was found by raging bull ctkt board.
    By: wmo767 $$$$   Reply To: 13527 by wallstreeterww $$$$                                              Saturday, 27 Jan 2001 at 10:48 PM EST                                                        Post #13537 of 13562
    Wall,    Here's that whole article from Northern Light. 
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    Base Materials for Large Area Displays. 
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    Two new ceramic materials have proven to be effective substrate materials for large area flat   panel displays. Cetek Technologies, Inc., has developed perovskite and cordierite substrates   in large area formats that have the proper flatness and other properties for several of the   emerging flat panel display designs. The company's technical efforts have focussed on large   area substrates, beginning with alumina, and has developed a variety of special finishes for   them. 
    The company can now make substrates up to a square foot, and is extending the process to   larger areas. The process of making large area substrates is also being developed to include   other materials, and now includes substrates of ceramics such as cordierite, perovskite,   quartz, and silicon carbide. The company claims the process can be used on a wide range of   ceramics, which promises to provide substrates suitable for a larger number of electronic   applications. 
    The difficulty in creating large area substrates is in curling during heat treatment, resulting   from non-uniform heating. Extremely flat substrates promise to open up a range of new   applications for ceramic structures. Cetek's large area substrates show the same flatness as   commonly used four inch substrates: caster and camber are 1 2 mils per inch. 
    The substrates are fabricated in thin, large-area structures. At the panel printing and other   fabrication steps, a square foot substrate yields nine times the usable area as the more   standard four inch substrate. The result is considerable savings in direct labor and capital   equipment, in much the same way that larger semiconductor wafers are used in electronics. 
    In display technology in particular, the large area substrate is needed, rather than a substrate   cut up into small components as in semiconductors. Ultimately, flat panel developers need   substrates as large as the displays that are built, relieving them of the need to attach separate   substrates together to make a single display. 
    The function of the substrates in displays is largely structural, acting as the base upon which   all other layers are built. Ceramics are preferable because they are strong, corrosion proof   and resistant to high temperature processes. In multilayer applications, the substrates acts   more like a multilayer circuit board, in that the wiring is embedded in the backplane, and   acquires an electrical function, not just structural. 
    The rigidity of the substrates also helps to improve performance. For example, in field   emission displays, the dimensions between layers must be maintained within tight   tolerances, and so rigidity helps to ensure optimum performance. Electroluminescent and   plasma displays use large energy densities, and polymeric materials may distort or react to   the heat generated. Ceramics therefore provide more reliable performance. 
    The process of making large, thin substrates involves tailoring the thermal expansion   coefficient, so that the substrates can be perimeter bonded to other materials such as display   glass--in the case of some displays. The next required evolutionary step will be to bring in   multilayering to the large area substrates, which means that the substrate manufacturer can   supply the entire backplane of a display, complete with wiring. 
    In liquid crystal displays all the layers must be transparent so as to not block backlighting.   However, in virtually all other flat panel designs, such as field emission, glow discharge,   electroluminescent, etc., the light is generated internally. Therefore, an opaque backplane is   acceptable, and the material can be chosen on the basis of structural and electrical   properties, rather than simple transparency. Based on desirable properties, ceramics are   greatly preferable to the more commonly used polymeric materials. 
    As part of its strategy to develop multilayer substrates, Cetek has acquired MultiLythics, Inc.   (Greenville, SC). MultiLythics had already focused on perovskite materials in capacitor   manufacture, and already had a capability in high resolution printing and formation of a large   number of thin layers, all complementary to Cetek's efforts in multilayer substrates. The   company's cordierite and perovskite substrates are the only such substrates available in   areas a foot square. Cetek is planning 20 in. square substrate production for December of   this year. Multilayer substrates should be available within the year. 
    Contact: Fayiz Hilal, President, Cetek Technologies, Inc., 19 Commerce St., Poughkeepsie,   NY 12603; Tel: 914/452-3510, Email: fayiz@cetektechnologies.com. 
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