Dr. Roderick R. Kunz
Senior Staff Member at MIT Lincoln Lab
SPIE Involvement:
Track Chair | Author | Instructor
Publications (49)

Proceedings Article | 14 June 2023 Presentation + Paper
Proceedings Volume 12541, 125410N (2023) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2663181
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Dyes, Chemical fiber sensors, Light emitting diodes, Biological and chemical sensing, Prototyping, Chemical weapons, Windows, Toxic industrial chemicals, Signal detection

Proceedings Article | 24 April 2020 Presentation + Paper
Richard Kingsborough, Alexandra Wrobel, Devon Beck, Lauren Cantley, Shane Tysk, Roderick Kunz
Proceedings Volume 11416, 114160O (2020) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2558158
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Spectroscopy, Light emitting diodes, Photodiodes, Biological and chemical sensing, Toxic industrial chemicals, Electronics, Data modeling, Absorbance

Proceedings Article | 24 April 2020 Presentation + Paper
Richard Kingsborough, Alexandra Wrobel, Roderick Kunz
Proceedings Volume 11416, 114160K (2020) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2558159
KEYWORDS: Cell phones, Sensors, Cameras, Spectroscopy, Chemical analysis, Absorption, Light emitting diodes, Receivers, Absorbance, Light

SPIE Journal Paper | 28 August 2013 Open Access
Charles Wynn, Stephen Palmacci, Michelle Clark, Roderick Kunz
OE, Vol. 53, Issue 02, 021103, (August 2013) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.10.1117/1.OE.53.2.021103
KEYWORDS: Photoacoustic spectroscopy, Signal detection, Acoustics, Signal to noise ratio, Gases, Absorption, Solids, Environmental sensing, Receivers, Gas lasers

Proceedings Article | 17 April 2008 Paper
C. Wynn, S. Palmacci, R. Kunz, J. Zayhowski, B. Edwards, M. Rothschild
Proceedings Volume 6954, 695407 (2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.782371
KEYWORDS: Explosives, Luminescence, Photons, Solids, Liquids, Signal detection, Explosives detection, Optical filters, Optical parametric oscillators, Quantum efficiency

Showing 5 of 49 publications
Proceedings Volume Editor (1)

SPIE Conference Volume | 14 June 1996

Conference Committee Involvement (7)
SPIE Advanced Lithography
12 February 2012 | San Jose, United States
SPIE Advanced Lithography
27 February 2011 | San Jose, United States
SPIE Advanced Lithography
22 February 2009 | San Jose, United States
SPIE Advanced Lithography
24 February 2008 | San Jose, United States
SPIE Advanced Lithography
25 February 2007 | San Jose, United States
Showing 5 of 7 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC355: Fundamentals of Photochemical Contamination Control for Lithographic Tools
This course is an overview of contamination control and discusses the issue of optical performance degradation as limited by the interaction of the actinic radiation with trace ambient vapors. This course draws from the UV/VUV space optics and lithography community. Means to test and identify incompatible materials, minimize the effects of contamination, and restore the performance of contaminated optics are covered.
SC120: 193-nm Photoresist Materials
This course reviews the present status of 193-nm photoresist technology at a time when it has seen successful production implementation and is moving into immersion technology. It describes the initial technical hurdles that had to be overcome to make 193 nm photoresists viable materials, describes the currently used platforms for dry lithography, and goes on to review the remaining issues still being resolved in the transition to immersion lithography with water and high refractive index liquids. The course will include a review of the status of the design and performance of 193 nm photoresists and processes for dry and immersion lithography. It will highlight the remaining issues that will need to be addressed for successful extension of 193 nm lithography, such as limitations of overlapping process windows, line edge roughness, PEB sensitivity, substrate interactions, dry etching capability, pattern collapse, and defectivity (dry and immersion), and the availability of materials required for extension beyond the 45 nm node. These topics will be discussed from both a mechanistic point of view as well as with respect to their impact on production implementation.
SIGN IN TO:
  • View contact details

UPDATE YOUR PROFILE
Is this your profile? Update it now.
Don’t have a profile and want one?

Advertisement
Advertisement
Back to Top