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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Miracle Material Gets New Life
This is one of a series of reports on basic research discoveries at Harvard
that have led to unique products and processes. Since 1980 more than 20
new companies have been started based upon technology developed at the University.
This is the story of one of them.
By William J. Cromie
Gazette Staff
It was touted as the miracle material of the 1980s. A compound of arsenic
and a blue-white metal called gallium, which conducts electricity seven
times faster than the silicon chips used in all of the world's computers.
What's more, gallium arsenide promised switches that turn on and off in
trillionths of a second, a dream come true for makers and users of cellular
phones.
Not only that, this material could boost the efficiency of lasers that read
compacts discs, allowing more data, music, or graphics to be squeezed onto
CDs. Visionaries insisted that it also would be possible to make gallium
arsenide solar cells that generate nonpolluting heat and electricity.
Then reality struck. Not only was gallium arsenide difficult to fashion
into computer chips and other devices, it degraded when exposed to air.
In a matter of weeks, even days, oxygen seriously decays its performance.
At the time, Andrew Barron, associate professor of chemistry, was designing
unique materials not found in nature. He came up with a sulfide coating
which not only protected gallium arsenide from oxygen, but improved its
electronic and optical qualities. In other words, with this covering, gallium
arsenide transmits electricity and light better than without it.
Materials for the coating are easy to obtain, and they can be applied as
a thin film by a familiar technique known as chemical vapor deposition.
Barron has since moved on to Rice University in Texas. Harvard filed the
first of several patent applications on the tailored gallium arsenide in
1992. The University licensed the technology to a startup company called
Gallia, located in Cambridge.
"It was an ideal process to build a new company around," notes
Kevin Heyeck of Harvard's Office for Technology and Trademark Licensing.
"It solved a critical problem, had many applications, and we had good
patent protection." The University held a part-ownership of the company.
Startup Buyout
Donald Ciappenelli, former director of Harvard's chemistry laboratories,
became the first president of Gallia. "My job was to get this exciting,
powerful technology from laboratory experiments to the stage where it could
be produced commercially," he recalls.
At first, Gallia found it difficult to raise venture capital because the
suppliers of such funds had been burned by premature claims for gallium
arsenide in the 1980s. Ciappenelli solved the problem with grants from the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Foundation.
Such funds are targeted to help small businesses develop novel technology.
With this support, Gallia proved that gallium arsenide devices, protected
and improved with a stable coating, can be made in a factory. By working
through a startup, Harvard also avoided the prejudice of established corporations,
such as Intel and Motorola, against academic research.
"This is because the semiconductor industry, as such chipmakers are
known, does not invest large sums of money in developing major new technologies
with long lead times," Heyeck explains. "They prefer making incremental,
low-risk improvements to their product lines."
Once Gallia lifted gallium arsenide out of high-risk limbo, commercial interest
picked up. Last month, Gallia was bought by TriQuint Semiconductor, a maker
of chips for cellular telephones. Located in Beaverton, Ore., TriQuint plans
to install the coating process at the end of a fabrication line that makes
gallium arsenide chips for the phones.
Harvard is encouraging TriQuint to sublicense the technology for other purposes,
such as faster CD lasers and new types of chip circuits that operate everything
from supercomputers to digital watches.
The exotic compound could become a prime ingredient in high-frequency lasers,
fiber optics, and other communications devices. It also can be used in an
uncoated form in the winglike panels of cells that convert solar energy
into electricity aboard space shuttles and space stations. In the rarefied
air, 100 miles or more above Earth, oxygen degradation ceases to be a problem.
"As things now stand," Heyeck says, "I think gallium arsenide
is on the threshold of fulfilling much of its promise as a miracle material."
Ciappenelli considers the Gallia story "an excellent model of how so-called
ivory-tower research at a university can result in a technology with the
potential of a positive effect on the national economy."
And, he adds, "I'll bet there are many other ideas with this kind of
potential buried in Harvard laboratories."
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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