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From fredlacy at engr.subr.edu Fri Mar 6 10:56:08 2009
From: fredlacy at engr.subr.edu (fred lacy)
Date: Fri, 6 Mar 2009 09:56:08 -0600
Subject: [labnetwork] information on Cressington 108 sputter coater
Message-ID: <3DA162E91DBBA74B8C3CB066FF1D180387FEA6@facultymail.engr.subr.edu>
Greetings. Not sure if anyone can help me with this, but I have a
Cressington 108 sputtering machine and I need the following information:
target voltage
substrate bias (or voltage)
substrate temperature
I checked the website http://www.cressington.com/spec_108.html , and I
could not find what I needed. Any information that anyone can provide,
I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks in advance.
Fred Lacy, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Electrical Engineering Department
Southern University
College of Engineering
Pinchback Hall, Room 415
Baton Rouge, LA 70813
(225) 771-4094 [direct]
(225) 771-5292 [secretary]
(225) 775-9828 [fax]
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From cwhite at sensorprod.com Wed Mar 18 16:27:43 2009
From: cwhite at sensorprod.com (Christopher White)
Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2009 15:27:43 -0500
Subject: [labnetwork] wafer bonding research project
Message-ID: <mailman.0.1512762173.4009.labnetwork@mtl.mit.edu>
We're looking for a student for a wafer bonding research project that we
have available here at our company. The student
would be involved in performing research into specific techniques in the
wafer bonding pressure measurement process.
Would you be able to recommend any students to us?
Kind regards,
Christopher White
Director of Operations
Sensor Products Inc.
300 Madison Ave
Madison, NJ 07940 USA
973.884.1755 ext. 5092
973.884.1699 - Fax
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From gcure at ece.arizona.edu Tue Mar 24 19:29:05 2009
From: gcure at ece.arizona.edu (Gregg Cure`)
Date: Tue, 24 Mar 2009 17:29:05 -0600 (MDT)
Subject: [labnetwork] Sloan Sequentorr III documentation
Message-ID: <3935.150.135.217.55.1237937345.squirrel@secure.ece.arizona.edu>
Hello -
I am looking for ANY documentation of any kind, in any condition, for a
Sloan Sequentorr III vacuum controller.
If anyone out there in Labnetwork-land can help me with
documentation/schematics for this vacuum controller, I would be very
thankful!
Regards,
--
Gregg D. Cure`
The University of Arizona
Micro/Nano Fabrication Center
Electrical and Computer Engineering
1230 E. Speedway Blvd.
P.O. Box 210104
Tucson, AZ 85721-0104
Office: 520.626.1987
Cell: 520.307.2760
Fax: 520.626.7877
Website: http://mfc.engr.arizona.edu
From mtang at stanford.edu Thu Mar 26 17:01:29 2009
From: mtang at stanford.edu (Mary Tang)
Date: Thu, 26 Mar 2009 14:01:29 -0700
Subject: [labnetwork] A safer hotplate?
Message-ID: <49CBED29.70909@stanford.edu>
Hello Labnetworkers --
We are interested in trying to find, or even build, a safer hotplate.
As you probably know, these things are ubiquitous and probably the most
hazardous thing in the lab. There was a presentation from a major
insurance company a while ago which said that the greatest damage
payouts in the semiconductor industry were due to fires caused by hot
pots or heating plates -- scarier still was that majority of these
incidents occurred during operation while someone was ostensibly present.
Anyway, we (actually, Jim Haydon, one of our engineers) have been on the
search for a safer hotplate -- but just haven't found one that has all
the features we'd like. (Does anyone have recommendations???) Because
we haven't had a lot of success, Jim has initiated some discussions with
one of the best controlled hot plate manufacturers we've found. They
are interested in working with us, but wanted to see if there might be a
broader market (other than just our lab) for these things. So, this
email to you.
Some of the features we'd like to see:
- Ability to program recipes and store multiple recipes (for example,
hot phosphoric nitride strip versus solvent-based resist strip).
- Programmable max temp (right now, we install a hard stop -- but it
would be nice to be able to change this depending on the process
need/recipe.)