Topic for #homecmos is now Homebrew CMOS and MEMS foundry design | http://code.google.com/p/homecmos/ | Logs: http://en.qi-hardware.com/homecmos-logs/
<nmz787> anyone around?
<azonenberg> yep
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<azonenberg> 2-side polished 2" wafer
<azonenberg> with oxide + nitride
<azonenberg> Would allow some interesting MEMS processing with no need to do film deposition (except for metal evaporation but that's a bit easier to homebrew than PECVD)
<azonenberg> only downside for my application is that it's (100) orientation and not (110)
<azonenberg> but it might be able to live with that
<azonenberg> i think using laserlab masks and that, i could make a comb drive with my current lab setup plus the evaporator on campus
<azonenberg> a full wafer of them, no less
<azonenberg> I'd just need some hot phosphoric acid to go through the nitride... let's see
<azonenberg> Thermal oxide in KOH is 7.7nm/min, or 23nm/min in room temp 10:1 HF
<azonenberg> Phosphoric barely touches it
<azonenberg> 0.18nm/min
<azonenberg> Nitride in HF is slow (<1 nm/min) but phosphoric is 2.7nm/min
<Sync_> oh dual side polished
<azonenberg> actually that's for Si-rich, stoichiometric is 4.5nm/min and high-RI is 20nm/min
<azonenberg> Yes, and coated on both sides
<azonenberg> So let's assume stoichiometric for now
<azonenberg> 50nm means just over ten minutes in the wet etch
<azonenberg> Negligible undercut for MEMS-sized features
<azonenberg> ten minutes in hot phosphoric
<azonenberg> Then switch to HF to go through the thermal oxide, using the nitride as a mask
<Sync_> quite expensive tho
<azonenberg> assuming we use my very weak (~2%) HF but slightly heated it should be about the same, 23nm/min
<azonenberg> so 300nm will be around 15 minutes
<azonenberg> Which will also eat about 5nm of the nitride, but not enough to matter
<azonenberg> Now we have bare Si exposed and can do a KOH etch
<azonenberg> And yes, but it means i can do MEMS work with my current lab
<azonenberg> no need for a furnace or CVD etc
<azonenberg> not even spin-on glass
<azonenberg> as long as i can live with that particular oxide-nitride stackup
<azonenberg> now to make sure 10 minutes in hot phosphoric won't kill my photoresist...
<Sync_> I should ask if I can use the other cleanroom when nobody is processing there
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<azonenberg> Looks like some resists peel in hot phos
<Sync_> I could make you some wafers for a lot less :D
<azonenberg> etch rates of between 50 and 100nm/min
<azonenberg> so ten minuts would be 0.5 to 1 micron
<azonenberg> significant, but not enoguh to have breakthrough
<azonenberg> this might actually work
<Sync_> yeah
<azonenberg> i might want to get myself HMDS to prime it, and i still need a better spin coater
<azonenberg> But if i could design myself a comb drive that would work with <100> wafers using a KOH etch
<Sync_> we had to vent the MBE yesterday :/
<azonenberg> why?
<Sync_> wiggle stick got stuck
<azonenberg> And lol, it would be nice if you could make me some wafers but i think thats unlikely
<Sync_> the threaded rod that actuates the wafer handler
<Sync_> got unscrewed
<Sync_> (that happens regularily)
<azonenberg> lol
<Sync_> but is not an issue because you can screw it back in
<azonenberg> once you vent it
<Sync_> but we found out if the wafer is in the clamp you cannot screw it back in
<Sync_> no it is on the air side
<azonenberg> oh, hmm
<Sync_> but when the wafer is in the clamp the hole is offset at an angle
<Sync_> so you have to vent
<azonenberg> oh, i see
<Sync_> I should be able to
<Sync_> we have a company inhouse that does research on furnances
<Sync_> so we have shitload of unused ones
<azonenberg> of unused wafers? lol
<azonenberg> with known films on them?
<azonenberg> My current thinking is
<azonenberg> contact litho using LaserLab mask
<B0101> hi, does anyone know how to polish wafers?
<Sync_> we have some shitty wafers we don't want to use for experiments
<azonenberg> i can get by with pretty loose alignment
<Sync_> I can use them for free
<azonenberg> front to back
<Sync_> and oxidizing is not too bad
<azonenberg> then front to metal will be pretty loose tolerances too
<Sync_> B0101: on a lapping machine
<azonenberg> Well, i need oxide + nitride
<azonenberg> KOH eats Si for breakfast and likes SiO2 for dessert
<azonenberg> but nitride is too crunchy
<Sync_> I'll ask around
<Sync_> but I think it'd be possible
<azonenberg> Anyway, no immediate need
<azonenberg> i want to try with the MTI wafer since thats something i can readily source
<azonenberg> and that's contingent on me getting a better spin coater
<Sync_> and haha, the ebeam evap control got a bit out of hand on the other MBE
<Sync_> and melted a bit of the crucible
<azonenberg> I know a guy wh odid that here
<Sync_> it was quite annoying to pound that Si block out of there
<azonenberg> got in some trouble for it :p
<B0101> hmm, I am not sure about getting wafers off ebay
<azonenberg> thats not a bad price
<Sync_> yeah that is acceptable
<azonenberg> then i need to find more photoresist
<Sync_> well yeah azonenberg but the machine did it on itself
<azonenberg> mine is probably degraded by now
<azonenberg> been sitting aroudn a long time
<azonenberg> Any idea where to buy resist?
<Sync_> now we have added an end stop so that cannot happen anymore
<Sync_> good question
<azonenberg> i had been using PCB-grade
<azonenberg> but thats meant to stick to metals
<azonenberg> not oxides
<Sync_> spi supplies?
<azonenberg> tedpella doesnt have it
<azonenberg> let me try spi
<azonenberg> ok, thats a better price on HMDS
<azonenberg> $78 for 250ml from ted pella or $15.62 for 100ml from SPI
<Sync_> yeah
<Sync_> spi usually has prices that are insane
<Sync_> but that's ok
<azonenberg> No photoresist though
<Sync_> but their website is very VERY web -1.0
<azonenberg> Negative resist
<azonenberg> hmm
<azonenberg> with proprietary thinner/developer/stripper
<Sync_> yeah
<Sync_> notwant
<azonenberg> ooh, good forum
<Sync_> ah nice
<Sync_> oh yeah
<Sync_> we get our supplies from microchemicals
<azonenberg> Yes, but do they sell direct?
<Sync_> idk
<Sync_> oh btw, someone managed to smash a view port on a vacuum chamber while moving something
<azonenberg> :o
<azonenberg> how bad was it?
<azonenberg> i assume the wafer(s) got shredded
<Sync_> left quite large scratches in the chamber
<Sync_> there was nothing in it
<Sync_> it was just pumped to prevent contamination
<azonenberg> oh
<azonenberg> i thought you meant they bumped a sample into it
<azonenberg> and scratched the inwodw or something
<azonenberg> the window*
<Sync_> no
<Sync_> they moved a shelf and hit the viewport+
<Sync_> B0101: buying wafers off ebay is not a good idea
<Sync_> even buying from reputable companies that distribute wafers from bankrupt fabs sell crap
<Sync_> we have a LOAD of wafers that are completely useless
<Sync_> some have really bad metal ion contamination, others are not doped and again others have all the wrong conductivity
<Sync_> but they were cheep
<Sync_> :D
<azonenberg> lol
<azonenberg> nice for mechanical / litho testing though
<azonenberg> deposition process development
<azonenberg> etc
<Sync_> we do rate calibration on them
<azonenberg> Ye
<azonenberg> Yep*
<azonenberg> Good for something still then :p
<azonenberg> So i think i might try to stick with my PCB resist a bit longer
<azonenberg> maybe buy another bottle from the same vendor
<Sync_> yep
<azonenberg> the solvent chemistry looks very similar to normal electronic resist
<azonenberg> its probably not trace-metal grade
<azonenberg> but who cares about metal ions for MEMS :D
<Sync_> yeah
<azonenberg> So i think the next step would be to make a contact mask aligner
<azonenberg> suitable for a single 2" wafer
<azonenberg> and a spin coater
<Sync_> oh, I bought a mill btw
<azonenberg> ooh
<azonenberg> i think when i have osme time i'll develop a full process for this
<Sync_> meh I should start working on the spin coater idea I had
<azonenberg> i was going to make one but got busy with school... silly thesis :p
<azonenberg> all of this fab work is totally unrelated to my "real" research in OS/CPU design and security lol
<B0101> Darn: I don't get why certain students actually tried consuming CuSO4, darn, report coming up...
<azonenberg> consuming?
<azonenberg> like, ingesting?
<azonenberg> that can't be healthy
<B0101> ingesting? yes, though according to the other lab tech, the student only consumed a little bit
<azonenberg> o_O
<azonenberg> these are... college students?
<azonenberg> they should know better...
<Sync_> no
<Sync_> they don'T
<Sync_> also, why not taste it?
<azonenberg> Darwin award?
<Sync_> #yolo *hides*
<Sync_> but being a college student doesn't mean that you know anything tbh
<azonenberg> lol
<Sync_> hm CuSO4 was used as an emetic agent
<Sync_> can't be that bad.
<B0101> I don't think CuSO4 taste sweet, does it? o_O
<Sync_> no
<Sync_> it tastes bitter
<azonenberg> makes sense given the sulfate
<azonenberg> still, you have to wonder what said person was thinking
<soul-d> i read copper is verry toxic when i was researching it a bit
<Sync_> it works because it irritates the stomach walls like most cytotoxins
<azonenberg> soul-d: copper ions are not exactly healthy
<B0101> according to the original incident report, the student claims that CuSO4 tasted sweet
<azonenberg> B0101: ...
<Sync_> then it was not coppersulfate
<Sync_> or he has a very strange taste
<Sync_> heavy metal ions in your body are generally not too good
<azonenberg> Te lab accidents i normally hear about are things like "poured chemical into wrong beaker, blew up"
<azonenberg> the*
<azonenberg> not "decided to randomly drink some chemical" lol
<Sync_> I'm annoyed to some degree by a lot of that safety craze
<Sync_> especially when it gets in the way of working safely
<B0101> here, I am shocked: the students don't even get latex gloves when working with chemicals, especially corrosive ones
<B0101> Imagine handling HCl, or even HNO3 w/o gloves
<B0101> I have written letters to the safety department, but no responses even after the 3rd letter
<Sync_> huh
<Sync_> hcl is not bad
<Sync_> I have some scars on my hands where NaOH tried to soap up my hands
<B0101> ah, NaOH... some students even teacher's think that basic chemicals can be treated like innocous chemicals
<Sync_> it could be worse
<Sync_> if the solution is not too awfully concentrated you just wash it off your hands
<Sync_> I can see where the "hurr wear gloves for everything" comes from, but there usually is no real need for them
<B0101> wow... just to do hydrogen test: 'Placed zinc metal into test-tube, poured conc. HCl into test-tube, student stoppered off test-tube. Started heating up test-tube from bottom,causing test-tube to explode"
<B0101> 2 incidents in 1 day, same lab session...
<Sync_> that is quite an achievent to stopper it off so hard that it explodes
<B0101> I don't know how a student managed to do that, as all the time we tried that, the stopper pops off the test-tube
<Sync_> it is possible, probably overheated the tube
<B0101> no matter what the cause, the lab techs are going to be in trouble once science dept asks
<B0101> speaking about safety: I believe that labs should be safe, except when people do stupid things
<Sync_> well, most safety aspects are about training, there are not that many constructive safety measures you can take in an R&D lab
<Sync_> you can provide proper workspaces, appropiate for the job, like fume hoods and such but apart from that
<B0101> but then here, the war on terror is getting so absurd that people have difficulty setting home labs here
<B0101> in fact, if they suspect you being a terrorist, they arrest you and under my country's law, the can detain anyone without trial for 2 years and that may be extended depending on the government
<B0101> just as long as 1 officer suspects, even without evidence, that still applies
<B0101> so actually, the so-called safety rules here just hinder the school lab from operating with audits and checks from the government
<B0101> they think as if some student or lab tech is going to make explosives or something
<Sync_> but that's what they do :D
<Sync_> we made all kinds of explosives in chemistry class in school
<B0101> heck, If I try to do that here, I'm doomed
<Sync_> way more fun than regular high school chemistry
<B0101> heh, too bad I have no chance to experience that here
<Sync_> you just have to have cool teacher
<B0101> here, law doesn't allow it
<Sync_> here too
<Sync_> but who cares
<berndj> i thought the royal navy gave their sailors CuSO4 to prevent them from catching gayitis
<berndj> our high school science teacher regularly drpped slices of sodium into a tube of bromine
<berndj> made a nice bang
<berndj> i can't find a reference for CuSO4 in the royal navy; quite possibly a crappy HS textbook / bogus storytelling from the teacher
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<B0101> hmm, I am not sure how they deposit copper onto boards to make copper boards for PCB making, anyone has any idea?
<Sync_> electroplating
<Sync_> a thin foil is glued on in the first place and then the rest is deposited
<B0101> hmm, I not sure if we can create different layers of CuO and Cu2O to make devices
<Sync_> wut
<B0101> I was thinking that since both CuO and Cu2O are semiconductors, if we can create different layers of the 2 on one board, we may be able to make simple things like transistors
<Sync_> probably not
<B0101> ok then, and can we melt bits and pieces of silicon to make ingots?
<Sync_> probably but what would a Si ingot do?
<B0101> well, I am looking for ways to obtain Si and other semiconductor materials as the supplier I usually go to has increased the price
<Sync_> manufacturing your own wafers is quite impossible or rather very unlikely due to the cleanliness issues
<Sync_> what do you want to do with them?
<B0101> I want to try to make a simple NMOS transistor
<Sync_> then just get wafers from ebay
<Sync_> but do not expect anything from the transistor
<Sync_> the problem more or less with wafers from unknown sources is that you really do not know what specs they have or how good they are qualitywise
<Sync_> which are things you want to eliminate in semiconductor manufacturing
<B0101> darn, now I have to risk buying potentially impure wafers or buy a pack of 25 for $5000
<Sync_> for a very very basic transistor grade of the wafer is not the prime concern
<berndj> would a FET of either polarity be easier to make than a BJT?
<Sync_> yes
<Sync_> two contacts, oxide, gate
<Sync_> much easier
<berndj> B0101, i think i read in a book somewhere that they do some electroless nickel (or even paladium? but maybe that's just for plated vias) on a board and then plate the rest of the thickness with copper
<Sync_> yep
<berndj> Sync_: metal gate, i'm guessing?
<Sync_> most fabs use a palladium process
<Sync_> it doesn't really matter
<Sync_> use anything conductive
<berndj> it matters if you want to DIY :)
<Sync_> but yes a metal gate is probably what you want to use
<Sync_> no
<Sync_> :D
<Sync_> I guess you could use conductive epoxy
<berndj> paper + fibreglass epoxy + copper foil :)
<berndj> then you can use cheap HSS drills too
<berndj> yeah, jeri ellsworth used conductive epoxy for her FETs
<Sync_> I'd just evap some copper
<berndj> (btw azonenberg you need to get her into this channel!)
<berndj> evap? sputter? i thought the pcb material might not be so high vacuum compatible
<Sync_> wat, I was talking about the fets
<Sync_> pcb material is just so cheap to buy
<berndj> oooh sorry, got confused there
<Sync_> there is no need to diy
<berndj> for fun!
* berndj points Sync_ at the first 4 letters of the channel name
<Sync_> yes, but there really is no point besides fun
<Sync_> I do plated vias at home but that's as far as I'd go
<B0101> wow, even optics shops carry silicon wafers??? O_o
<Sync_> Si is IR transparent
<berndj> i might still make DIY PCB just because it makes drilling easier, because then i can use paper, for example. HSS-friendly. HSS drills seem to come smaller than TC drills (while still fitting my budget)
<berndj> you plate vias with that palladium process?
<Sync_> yes
<berndj> cool!
<Sync_> you can just get phenolic pcbs
<berndj> didn't think you could still get those (but i'm a n00b)
<Sync_> and carbide tooling is not too expensive
<berndj> well, i can buy 0.3mm drills for pocket change at a local shop; i wouldn't even know where to get the same size in carbide
<berndj> never mind what it'll cost me
<Sync_> a very high quality one will run you 14€
<Sync_> but it'll last a long time
<Sync_> you could also resharpen the drills
<berndj> 14 euro??? where!?
<Sync_> hoffmann
<berndj> last quote i had from a local supplier was R700 (just under $100 i guessconvert) for a 0.5mm carbide drill
<Sync_> R?
<berndj> south african rand
<Sync_> 58€
<Sync_> that is quite a ripoff
<berndj> it's possible it's optimized for different uses, namely metal fabrication, not making holes in PCBs
<Sync_> a .3mm HSS drill should run you around 6€ in a good quality
<Sync_> the only thing that can be changed is the cutting geometry
<berndj> yeah, something close to that, not 5x more
<Sync_> and that does not matter too much when drilling pcbs
<berndj> and the length of the spirally bit, forget its name
<berndj> the flutes
<Sync_> yeah the flute angle is something to be considered but for hobby production it does not matter at all
<berndj> guy i spoke to said they can go up to 70:1 l:D ratio (which is wholly unneeded for PCB)
<Sync_> yeah it is possible but only with specialized geometry
<berndj> i mean the *length* of the flutes
<berndj> which at 0.3mm would be a 21mm hole
<Sync_> yeah with very small bits it tends to be a problem but with regular pcbs every drill should cut it
<berndj> do the PCB shops drill one board at a time or do they drill a whole stack at a time?
<Sync_> haha
<Sync_> they do one at a time
<Sync_> drilling a stack will break your drill
<berndj> and they run their drills at an unholy rpm, right?
<Sync_> yeah
<Sync_> sometimes over 100000rpm
<Sync_> but that's nothing too special
<berndj> no? lol, so what is?
<Sync_> well you can buy spindles made for that on every corner
<berndj> i still need to build a PCB drill. biggest obstacle is figuring out how to chuck it
<berndj> probably a collet is easiest
<Sync_> just get a dremel or proxxon tool
<berndj> lol, you must live in a first-world country
<berndj> i thought those tools have rather suboptimal runout?
<Sync_> they work fine for diy pcbs
<Sync_> I just call kavo or gmn and they are happy to sell me a spindle that can do it
<berndj> the joys of being in a first-world country :-/
<Sync_> (I actually do not want to pay their prices but it'd be possible)
<Sync_> I'd think they'd be happy to ship to south africa
<berndj> i'm sure. i just don't feel like running the credit card gauntlet. (i don't have one (yet?) and don't really want one - rarely miss having one)
<Sync_> but really a dremel tool or such will do it for you
<berndj> i guess that's my fallback. those are easy to get here
<Sync_> we use a mb140 and the proper drill for it at our hackerspace and it is very good
<berndj> in what city are you btw?
<Sync_> hannover
<berndj> i'm also german
<Sync_> I suspected that
<Sync_> :D
<berndj> my family's from ex-germany though (bautzen and further east even)
<Sync_> cool
<Sync_> that's close to my home town
<berndj> just don't say uhyst?
<Sync_> not that far east but colditz
<berndj> i recognize that name
<Sync_> close to grimma
<Sync_> how did you end up in SA?
<berndj> my mother's family had a schloss in pannewitz 100+ years ago, but i guess we gambled the estate away or something
<berndj> we ended up in the SA because of the 7 day war! suez canal was closed so the tug my dad worked on had to go via cape town
<berndj> fell in love with the place and decided to move here
<berndj> anyway, i'm jealous of you first world people with your proper hackerspaces :)
<Sync_> move back to the civilized world :P
<berndj> we have one here, but it only just got started and it's mostly just software people. i guess we don't have the density of engineers that you have in europe / north america
<Sync_> most of the people in hackerspaces do not have an academic engineering background
<berndj> i mean "engineer" more broadly - maker types