From bulentk at sabanciuniv.edu Wed May 2 17:15:40 2012 From: bulentk at sabanciuniv.edu (Bulent KOROGLU) Date: Thu, 03 May 2012 00:15:40 +0300 Subject: [labnetwork] Cleanroom Safety Message-ID: <4FA1A3FC.5060800@sabanciuniv.edu> Dear All we are making a new nano technology center in Turkey, Our web site is not completed yet but if you are interested link is below http://sunum.sabanciuniv.edu I have a few questions 1.) what kind of fire extinguisher are you using in your Cleanroom (Gas,Water,Powder etc...) and which one is the best solution 2.) How do you ensure the safety of hazardous gases (silane,chlorine,Ammonium) 3.) How do you ensure personal safety when working with hazardous gases (fireman's suit and scuba mask) if i will not to bother you, i will ask to continue my questions to use your experience Thank you very much for your help Sincerely... -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rmorrison at draper.com Thu May 3 06:17:22 2012 From: rmorrison at draper.com (Morrison, Richard H., Jr.) Date: Thu, 03 May 2012 10:17:22 +0000 Subject: [labnetwork] Cleanroom Safety In-Reply-To: <4FA1A3FC.5060800@sabanciuniv.edu> References: <4FA1A3FC.5060800@sabanciuniv.edu> Message-ID: Hi, Here at Draper the fire extinguisher is selected by the material in the area, most of ours are dry CO2, however, only trained staff should use them, for us it is a ERT team. Hazardous gas safety start with the proper gas cabinet selected for the gas you want to use, then a gas monitoring system, sensor at the cabinet, load area, vacuum pump exhaust, gas cabinet on the tool. These monitors should shut off the gas source at the cabinet and evacuate the area. People safety for gases, is SCBA while changing the tanks, maybe a hand held gas detector to ensure that the cylinder does not leak. If using SiH4 or materials like that, then fire resistant gloves are good and a suit is helpful. It is safer to have a gas cabinet with a auto cylinder opener, that way you are not exposed while changing the cylinders Rick Rick Morrison Senior Member Technical Staff Group Leader Microfabrication Operations Draper Laboratory 555 Technology Square Cambridge, MA 02139 W 617-258-3420 C 508-930-3461 From: labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu [mailto:labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu] On Behalf Of Bulent KOROGLU Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2012 5:16 PM To: labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu Subject: [labnetwork] Cleanroom Safety Dear All we are making a new nano technology center in Turkey, Our web site is not completed yet but if you are interested link is below http://sunum.sabanciuniv.edu I have a few questions 1.) what kind of fire extinguisher are you using in your Cleanroom (Gas,Water,Powder etc...) and which one is the best solution 2.) How do you ensure the safety of hazardous gases (silane,chlorine,Ammonium) 3.) How do you ensure personal safety when working with hazardous gases (fireman's suit and scuba mask) if i will not to bother you, i will ask to continue my questions to use your experience Thank you very much for your help Sincerely... -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From zhang.bin at mtpvcorp.com Fri May 4 06:43:35 2012 From: zhang.bin at mtpvcorp.com (BenZ) Date: Fri, 4 May 2012 18:43:35 +0800 Subject: [labnetwork] we are looking for Surfscan equipment for wafer inspection Message-ID: <001501cd29e2$c39d5c30$4ad81490$@mtpvcorp.com> Dear All, We are currently suffer from wafer surface quality inspection. The KLA Surfscan could do this job, but we have not find any lab have it yet. We are around Boston. It will be highly appreciated if any of you could provide any piece of info regarding it. Thanks BR Ben Electrical engineer MTPV power corporation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From bill at eecs.berkeley.edu Fri May 4 22:40:00 2012 From: bill at eecs.berkeley.edu (Bill Flounders) Date: Fri, 04 May 2012 19:40:00 -0700 Subject: [labnetwork] Cleanroom Safety In-Reply-To: <4FA1A3FC.5060800@sabanciuniv.edu> References: <4FA1A3FC.5060800@sabanciuniv.edu> Message-ID: <4FA49300.4090606@eecs.berkeley.edu> Re Fire Extinguishers: Berkeley selected a Class ABC clean room compatible fire extinguisher. The main issue with these units is the 'fill agent'. These were filled with halon in the past. However, due to its ozone depleting properties Halon 1211 (CF2ClBr) is no longer manufactured (as of 1994). The material is reclaimed and there are some stockpiles, however, it has become steadily more expensive. Halotron1 (CF3CHCl2) is a less ozone depleting compound developed as an alternative to halon 1211, but it is scheduled for production halt in 2015. The non-ozone depleting, non toxic, proven effective halon and halotron replacement is FE-36. It is not scheduled for phase out and as it becomes the standard its price has stabilized and begun to come down. All these "clean agents" discharge as a liquid, have high visibility during discharge, do not cause thermal or static shock, leave no residue and are non-conducting. These properties make them ideal for computer rooms, clean rooms, telecommunications equipment, and electronics. But these superior properties of halon, halotron and FE-36 come at a higher cost relative to carbon dioxide - several hundred dollars each. Bill Flounders UC Berkeley Bulent KOROGLU wrote: > Dear All > > we are making a new nano technology center in Turkey, > > Our web site is not completed yet but if you are interested link is below > > http://sunum.sabanciuniv.edu > > I have a few questions > > 1.) what kind of fire extinguisher are you using in your Cleanroom > (Gas,Water,Powder etc...) and which one is the best solution > > 2.) How do you ensure the safety of hazardous gases > (silane,chlorine,Ammonium) > > 3.) How do you ensure personal safety when working with hazardous > gases (fireman's suit and scuba mask) > > if i will not to bother you, i will ask to continue my questions to > use your experience > > Thank you very much for your help > > Sincerely... > > > > _______________________________________________ > labnetwork mailing list > labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu > https://www-mtl.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo.cgi/labnetwork -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From info at fabsurplus.com Mon May 7 06:39:06 2012 From: info at fabsurplus.com (Stephen CS Howe) Date: Mon, 07 May 2012 12:39:06 +0200 Subject: [labnetwork] we are looking for Surfscan equipment for wafer inspection In-Reply-To: <001501cd29e2$c39d5c30$4ad81490$@mtpvcorp.com> References: <001501cd29e2$c39d5c30$4ad81490$@mtpvcorp.com> Message-ID: <1336387146.6891.34.camel@samsung> Dear Ben, We are able to provide such equipment used. Here is a link to a short web page giving details about a previous AIT refurbishment project we did for ST Microelectronics in Catania:- http://www.fabsurplus.com/sites/KLA.html I would also like to point out we are currently selling some equipment for Infineon AG in Dresden. It is surplus to their requirements due to the development of their 300 mm / 12 inch fab. It includes a KLA Puma and two "Surfscan AIT 2" systems that have been upgraded to XP and with Fusion Computers. For photos etc. see the following links:- 34903 KLA-TENCOR PUMA 9000 DARKFIELD DEFECT INSPECTION SYSTEM http://www.fabsurplus.com/sdi_catalog/salesItemDetails.do?id=34903 34904 KLA-TENCOR AIT XP FUSION DARKFIELD DEFECT INSPECTION http://www.fabsurplus.com/sdi_catalog/salesItemDetails.do?id=34904 34905 KLA-TENCOR AIT XP FUSION DARKFIELD DEFECT INSPECTION SYSTEM http://www.fabsurplus.com/sdi_catalog/salesItemDetails.do?id=34905 We are also selling a lot of other methrology and fab equipment. The list you can find here:- http://www.fabsurplus.com/news.html Yours sincerely, Stephen Howe Company Owner SDI Fabsurplus Group +1 830 388 1071 (Mobile) +39 335 710 7756 (Italy Mobile) Skype: Stephencshowe WWW.FABSURPLUS.COM Japan-Italy-Ireland-USA Contact us now to buy and sell used equipment and enjoy the benefits of cost-saving. On Fri, 2012-05-04 at 18:43 +0800, BenZ wrote: > Dear All, > > > > We are currently suffer from wafer surface quality inspection. > > > > The KLA Surfscan could do this job, but we have not find any lab have > it yet. We are around Boston. > > > > It will be highly appreciated if any of you could provide any piece of > info regarding it. > > > > Thanks > > > > BR > > Ben > > > > Electrical engineer > > MTPV power corporation > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > labnetwork mailing list > labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu > https://www-mtl.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo.cgi/labnetwork From rmorrison at draper.com Mon May 7 06:06:38 2012 From: rmorrison at draper.com (Morrison, Richard H., Jr.) Date: Mon, 07 May 2012 10:06:38 +0000 Subject: [labnetwork] we are looking for Surfscan equipment for wafer inspection In-Reply-To: <001501cd29e2$c39d5c30$4ad81490$@mtpvcorp.com> References: <001501cd29e2$c39d5c30$4ad81490$@mtpvcorp.com> Message-ID: We have a Surfscan at Draper, it can process 100mm and 150mm wafers. Rick Rick Morrison Senior Member Technical Staff Group Leader Microfabrication Operations Draper Laboratory 555 Technology Square Cambridge, MA 02139 W 617-258-3420 C 508-930-3461 From: labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu [mailto:labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu] On Behalf Of BenZ Sent: Friday, May 04, 2012 6:44 AM To: labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu Subject: [labnetwork] we are looking for Surfscan equipment for wafer inspection Dear All, We are currently suffer from wafer surface quality inspection. The KLA Surfscan could do this job, but we have not find any lab have it yet. We are around Boston. It will be highly appreciated if any of you could provide any piece of info regarding it. Thanks BR Ben Electrical engineer MTPV power corporation -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From philippe.fluckiger at epfl.ch Mon May 14 06:10:17 2012 From: philippe.fluckiger at epfl.ch (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Fl=FCckiger_Philippe?=) Date: Mon, 14 May 2012 10:10:17 +0000 Subject: [labnetwork] Job offer: Photolithography Technician Message-ID: <4AA894F792D3D64085E82E89F360413120CE85E1@rexma.intranet.epfl.ch> Dear All, The EPFL seeks for it's Center of MicroNanoTechnology (CMi) a Photolithography Technician. More information about the job offer is available at the following link: http://cmi.epfl.ch/ With my very best regards, Philippe Dr Philippe Fl?ckiger Director of Operations http://cmi.epfl.ch/ Phone +41 21 693 6695 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Photolith_Technician.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 33886 bytes Desc: Photolith_Technician.pdf URL: From voros at silicon.EECS.Berkeley.EDU Thu May 24 14:31:45 2012 From: voros at silicon.EECS.Berkeley.EDU (Katalin Voros) Date: Thu, 24 May 2012 11:31:45 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [labnetwork] UGIM 2012 open for registration Message-ID: <201205241831.q4OIVjV2004230@silicon2.EECS.Berkeley.EDU> Dear Colleagues, The full program of the UGIM 2012 Symposium is available for your perusal on the website: http://microlab2.eecs.berkeley.edu/UGIM2012/ It includes a two-day program packed with papers on all aspects of lab management, two lab tours and a San Franscisco Bay dinner cruise. The Register Now button will enable you to register quickly. Please do so. Early registration fee is in effect until 8 June. Hope to see many of you in Berkeley! Sincerely Katalin and Bill A. William Flounders, Co-Chair Katalin Voros, Co-Chair 510-642-2911 UGIM 2012 Local Organizing Committee http://microlab2.eecs.berkeley.edu/UGIM2012/ -------------------------------------------- KATALIN VOROS R&D Engineering Manager Engineering Research Support Organization Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences University of California at Berkeley 406 Cory Hall #1770 Berkeley, CA 94720-1770 phone: (510) 642-2911 voros at eecs.berkeley.edu --------------------------------------------