From edmyers at stanford.edu Mon Jun 9 16:22:03 2008 From: edmyers at stanford.edu (Ed Myers) Date: Mon, 09 Jun 2008 16:22:03 -0700 Subject: Low Ammonia RTA Gas? Message-ID: <6.2.5.6.2.20080609161734.02dddea8@stanford.edu> All, I was watching a nitridation process this afternoon. The Ammonia flow steadily decreased during the process as did the delivery pressure for the gas. I checked the gas bottle in the gas bunker with mixed results. I have informed the maintenance staff with the hope of a quick resolution. In the mean time, you may not have ammonia during your process. Regards, Ed From shott at stanford.edu Tue Jun 17 12:47:42 2008 From: shott at stanford.edu (John Shott) Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 12:47:42 -0700 Subject: New pryometer head installed .... Message-ID: <485814DE.9020601@stanford.edu> AG400 fans: This morning AllWin has installed and calibrated a new pyrometer head on the AG4100. The old one was producing an output of only 200-400 mV at a thermocouple wafer reading of 1000 deg C. The new one is producing an output in excess of 1000 mV at the same thermocouple reading. The thermocouple calibration has been run up to a thermocouple wafer temperature of 1195 degrees C, so you should get good temperature performance up to process temperatures of 1150 degrees C. Like most pyrometers, of course, it can't see anything below something close to 400 degrees C so if you are running a low process temperature of something on the order of 600 degrees C, you probably want to make sure that your recipe includes a "warm up" step for a short time at 450 degrees C before moving up to the "real"process temperature so that they system is pre-stabilized a bit. We have not run full process qualifications with the new pyrometer, but will try to do so at our earliest convenience. However, we are aware that some of you are anxious to use the system, so we are releasing it for use, pending full process qualification. If you are using it, however, please make sure that you conduct appropriate tests with your recipe in advance of committing any real wafers to this tool. Because the pyrometer is at the heart of this system, you should thoroughly test if you are planning on using the system in these early post-pyrometer-replacement days. Also, if you are running a nitridation recipe, please contact me in advance .... I'd like to be with you so that we can monitor the status of the ammonia flow to see if we are getting a shutdown of the excess flow switch during high-demand ammonia flow. There were reports of ammonia flow problems that we really haven't been able to investigate until the pyrometer problem has been resolved .... so will now begin to investigate that in earnest. Happy processing on the AG4100 .... and please let us know if you encounter any problems. John