From tura at ucla.edu Thu Feb 8 17:11:48 2007 From: tura at ucla.edu (Ahmet Tura) Date: Thu, 08 Feb 2007 17:11:48 -0800 Subject: clean piece holder Message-ID: <20070208171148.na4yt8ulq88gwgkk@mail.ucla.edu> I need to clean ~1cmx1cm pieces at the diffusion bench to load into the furnaces. I was wondering if I can borrow a clean piece-holder (small bucket type or the flat type). I would like to do it today (thursday) or tomorrow, so any response is greatly appreciated. Thanks, -- Ahmet Tura From mtang at stanford.edu Thu Feb 22 17:19:06 2007 From: mtang at stanford.edu (Mary Tang) Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 17:19:06 -0800 Subject: Ammonium Fluoride Crystals!!! Message-ID: <45DE410A.6030504@stanford.edu> Everyone -- Warning: THIS IS A RANT!!! For two days running, there have been reports of ammonium fluoride crystals at the BOE tanks at wbdiff and wbnonmetal. These crystals have appeared in large clumps, on top of the dump rinser, on the front of the bench and on the floor in front of wbdiff, around the tank and on TOP of the splash shield at wbnonmetal. This is an appalling example of bad acid handling. This is dangerous, not only for the person doing this, but for unsuspecting people using the benches afterwards. Now, for those of you who dared ask, "BOE" means "Buffered Oxide Etch", a premixed etchant which contains ammonium fluoride as the buffer to improve etch reliability and performance. Now, BOE's contain a LOT of ammonium fluoride -- there is about as much fluorine content in a BOE etchant as there is in 49% concentrated liquid hydrofluoric acid. And, it's just about as insidiously dangerous -- ammonium fluoride penetrates a little slower through your skin than HF, but the effect is much the same. Basically, just a few crystals touching your skin here and there can result in a lot of pain.... probably many hours after exposure... And for those of who feel that maybe a little pain is to be expected when pursuing the art of fine research, understand that these crystals are PARTICLES which can mess up your work. Please, please, please, be conscientious about your handling of wafers and cassettes at these stations. Please also be aware of what people are doing around you, especially if you are enabled on the system. This is your lab too -- don't be afraid to talk to someone if you feel uncomfortable with their lab practices. If you have any information, concerns, or complaints, contact your favorite staff member and we will follow up. Mary -- Mary X. Tang, Ph.D. Stanford Nanofabrication Facility CIS Room 136, Mail Code 4070 Stanford, CA 94305 (650)723-9980 mtang at stanford.edu http://snf.stanford.edu