From maurice at stanford.edu Mon Jul 7 16:15:05 2008 From: maurice at stanford.edu (maurice stevens) Date: Mon, 07 Jul 2008 16:15:05 -0700 Subject: New!! WBSilicide features! Message-ID: <4872A379.10502@stanford.edu> The silicide bench has to be enabled to drain acids, dump rinse or spin dry. -m -- maurice at stanford.edu Maurice Stevens Stanford Nanofabrication Facility CIS Room 142, Mail Code 4070 Stanford, CA 94305 P. (650)725-3660 F. (650)725.6278 From robinhmb at yahoo.com Mon Jul 7 21:00:42 2008 From: robinhmb at yahoo.com (Robin King) Date: Mon, 7 Jul 2008 21:00:42 -0700 (PDT) Subject: New!! WBSilicide features! In-Reply-To: <4872A379.10502@stanford.edu> Message-ID: <616110.54485.qm@web58711.mail.re1.yahoo.com> Webster Online "Feature" c: something offered to the public or advertised as particularly attractive This change came the morning after someone accidently picked up what he thought was a semi-clean handle that turned out to be the gold contaminated handle placed in the wrong location. When one bench has some pots and handles designated gold, and others semi-clean, it's bound to happen. It's not clear why the solution is to tighten up on lab users? Maybe the bench logistics could be resolved better. -a lab user. --- On Mon, 7/7/08, maurice stevens wrote: > From: maurice stevens > Subject: New!! WBSilicide features! > To: wbsilicide at snf.stanford.edu, tylanbpsg at snf.stanford.edu > Date: Monday, July 7, 2008, 4:15 PM > The silicide bench has to be enabled to drain acids, dump > rinse or spin > dry. > > -m > > -- > maurice at stanford.edu > > Maurice Stevens > Stanford Nanofabrication Facility > CIS Room 142, Mail Code 4070 > Stanford, CA 94305 > P. (650)725-3660 > F. (650)725.6278 From mtang at stanford.edu Tue Jul 8 12:48:40 2008 From: mtang at stanford.edu (Mary Tang) Date: Tue, 08 Jul 2008 12:48:40 -0700 Subject: New!! WBSilicide features! Message-ID: <4873C498.80800@stanford.edu> Dear wbsilicide users -- This wet bench now requires that users enable the system to be able to use many bench functions. The reason for this change is economic: our single biggest materiel expense is nitrogen. Our LN2 tank gets filled up about 3X/week. We also seem to go through about 2-3X what other university labs of comparable size use. So one ongoing program in our lab is N2 monitoring and reduction. As you may have noticed, flow meters are being installed in various tools, including the wet benches. Lots of N2 is used to run the wet benches -- the spin-rinse dryers N2 hogs, but N2 is also used to drive the pneumatic valves which actuate most of the wet bench functions, like draining. (No, there is no convenient "clean dry air" hook up at the wet benches.) Estimates put N2 use at all the wet benches up to perhaps 7%-10% of the total N2 use -- in the building. Wet benches continuously consume nitrogen whether or not they are being used -- and the opportunity cost is significant, particularly when you consider the low utilization on most et benches (wbnitride, wbmetal.) So, the plan is to place have N2 turn on at individual wet benches only when the bench is enabled; i.e., when someone actually needs to use it. There are some logistics that need to be worked out, so Jim H. is "bench testing" his set up at wbsilicide. Once he's confident everything will work, the plan is to install this modification on all the wet benches. We are trusting this modification should be reasonably transparent to normal, appropriate bench use. Any comments or questions about this modification are appreciated. Your SNF Staff -- 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