<swkhan> hello =)
<berndj> azonenberg, some possibly useful info: http://www.microchemicals.eu/technical_information/  (i see the word "chromium" for example)
<azonenberg> berndj: i already raed that lol
<azonenberg> read*
<B0101> hi azonenberg
<azonenberg> hi
<azonenberg> Just did some tests of using evaporated Cu over Cr as a wet etch mask for KOH
<azonenberg> The Si didnt etch at all
<azonenberg> even though the metal was removed
<azonenberg> I think that the Cu was removed but the ~5nm of Cr (too thin to see) is still there masking the KOH
<azonenberg> Going to try repeating the process with a longer HCl etch to make sure the Cr is gone
<B0101> oh. and I have found the supplier i was talking about last week
<azonenberg> nice
<B0101> I now got to wait for the wafers to arrive...
<azonenberg> you actually ordered some?
<azonenberg> What type
<CIA-67> homecmos r121 | trunk/lithography-tests/labnotes/azonenberg_labnotes.txt | Today's lab notes
<B0101> azonenberg: p-type wafers, orientation: 100
<azonenberg> single polish? 4-inch?
<B0101> single polish at 2 inch
<B0101> I wonder if my furnace still works though....
<azonenberg> Time to find out lol
<azonenberg> Oxidation is a capability I want but dont have yet
<azonenberg> i have a toaster oven (goes a little hotter but worse control) for reflow soldering
<azonenberg> and a nice lab oven
<azonenberg> but they max out at 260 and 225C respectively
<azonenberg> then a hot plate
<B0101> I think i will need Si 29...
<azonenberg> ?
<B0101> Or silicon isotope 29
<azonenberg> Why is that?
<azonenberg> what does the isotope matter to you
<azonenberg> I assume you are trying to build electronics and not a nuclear device :p
<B0101> azonenberg: I need silicon isotope 29 because of its 1/2 nuclear spin.
<B0101> for an experimental Josephson Junction
<azonenberg> interesting
<azonenberg> i dont know enough about them to be able to say much
<azonenberg> all of my work to date has been MEMS based
<azonenberg> focusing on the mechanics of patterning
<B0101> I'm gonna be afk, talk to you in a while
<azonenberg> k
<B0101> i'm back
<azonenberg> that was fast lol
<B0101> just went get the door, and found that my 100+ BC547 transistors have arrived
<azonenberg> nice
<B0101> you can guess what they're for
<azonenberg> is working on database homework due in a few hours
<azonenberg> and i dont know the model
<azonenberg> dont even know if they're fets or bjt
<B0101> the bc547 are BJTs
<azonenberg> So what are you using them on?
<B0101> I am using some to repair a board
<B0101> and the rest for a homemade CPU
<B0101> of course, it will be very slow
<bart416> azonenberg, I just managed to extract the electron cannon from the crt's glass tube without damaging
<swkhan> azonenberg: you're still working on the copper stuff? =)
<swkhan> ever figure out why chromium works?
<swkhan> or why titanium is used as an adhesion layer for platinum, etc.?
<bart416> swkhan, learn some basic chemistry
<swkhan> bart416: ouch =( i read a book on chemistry, i still don't understand. transitional metals are weird
<bart416> You need to look at the oxidation states in specific
<bart416> That's the easy guideline
<bart416> On the other hand, you need to look at the potential differences for the redox reaction
<bart416> And the molecular orbitals
<bart416> But to show it easy: Platinum has two common oxidation states 4 and 2 and uncommonly 6 and 3, while Titanium has 4, 3, 2; chrome has 6, 4, 3, 2
<bart416> azonenberg, about that railgun design
<bart416> We did some more math
<bart416> We figured out if we actually built it like we originally intended to it would have fired
<bart416> Once
<bart416> It'd rip itself apart (in a cloud of shrapnell I think)
<azonenberg_work> hi mrdata
<bart416> I heard captain picard was still looking for you!
<mrdata> yes, ever since that incident on romulus
<mrdata> but, he'll have to wait
<azonenberg_work> lol
<bart416> Strictly speaking the incident wasn't on romulus
<bart416> But related to romulans, your memory banks are flawed!
<mrdata> an unfortunate consequence of the explosion
<bart416> I blame listening to trekies whining about irc trolls for knowing such things :|
<azonenberg_work> lol
<mrdata> and now to business. so this is the first ive heard of #homecmos
<mrdata> what goes on, around here?
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: we've been around for a while but are still small
<azonenberg_work> As of now i'm the main one doing lab work but am getting good input from others
<azonenberg_work> B010101 isnt here right now
<azonenberg_work> but is setting up a lab as well
<azonenberg_work> she's planning to do work on Josephson junction stuff from what i hear
<azonenberg_work> i'm focusing on MEMS
<mrdata> nice
<azonenberg_work> and am the main one backing the project
<mrdata> wants sketchy homebrew mems sensor devices
<mrdata> just to scare people
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: Once i get a working comb drive
<azonenberg_work> a mems accelerometer is within reach
<azonenberg_work> the control stuff will obviously be an external microcontroller and not a stacked-die design like modern ones are
<azonenberg_work> And bonding is still an unsolved problem
<bart416> mrdata, you building an icbm?
<azonenberg_work> right now i am focusing on fab, and i have a probing station suitable for testing a couple of points
<azonenberg_work> three probes is enough to do a single transistor
<azonenberg_work> will need four or five to test gates, unless i hard-wire inputs to Vdd or Vss
<mrdata> bart416, not building, no; i am curious about what-if scenarios, for global disaster and collapse
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: a lot of people are
<azonenberg_work> One thing none of us have touched on is the materials
<mrdata> so it would be nice to have, let's see.. homebrew hall effect sensor, temperature sensor,...
<bart416> After I'm done there'll be no globe left for a global disaster
<azonenberg_work> photoresist, for example, i have no idea how to make
<mrdata> silicon purification
<azonenberg_work> i know the theory behind crystal growth but have no idea how to refine the materials
<azonenberg_work> Its not something i'd attempt with the setup i have now
<mrdata> has read up on solar grade silicon purification techniques
<mrdata> but i havent done any
<azonenberg_work> Having a Czochralski rig in my basement would be cool
<azonenberg_work> Make my own 4-inch boules lol
<azonenberg_work> But i'm not nearly that advanced yet
<azonenberg_work> bart416: oh, good news
<mrdata> would like to have a x-ray photovoltaic cell
<azonenberg_work> a guy i was doing consulting with a while ago needs a sample tested under vacuum
<azonenberg_work> and is buying me a bell jar and mechanical pump
<mrdata> nice
<azonenberg_work> the chamber has feedthroguhs rated to 30A
<azonenberg_work> Which means that if i can get myself a diffusion or turbopump, setting up a sputtering or filament evaporation system is well within the realm of feasibility
<mrdata> what pressure will the bell jar reach?
<azonenberg_work> Its rated to high vacuum iirc
<mrdata> 1 torr?
<azonenberg_work> i dont have full details
<mrdata> less?
<azonenberg_work> His tests dont need to go too deep
<azonenberg_work> Personally, i'd like to hit 1E-6
<azonenberg_work> which would let me do evaporation
<azonenberg_work> sputterin i could do at around 1E-1 or -2
<azonenberg_work> DC sputtering*
<azonenberg_work> I wont know for sure until itry pumping it down
<azonenberg_work> Also, tonight i am going to try running some polishing experimnents
<azonenberg_work> see if i can take a rough chunk of some material (silicon? metal plate?) and get it to an optical polish or better
<mrdata> yes
<azonenberg_work> 1500 grit sandpaper, 6-3-1 um diamond paste
<azonenberg_work> 50-250nm diamond paste
<azonenberg_work> then 60nm colloidal silica CMP
<mrdata> if you had to start from nothing, in the woods, with 18th century equipment, what could you do
<azonenberg_work> It'd take a while, i dont have the chemistry background
<mrdata> you'd have to know metallurgy
<azonenberg_work> One of the first things to do would be to build electric motors (not that hard) for a spin coater and polishing machine
<azonenberg_work> and a vacuum pump
<azonenberg_work> which would be necessary for most of the remaining work
<mrdata> ok, so we'll say you have copper wire (otherwise you have to refine the copper forom ores)
<azonenberg_work> this assumes you have 1700s era metallurgy available (reasonably pure copper wire)
<azonenberg_work> and basic steam powered machine tools
<azonenberg_work> if you dont have the second, get it first
<mrdata> yes. but you can use your knowledge of modern methods and equipment, to make those
<azonenberg_work> Correct
<azonenberg_work> Given the knowledge, they arent that difficult to make
<azonenberg_work> a few years to get decently working ones at most
<azonenberg_work> probably less given a good team
<azonenberg_work> The next step is to start building up stocks of raw materials
<mrdata> many metals can be made pure by electroforming
<azonenberg_work> refining pure metals etc
<azonenberg_work> as well as synthesizing solvents and such
<azonenberg_work> This is not my area of expertise
<mrdata> yes. i need catalysts
<mrdata> platinum, palladium, rare earths,...
<azonenberg_work> Given somewhat pure materials, you can use float-zone crystallization to make them purer
<azonenberg_work> among other techniques
<mrdata> yes that works for silicon
<azonenberg_work> Photoresist, i have no clue
<azonenberg_work> the active ingredient in the stuff i use is some long complicated diazo compound abbreviated DNQ
<azonenberg_work> in a novolac-epoxy resin
<mrdata> starting from metallurgical grade silicon, (~99% pure), make silicon solar cells
<mrdata> must purify the silicon to 99.999
<azonenberg_work> Ok
<azonenberg_work> Float zone might work for that
<azonenberg_work> Repeat a couple of times
<azonenberg_work> then you can do doping of boron and phosphorus compounds by diffusion
<azonenberg_work> spin-coat a solution of an alcohol-baseed dopant and heat in air to drive in
<azonenberg_work> if anyone tries it i'd love to hear the results
<azonenberg_work> if success, great
<azonenberg_work> if fail, let us know what you tried and how it failed
<azonenberg_work> so we wont make the same mistake
<bart416> You'd need a SEM to analyse the mistake though :(
<azonenberg_work> Depends on how small it was
<azonenberg_work> most of my stuff i can do at least some failure analysis under optical microscopy
<azonenberg_work> And i want to build a sem at some point
<azonenberg_work> you have no idea :P
<azonenberg_work> But knowing the mat sci department's microscopy lab manager has its perks for the short term lol
<azonenberg_work> i'm last priority in scheduling since i'm not paying, but i can get my analysis done eventually
<mrdata> microscopy is a critical technology
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: agreeed
<azonenberg_work> Optical comes first
<azonenberg_work> you need to get basic electronics (including single silicon transistors at macroscale) working before you try doing too much of a shrink
<mrdata> really?
<mrdata> the scanning/tunneling microscope was a breakthrough
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: Do optical first
<mrdata> definitely
<azonenberg_work> Quick inspection of large samples in full color
<azonenberg_work> STMs shouldnt be too hard to build
<azonenberg_work> i actually want to make an STM or AFM some time soon
<azonenberg_work> then a SEM later on
<mrdata> if your fab lab is in your living room, how do you handle dust?
<mrdata> finger prints?
<mrdata> etc
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: hair net, lab coat, and rubber gloves
<azonenberg_work> pretty much eliminates particulates from me
<azonenberg_work> the ambent levels are low enough that i can live with them given frequent cleaning (right before a film deposition etc)
<mrdata> so, maybe a dust remover?
<azonenberg_work> I have not had any issues with dust in air
<azonenberg_work> when you try shrinking to micron scale or doing mass production cleanroom capability will be nice
<mrdata> imagines an eavesdropper watching thru the window, and getting very confused and worried
<azonenberg_work> for research scale on tens-of-microns features?
<azonenberg_work> not a problem
<azonenberg_work> mrdata: a friend of mine actually got raided by local cops and some federal folks
<azonenberg_work> neighbor saw vacuum equipment in his basement and called 911 reporting a bomb
<azonenberg_work> people are idiots... but he still hasnt gotten his stuff back and the court case isnt over yet
<azonenberg_work> a year later
<azonenberg_work> so i've been very paranoid in terms of making sure i'm up front with the landlord etc about whats going on
<azonenberg_work> msds book in plain view, full fire sprinkler coverage
<azonenberg_work> proper and documented waste disposal
<mrdata> residential zoning might forbid some stuff
<azonenberg_work> lives in Highway Commercial zone ;)
<mrdata> good
<azonenberg_work> permits light industrial work including "laboratories for commercial and academic research and development"
<mrdata> good
<azonenberg_work> i looked that uup a while ago
<azonenberg_work> and after a year and a half of living here my ex-cop landlord (retired chief of police actually) hasnt turned me in
<mrdata> irf the authorities think youre operating a clandestine lab, they'll shut you down. doesnt matter what you make
<azonenberg_work> so my best guess is he doesnt think i'm doing anything illegal
<mrdata> so it's good to make sure you dont try to hide
<azonenberg_work> Yeah
<azonenberg_work> I dont work outside on the sidewalk to avoid freakng out the neighbors, obviously
<azonenberg_work> But i also dont make any attempt to hide
<azonenberg_work> makes mental note to add latest purchase of polishing compound to MSDS binder
<azonenberg_work> why does it have to be so expensive
<azonenberg_work> i feel lke i could make something equivalent for $200ish
<cheater> hi
<cheater> how is the project coming along :)
<azonenberg_work> cheater: hi
<azonenberg_work> Quite well. I did some runs on the 20um process for characterization last night
<cheater> nice
<azonenberg_work> thats 800x magnification
<cheater> say, is your toolkit mostly geared for digital, or for analog as well?
<azonenberg_work> nominal line / space dimension 20um
<cheater> < ignorant
<azonenberg_work> and i am actually focusing on MEMS, with digital CMOS as a secondary goal
<cheater> let me just say that looks cool
<azonenberg_work> evaporated copper on silicon
<azonenberg_work> The roughness you see on the copper is actually the photoresist
<azonenberg_work> which has not yet been stripped
<azonenberg_work> the copper itself is very flat
<azonenberg_work> Yes
<azonenberg_work> A comb drive is my current goal
<cheater> what does that do?
<bart416> btw azonenberg have you tried using comsol for simulations?
<azonenberg_work> i hope to have a working one on the 20um process (i.e. 20um fingers at 20um spacing) by end of the year
<azonenberg_work> bart416: no, i have not
<azonenberg_work> cheater: its a linear actuator much like a solenoid
<azonenberg_work> except it uses electrostatic instead of magnetic forces
<cheater> gotcha
<azonenberg_work> you have two sets of parallel plates
<azonenberg_work> one fixed and one mounted on a spring
<azonenberg_work> forming a parallel-plate capacitor
<azonenberg_work> when you apply a charge to the plates they attract
<cheater> yes
<cheater> that is apparent even in capacitors
<azonenberg_work> Yeah
<azonenberg_work> Except in this case capacitance is not the goal, it's motion
<azonenberg_work> The capacitance actually wastes energy - every charge/dischage cycle uses power
<azonenberg_work> The static power consumption is effectively zero though
<azonenberg_work> unlike a solenoid
<azonenberg_work> iow, much like cmos, you only use power when changing state
<mrdata> what about isentropic switches?
<azonenberg_work> not familiar with them
<mrdata> you only use power when you have to destroy bits
<azonenberg_work> all of my "real" experience has been working with a group building mems
<azonenberg_work> and all of my home work has been focused on getting a working comb drive
<cheater> hm
<cheater> so where could a comb drive be applied?
<mrdata> some kind of sensor
<cheater> what about using it to eg change the color of something
<azonenberg_work> cheater: i dont see that as being too useful
<azonenberg_work> you could use it on a mems micromirror
<azonenberg_work> as, for example, part of a DLP array
<azonenberg_work> If you run it backwards (use low voltage to measure capacitance, rather than high to generate a force)
<azonenberg_work> you can use it like an accelerometer
<azonenberg_work> in fact this is how most mems accelerometers work
<berndj> azonenberg_work, i wonder if your basement czochralski rig is only the beginning of yet another whole stack of tech
<berndj> specifically, how do you make wafers from boules
<berndj> <mrdata> if you had to start from nothing, in the woods, with 18th century equipment, what could you do  <-- wait, i'll get you a link
<berndj> hmm, could take a while to find.  there was some guy who was building a telegraph from basically nothing
<berndj> and while you guys are re-bootstrapping tech, i'd propose that we avoid the vacuum tube cul de sac (until we *really* need them)
<bart416> telegraphs are easy enough to build berndj
<berndj> uhm, this guy extracts metals from ore
<bart416> so? :P
<bart416> You can build a telegraph out of things you find on your desk right now most likely
<berndj> then again, i could build half a 6-axis robot from what's n front of me
<bart416> lol
<bart416> from what's in front of me I couldn' build that much, from what's next to me though lol
<bart416> Enough transistors to build a small computer xD
<berndj> hmm, 4 motors and a geiger tube
<berndj> now all i need is an xray tube and it could be a weld inspection robot
<azonenberg> lol
<azonenberg> berndj: also, i dont have a CZ rig yet
<azonenberg> its on the "would-be-cool-but-not-a-high-priority" list
<berndj> i know, just extrapolating :)
<azonenberg> Also, i think tonight or tomorrow morning i am gonna try more double patterning
<azonenberg> this time with an even shorter exposure
<azonenberg> say 1 min per shot rather than 2.5
<berndj> just how accurately do you need your cuts to be aligned with the crystal planes?
<azonenberg> So far? Not very
<azonenberg> i can handle a few degrees off
<berndj> hehe, i mean in hypothetical CZ-in-basement setup
<azonenberg> Oh
<azonenberg> You'd set the seed crystal up as accurately as you can based on a cleavage plane
<azonenberg> and that sets the orientation for the whole rest of the boule
<azonenberg> And are you talking orientation of the wafer normal?
<azonenberg> Or the flat
<berndj> i suppose it isn't the end of the world if you have < 0.998 0.996 0.005 > instead of <1 1 0> ?
<azonenberg> For precise etches you normally calibrate by doing a test etch
<azonenberg> And correct, it isnt
<azonenberg> in fact, most real wafers are +/- a degree or so afaik
<berndj> not at 5µm anyway!
<azonenberg> specifically because that tolerance isnt that crucial
<berndj> oooh
<berndj> that's good news then
<berndj> and how would you saw the boule into wafers?  are you positing a diamon wire saw in your basement too?
<azonenberg> I'd probably get one of those *before* the CZ rig
<azonenberg> since its useful for other stuff
<azonenberg> cross section imaging for example