news digest ♦ Equipment and Materials
“Since we originally selected Veeco as our MOCVD equipment supplier for KaiStar a year ago, we have been extremely impressed with the product quality, service and support we have received. A critical deciding factor has been Veeco’s quick process transfer which is important as we share know-how across our LED manufacturing sites. In addition, the TurboDisc’s low cost-of-ownership made it a straight-forward decision to turn to Veeco as we add more tools for KaiStar in 2013.”
Bill Miller, Executive Vice President of Veeco, says, “We are pleased to support Epistar and Kaifa as they continue to expand their leadership position in the China market through KaiStar and their other joint ventures. We will remain focused on helping them to achieve their manufacturing goals.”
Veeco’s TurboDisc MaxBright M GaN MOCVD Multi-Reactor System platform is an MOCVD system designed to manufacture high quality, high brightness LEDs. The firm says its MaxBright M provides up to 15 percent improved footprint efficiency, easier serviceability and offers accommodating layout configurations compared to the original MaxBright.
Canadian university purchases Veeco MBE system
The reactor will be used for a new nano research centre
The University of Waterloo has purchased a Veeco GEN10 MBE system for its recently opened Quantum-Nano Centre (QNC) hosting the Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology (WIN) and the Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC).
The system will be installed in the new MBE laboratory being established by Zbig Wasilewski, Endowed Nanotechnology Chair at WIN.
According to Wasilewski, “MBE technology is rich in its application across several fields of study that we are focusing on here at WIN and IQC. After thorough evaluation, we thought the GEN10 was the best choice due to its flexible cluster architecture, system design details, full automation
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www.compoundsemiconductor.net January/February 2013
and relatively small footprint. It ideally fits our needs across many research frontiers. Also, given the importance of effusion cells to our research, we thought Veeco would be a great choice given their expertise and our history with their cells.”
Jim Northup, Vice President, General Manager of Veeco’s MBE Operations, adds, “Our team is very excited that the University of Waterloo has selected the GEN10 as its first piece of equipment to be installed at the new Quantum-Nano Centre. It’s a great example of how Veeco’s state of the art MBE technology continues to remain at the forefront of broad based research around the world.”
The Mike & Ophelia Lazaridis Quantum-Nano Centre opened in the fall of 2012. The QNC is dedicated to allowing faculty and students to pursue quantum information and nanotechnology research at the highest level. Shared between the Institute of Quantum Computing and the Waterloo Institute of Nanotechnology, the building fosters cross-disciplinary collaboration in its many common areas, lounges and meeting rooms.
Veeco’s GEN10 MBE system allows for up to three configurable, material specific growth modules, enabling high system utilisation with multiple researchers simultaneously performing unattended growths and calibrations.
BaySpec’s InGaAs detector tackles harsh weather
The indium gallium arsenide detector is designed to meet real-world challenges for best-in-class performance, long-term reliability, compact size and optimised power consumption
BaySpec’s Nunavut InGaAs detector covers wavelength ranges 900-1700, 1100-2200, and 1250-2500 nm.
The tool also has hermetic-sealing to ensure reliable operation in harsh environments.
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