Equipment and Materials ♦ news digest
“For researchers working with hard disk media and other flat substrates, the process of identifying nanoscale defects is time consuming with conventional tools, hindering throughput. The Automatic Defect Review (ADR) speeds up and improves the way it identifies, scans and analyses defects in substrates and media,” comments Sang-il Park, CEO and Chairman.
“Beta test runs with Park NX-HDM demonstrate a 10x increase in throughput for defect review in an automated process when compared with more traditional manual methods of defect review. Moreover, we perfected the remapping and defect identification algorithm, and the success rate of the new NX- HDM is 30 percent higher than its previous generation, XE- HDM.”
Park NX-HDM for LED, solar, and general semiconductor device industries, speeds up the automatic defect review for media and wafers. The survey scan, zoom-in scan, and analysis of imaged defect types are automated with a wide range of automated optical inspection (AOI) tools.
What’s more, ‘True Non-Contact Mode’, combined with one of the industry’s lowest noise floors, provides accurate and reliable measurements for the sub-angstrom surface roughness of diverse media and wafers.
The unique Park dual servo system with two symmetric, low- noise position sensors are incorporated on each axis of the XY scanner to retain a high scan orthogonality for widescan ranges and sample sizes. The secondary sensor corrects and compensates for non-linear and non-planar positional errors caused by a single sensor.
“There has never been a metrology tool capable of providing accurate and reliable measurements for the sub-Angstrom roughness of the substrate surfaces,” says Ryan Yoo, Vice President of Global Sales and Marketing. “By delivering the industry’s lowest noise floor of less than 0.5 Å, Park NX-HDM can acquire accurate, repeatable, and reproducible sub- angstrom roughness measurements for the flattest substrates and media.”
Suppliers to various industries are developing ultra-flat substrates to address the ever-increasing need for shrinking device dimensions. However, there has never been a metrology tool capable of providing accurate and reliable measurements for the sub-Angstrom roughness of this substrate surfaces.
Park NX-HDM combines the industry’s lowest noise floor of less than 0.5 Å with Park’s proprietary ‘True Non-Contact’ technology to create repeatable and reproducible sub- Angstrom roughness measurements without tip degradation. Scan size and scan speed are adjustable to match the user’s needs in throughput and quality control.
materials product line
In May of 2013, Nanotronics Imaging installed an nSPEC system at Kyma Technologies in Raleigh, North Carolina.
nSPEC system
Kyma and Nanotronics began discussing how the nSPEC tool might benefit Kyma’s nitride semiconductor materials production effort in early 2013. A collaborative partnership was quickly spawned which led to Kyma’s purchase of the nSPEC tool.
The nSPEC enables Kyma to inspect their wafers via powerful image analysis software. This includes the ability to store high resolution images, capture particular features and areas of interest while translating the acquired visual information into quantifiable data.
Kyma uses Nanotronics tool
to classify defects in GaN The newly installed inspection system will be used in the characterisation of Kyma’s growing III-nitride semiconductor
August/September 2013
www.compoundsemiconductor.net 157
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