Wednesday, September 30, 2009

PhD Orals--Aaron Parness, Friday, Oct 2nd, 2:30pm

Department of Mechanical Engineering
University PhD Dissertation Defense

Title: Microstructured Adhesives for Climbing Applications
Advisor: Prof. Mark Cutkosky

Time: Oct. 2nd, 2009, 2:30 pm (Refreshment served at 2:15pm)
Location: Mechanical Engineering Research Lab (MERL), Conference room (2nd floor, by the kitchen area)
Campus map: http://campus-map.stanford.edu/index.cfm?ID=02-660

Abstract:
Researchers seeking to expand the capabilities of mobile robots have begun looking to biological systems for inspiration. One particularly agile creature, the gecko lizard, is remarkably adept at maneuvering across both flat and vertical surfaces. Some species of gecko are even capable of climbing across inverted surfaces. The study of the gecko's adhesive system has informed the design of several synthetic adhesives in recent years. However, these adhesives generally fail to match the gecko adhesive's performance in one fashion or another. Many previous synthetic gecko adhesives are not reusable or they lack a method of control. Others do not have the ability to conform to surfaces with any roughness, or to distribute forces across the many thousands of fibers evenly. This presentation focuses on the design of a gecko-like adhesive system that achieves the level of performance necessary for implementation on a small-scale climbing robot.

A gecko's adhesive structure has a strong directional preference, allowing the animal a method to control the stickiness of its feet. When loaded from the tip of the toe towards the palm, the material exhibits high adhesion in both the shear and normal direction. However, when this load is released, or when the toe is loaded in a different direction, no adhesion is present. First, I will discuss the creation of a synthetic micro-structure that also displays a directional adhesive dependence. This begins with the presentation of a new lithographic process used to create asymmetric wedge-shaped cavities in a photo-sensitive epoxy at the scale of tens of microns. Elastomeric materials were cast into these molds to produce the synthetic micro structures. Analysis and laboratory testing of this material show its strong directional dependence. Its performance for robotic climbing applications was promising at small sample sizes when tested on smooth surfaces like glass. However, the material proved inadequate for climbing because its performance could not be scaled to areas greater than about 1 cm2, nor could it adhere to rough surfaces.

The gecko uses a multi-tiered hierarchy to insure that its millions of sub-micron sized spatulae make intimate contact with a surface regardless of its roughness. The gecko's system conforms across multiple length scales, distributing climbing forces and allowing rapid locomotion with seemingly minimal control effort. In the second portion of the talk, hierarchical suspensions for fibrillar adhesives are analyzed, and three iterations of a synthetic hierarchical adhesive design are detailed. The use of these hierarchical suspensions with modified wedge micro-structures similar to those mentioned above turned out to be successful enough to allow a mobile robot platform named Stickybot to climb multiple vertical surfaces ranging in roughness from glass to drywall. Data from large patches, well over 100 cm2, are also included. Discussion of these results and their implications for human climbing applications will conclude the presentation.

PhD Orals -- Maria Makarova, Thursday, October 1, 2009 10am

Department of Electrical Engineering
University PhD Dissertation Defense

Silicon-based photonic crystal light sources
Maria Makarova
Advisor: Prof. Jelena Vuckovic

Time:  Thursday, October 1st, 10:00 am (refreshments at 9:45)
Location:  CIS-X Auditorium

Abstract:

Efficient light generation on silicon is desirable for a variety of
applications because of its low fabrication cost relative to III/V
semiconductors and because it will enable monolithic integration with
electronic components on the same Si platform.  We studied
silicon-rich silicon nitride with emission in the visible and
erbium-doped silicon nitride (Er:SiNx) with emission at 1540 nm.  Both
of these materials are compatible with the mainstream complementary
metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) processing technology. In this talk,
I will discuss our results on using photonic crystal (PC) cavities to
enhance luminescence from these materials. Nano-resonators modify the
local optical density of states (DOS) to enhance the emission in a
fundamentally different way than what is accessible through materials
engineering. Specifically, photon emission rate can be enhanced at a
particular wavelength because the optical DOS is higher at the cavity
resonance, which in turn improves efficiency and allows faster
modulation rates.  We have demonstrated up to 11-fold enhancement at
photonic crystal resonance relative to smooth film at 730 nm and
30-fold enhancement at 1540 nm.  Most recently, we have observed
cavity line-width narrowing with increasing pump power in the
erbium-doped sample, resulting from decrease in ground-state
absorption by erbium ions as more of them are excited.  We achieved
excitation of up to 28% of Er ions at cryogenic temperature.   This is
an important step toward realizing a laser based on Er:SiNx in the
future.
--
EE students mailing list
ee-students@lists.stanford.edu
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/ee-students

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-29 15:44:47: Chamber C went offilne !

Online chamber C

The door between the gowning room and the cleanroom ....

SNF Lab Members:

As a number of you know, the inner door between the gowning room and the
cleanroon was not working much of today and folks were manually sliding
it open and shut. Even that doesn't seem to work any longer.

As a result, we've opened it completely and turned off the power to it
so that it will stay open. We have also defeated the "Door Closed"
sensor so that it thinks that the inner door is closed .... so that the
door to the hallway will open and close normally.

While this is not ideal from a cleanliness perspective, it is better
than people having trouble accessing the lab .... either entering or
exiting ... and better than having people get frustrated and jam something.

Hopefully, the service organization that works on this will be here in
the morning to fix this properly.

Thank you for your patience and continued support,

John

Ring fitting on the stereo microscope in the lab

Dear labmembers --


We're trying to install a lamp on the low power stereo microscope (also
called a "dissecting" scope) in the lab. However, it is missing the
large screw ring that fits around the objectives. This would be handy
for attaching the lamp. This ring was observed to be on the scope just
a few days ago. If you have this or have seen it, please return to the
scope so we can upgrade it.


Thanks,

Mary

--
Mary X. Tang, Ph.D.
Stanford Nanofabrication Facility
CIS Room 136, Mail Code 4070
Stanford, CA 94305
(650)723-9980
mtang@stanford.edu
http://snf.stanford.edu

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-29 15:44:47: Chamber C went offilne !

Suspended structure - backside etching

Dear labmembers,

I am designing some suspended structures (something like the membranes of pressure sensors) on silicon wafer but feel myself bogged down by the fab process. I will very appreciate if anyone who has experience in (or is currently doing) back-side litho/etching could offer me a couple of minutes to give some hints on the process details.

Thanks a lot,
Zijian

[Fwd: BBQ is TODAY!]

ALL ARE WELCOME to our fall kick-off BBQ today at 4pm in Ginzton Courtyard to share great food, drinks, and your interest in optics! Invite your colleagues to come out and learn about our organization's activities!
To learn more about Stanford OSA/SPIE and our upcoming events, visit:  http://photons.stanford.edu
BBQ Flyer

Stanford OSA/SPIE Chapter


Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-28 09:08:30: High backside He leak rate

Adjusted Chamber A hand-off position. Clamp fingers are worn out and needs to be replaced. Should work OK for now but there is very little margin for error. Ordered new parts. They should be ready by next week.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Discrete FETs for amplifier circuit

Greetings,

 

We are looking for 3 discrete FETs to build a simple low frequency amplifier that would operate at  low temperatures (77K), ideally GaAs HEMTs. Does anyone  know how we can get a few of these, or if there is lab that we can barrow from?

 

 

Thanks,

Arash

 

 

 

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Arash Hazeghi

 

PhD Candidate

Stanford Center for Integrated Systems

CIS-X 300, 420 Via Palou Mall,

Stanford, CA 94305

 

phone: +1-650-725-0418

web: http://www.stanford.edu/~ahazeghi

 

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-28 09:08:30: High backside He leak rate

Fwd: Reminder - Registration for Molecular Foundry Annual Users Meeting is OPEN!

>Delivered-To: rissman@stanford.edu
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> d="scan'208";a="102894131"
>Date: Thu, 24 Sep 2009 12:29:10 -0700
>From: "David A. Bunzow" <DABunzow@lbl.gov>
>User-Agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.23 (Windows/20090812)
>To: rissman@stanford.edu
>CC: "Lorri St.Claire" <LMStClaire@lbl.gov>, Oscar D Dubon Jr <ODDubon@lbl.gov>
>Subject: Reminder - Registration for Molecular Foundry Annual Users Meeting
> is OPEN!
>
>Hi Paul,
>
>Just a brief reminder for you and the folks (staff and users) at the SNF:
>
>The Molecular Foundry's Annual User Meeting is open for registration
>by attendees at:
>http://foundry.lbl.gov/user2009
>
>While the time for submitting abstracts technically has expired, we
>still have a limited number of slots open and would be very
>interested to have representation from your organization!
>
>We hope to see you and the scientists and users at SNF for this very
>stimulating event. Stay in touch and let me know when you would
>like the tour of TMF we discussed last month - there will be several
>opportunities during the user meeting to do this as well.
>
>Regards,
>David
>
>--
>David A. Bunzow
>User Facilities Program Manager
>The Molecular Foundry
>Materials Science Division
>Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
>1 Cyclotron Road MS 67-3207
>Berkeley, CA 94720
>
>Office: 510-486-4574
>FAX: 510-486-7424
>Cell: 701-541-2354

Friday, September 25, 2009

PhD defense- Kuan-Lin Chen, Wednesday 2pm, September 30, Mechanical Eng. Research Lab

Department of Mechanical Engineering
University PhD Dissertation Defense

Title: Wafer level thin-film encapsulation for RF MEMS resonators and filters.
Advisor: Prof. Thomas W. Kenny, Prof. Roger T. Howe

Time:  September 30, 2009, 2:00 pm (Refreshment served at 1:45pm)
Location: Mechanical Engineering Research Lab (MERL), Conference room (2nd floor, by the kitchen area) 

Abstract:
RF MEMS devices are becoming an promising alternatives for components in radio systems due to its high-Q, size, and on-chip compatibility. However, packaging for RF MEMS devices still remains a big challenge for commercialization. Using epitaxial silicon thin-film to encapsulate MEMS devices has been shown as a robust packaging technology, however the frequencies of devices were not yet in the radio frequency ranges. This talk will first evaluate the signal characteristics of silicon packaging followed by the presentation of two innovative packaging methods optimized for RF resonators and filters. The performances and models of resonators and filters packaged using these methods will also be presented.

Best,

Kuan-Lin Chen

Hall effect measurement

I'm looking to do some Hall measurements of semiconductor samples.
Does anyone know any place where I can do these types of measurements?

Thanks,
Scott

PhD Orals -- Maria Makarova, Thursday, October 1, 2009

Department of Electrical Engineering
University PhD Dissertation Defense

Silicon-based photonic crystal light sources
Maria Makarova
Advisor: Prof. Jelena Vuckovic

Time:  Thursday, October 1st, 10:00 am (refreshments at 9:45)
Location:  CIS-X Auditorium

Abstract:

Efficient light generation on silicon is desirable for a variety of
applications because of its low fabrication cost relative to III/V
semiconductors and because it will enable monolithic integration with
electronic components on the same Si platform.  We studied
silicon-rich silicon nitride with emission in the visible and
erbium-doped silicon nitride (Er:SiNx) with emission at 1540 nm.  Both
of these materials are compatible with the mainstream complementary
metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) processing technology. In this talk,
I will discuss our results on using photonic crystal (PC) cavities to
enhance luminescence from these materials. Nano-resonators modify the
local optical density of states (DOS) to enhance the emission in a
fundamentally different way than what is accessible through materials
engineering. Specifically, photon emission rate can be enhanced at a
particular wavelength because the optical DOS is higher at the cavity
resonance, which in turn improves efficiency and allows faster
modulation rates.  We have demonstrated up to 11-fold enhancement at
photonic crystal resonance relative to smooth film at 730 nm and
30-fold enhancement at 1540 nm.  Most recently, we have observed
cavity line-width narrowing with increasing pump power in the
erbium-doped sample, resulting from decrease in ground-state
absorption by erbium ions as more of them are excited.  We achieved
excitation of up to 28% of Er ions at cryogenic temperature.   This is
an important step toward realizing a laser based on Er:SiNx in the
future.
--
EE students mailing list
ee-students@lists.stanford.edu
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/ee-students

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-24 17:18:55: CH B qual after CHF3 change out

New vendor.
Etch rate Ox = 3131A/min
ER PR = 1605
ER Nitride = 3032
Selectivity Ox : Nitride = 1.03 : 1
Sel Ox:PR = 1.95 : 1
Sel SiN : PR = 1.89 : 1

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-23 16:48:17: Ch.B needs a qual

qual completed. See comments

Re: Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 06:47:26: low etch rate in ch. B. jim-ox recipe

Probably cuz we were running out of CHF3

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-23 16:48:17: Ch.B needs a qual

We are using a new CHF3 vendor. Need to run a qual to verify the etch rates.

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-22 10:14:47: no CHF3

Installed new CHF3 cylinder. Flow 200 sccm of CHF3 for 5 minutes with no problems.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Cookies ....

SNF Lab Members:

If you can get there before they are gone, there is one plate of
chocolate chip cookies in the lunchroom and another on the table outside
of the stockroom ....

Have a good evening,

John

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-22 10:14:47: no CHF3

Can't etch oxide in chamber B

Re: Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 18:01:58: CH B status

Status had been changed.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Process Clinic, Monday, 9/21, 2 pm

Hi all --

The next Process Clinic will be Monday, Sept. 21, at 2 pm, in the
cubicle area near Maureen's office. Keith Best and Ed will be on hand,
so bring your ASML questions in addition to your regular process and
SpecMat concerns.

Your SNF Staff

Friday, September 18, 2009

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 18:01:58: CH B status

Currently offline for maintainence. If the Helium leakage problem solved please switch the status., thanks.

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 06:45:44: Ch. B. cooling helium leak rate too high

Vented the chamber and recovered the user's wafer. Reduced the allowable He leak rate before alarming from 6 sccm to 3 sccm. Cycled 8 wafrs using the Jim Ox recipe. Leak rates were < 1 sccm.

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 06:45:27: wafer missing in CH. B or loadlock

Vented the chamber and recovered the user's wafer. Reduced the allowable He leak rate before alarming from 6 sccm to 3 sccm. Cycled 8 wafrs using the Jim Ox recipe. Leak rates were < 1 sccm.

Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 06:47:26: low etch rate in ch. B. jim-ox recipe

etched oxide on 20 wafers and noticed varying and decreasing oxide etch rate with each wafer. toward the end, etch rate seemed to be much less than the usual 3200A/min.

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 06:45:44: Ch. B. cooling helium leak rate too high

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-17 06:45:27: wafer missing in CH. B or loadlock

one wafer did not come out. could be in Ch. B or loadlock.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-16 11:19:24: Broken Wafer in Chamber B

Removed broken wafer pieces from the chamber and cleaned the electrode. Replaced one of the lift pin's lip seal. Ran 2 wafers using the Jim-ox recipe with no problems. Helium backside leak rate is < 0.5 sccm.

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-16 11:19:24: Broken Wafer in Chamber B

Wafer broke in chamber B. rcp = ch b Jim ox.

microprobing facility

Hi,

Does anyone know about some microprobing facility on campus or in the bay that I could access?

Thank you for your help,

Marlene

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-16 01:07:35: BCl3 MFC won't stabilize for chamber A

System keeps giving error in first step of process. Pressure and throttle position won't stabilize either. These problems seem to be coupled together.

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-16 01:04:38: MFC error on chamber A

Chamber A won't start the process because the BCl3 MFC won't stabilize. The pressure and throttle position also are not stable. It seems that those two problems are coupled together.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-15 22:57:30: Helium Leak rate too high in ChB

i received such a fault message when running Oxide Etch recipe. i tried 3 times and the machine showed the same problem.

postdoc for engineer w/fab in bio lab

from a collaborator -- if interested, please contact Prof. Lockery
directly: shawn@uoregon.edu
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Postdoctoral Position
Institute of Neuroscience
University of Oregon

Project title: Microfluidic devices for electro- and
optophysiological screening and analysis of new anthelmintics.

Description. There is an urgent and continuing need for new
anti-nematode drugs, known as anthelmintics. Anthelmintic drug
discovery efforts have not kept pace with emergence of
anthelmintic-resistant strains in humans and economically important
livestock. This problem arises because resource-limited countries do
not support markets that can offset the enormous cost of drug
development, estimated to be on the order of $800 million per drug.
Anthelmintic screening strategies have not changed significantly in
almost 50 years. The proposed research addresses this problem by
combining microfluidics and electro- and optophysiology to screen
drug candidates and identify their biological targets simultaneously.
We currently have proof-of-concept for microfluidic devices that
allow one to record changes physiological activity in nematodes upon
delivery of candidate anthelmintics. The main activities of this
position will be (1) to scale these systems up to tens to hundreds of
simultaneous recordings, (2) to develop automated data analysis
strategies for interpreting the effects of candidate drugs, and (3)
to demonstrate the practical utility of these novel systems.

Degree. PhD in engineering (bio-, electrical, mechanical, or chemical).

Qualifications. The main qualifications are a track record of
inventiveness and out-of-the box thinking in the design,
construction, and testing of novel devices. Prior experience in
microfabrication (esp. soft lithography and/or bio-MEMS), optics,
time-series data analysis, and/or image processing would be
considered a plus.

Funding. The project is funded by the National Institutes of Health
via the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA). Support is
guaranteed for two years with the possibility of longer term funding
as the project advances, including commercial ventures.

Starting date. In keeping with the spirit of the ARRA, the position
is available immediately, but the goal is to fill the position by 15
January 2010.

Contact. Dr. Shawn R. Lockery, Associate Director, Institute of
Neuroscience, 1254 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA. E-mail:
shawn@uoregon.edu.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Coffee Break time - Come down and buy a treat at our Bake Sale in Nancy's Office #145

Dear All,

 

It’s that time in the afternoon when you need a cup of coffee so, why not buy a treat to go with it and support Jasmine Hasi’s as a walker in the 3 Day Walk for the Cure in October.

 

Maureen

 

Maureen Baran

Stanford Nanofabrication Facility

Lab Services Administrator

mbaran@stanford.edu

650-725-3664

 

Sunday, September 13, 2009

missing wafers

Hi all,

I'm missing a box of wafers.  Last time, I left it inside a ziploc bag on the floor near wbnonmetal station (behind the workstations).  If you happen to know where the wafers are, please let me know.

Thanks,
Yuniarto

Friday, September 11, 2009

Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-11 17:11:48: chip of wafer broke in chamber B

seems like one of the clamps might have chipped off part of our wafer. likely a chip or two left on the chuck. ran one test wafer after this and it seemed to go in and out ok if that is any comfort to you.

FW: NNIN International Winter School for Graduate Students in INDIA

All,

In case you are interested in applying for this opportunity.

Yoshio Nishi

 


From: everyone-l-owner@lists.cnf.cornell.edu [mailto:everyone-l-owner@lists.cnf.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Lynn Rathbun
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 12:48 PM
To: everyone-l@lists.cnf.cornell.edu
Subject: Fwd: NNIN International Winter School for Graduate Students in INDIA

 

CNF users and PIs

Just a reminder about the NNIN International Winter School in Nanoelectronics. Please contact me immediately if you wish to apply.  This will be both a great intellectual experience and an exciting international adventure.



Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 10:37:04 -0400
To: everyone-l@lists.cnf.cornell.edu, staff
From: Lynn Rathbun <rathbun@cnf.cornell.edu>
Subject: NNIN International Winter School for Graduate Students in INDIA

CNF PIs and Users

Once again, NNIN will conduct an International Winter School for Graduate Students, this year in Mumbai at  IIT-Bombay,  Nov 30-Dec 13, 2009. Travel will begin on Friday Nov. 27.  This year's topic will be Nanoelectronics.  This follows last years inaugural offering on Organic Electronics and Optoelectronics held at IIT-Kanpur.

The School will consist on an intense technical course on Nanoelectronics at the graduate level--a one semester course taught over an intense 6 days. The course will be taught by leading faculty from US and Indian institutions.  Approximately 10 outstanding graduate students from across the US will be chosen to participate. They will be joined by 50 or more students and faculty from India.

After the technical course, the US and Indian participants will participate in a field experience for 4 or 5 days in an Indian village, working with a local NGO.

We encourage applications from serious, adventurous, advanced graduate students with an interest in Nanoelectronics, in the international aspects of scientific research, and in the impact of science and technology on the 3d world.

Participants DO NOT have to be from NNIN institutions and DO NOT have to be NNIN users. We encourage all outstanding graduate students ( US citizens and permanent residents only) to apply. Travel expenses will be paid by NNIN.

Application information is available at http://www.nnin.org/nnin_iwsg_2009.html .

The application deadline is September 14, 2009.

For questions, please contact Rathbun@cnf.cornell.edu.

Lynn Rathbun
NNIN Program Manager

**************************************************************
Dr. Lynn Rathbun                                        Rathbun@cnf.cornell.edu
NNIN  Program Manager                     (607)-254-4872
CNF Laboratory Manager                                     
Duffield Hall                                                (607)-255-8601 Fax
Cornell University                                       (607)-592-1549 Work Cell
Ithaca, New York 14853                      (607)-342-1880 Personal Cell


**************************************************************
Dr. Lynn Rathbun                                        Rathbun@cnf.cornell.edu
NNIN  Program Manager                     (607)-254-4872
CNF Laboratory Manager                                     
Duffield Hall                                                (607)-255-8601 Fax
Cornell University                                       (607)-592-1549 Work Cell
Ithaca, New York 14853                      (607)-342-1880 Personal Cell



Thursday, September 10, 2009

Building BBQ -- Today!!! 11:45 on the patio!

Just a reminder -- the Paul G Allen Building BBQ is today!! The fun
starts at 11:45 on the AllenX patio. There will be food and fun --
Allen building occupants and SNF labmembers are all welcome.


Your SNF and CIS party planning staff (Maureen and Marjorie)

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-08-29 23:53:54: issues with Ch.A

Flowed n2 and cal throttle valve.

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-08 06:09:11: BCl3 flow

Flowed bcl3 for 5mins w/out problerm.

BAKE SALE on MONDAY 14TH SEPTEMBER

Dear All,

I will be having my last Bake Sale on September 14th at 9am in Nancy Latta's
office (RM 145). PLease come along and buy some goodies and know that your
generous donation will be going to a great cause.

As you may know this cause means alot to me as I have lost good friends to
cancer and seen survivors suffer from this terrible disease. Deep down I am
sure we all know of someone who has been affected. So, lets help make a
difference.

If your unable to come to the bake sale and would like to donate then go online
to my personal fundraising page.
http://www.the3day.org/site/TR/Walk/SanFranciscoBayAreaEvent2009?px=1700145&pg=personal&fr_id=1299

Thank you for taking the time to read this letter, and thank you in advance
for your generosity!

Best Wishes,

Jasmine

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

PCB service

Thanks for all the responses. I summarized the information I received. I hope it will be helpful if someone else need it as well.

cheers,
chong

sierra proto express (http://www.protoexpress.com/) is local (sunnyvale) but can be expensive

imagineering (http://pcbnet.com) is in illinois but they are the least expensive that i have found, especially if you panelize. i have an active order with them right now, 3 day turnaround and 2 day shipping.
- joey


Try http://www.infinitisolutions.com/emsservices.html
They have a local quick turn service.

Tiemin


They're not local, but Circuit Express (http://www.circuitexpress.com/) can get you a quick turn-around time.

Cheers,
Mark

pcbexpress.com

If one week is ok, you can go with some Chinese companies for rather low price.
I use this one a few months ago. <$100 for ~50 pieces and delivered within a week.
http://www.goldphoenixpcb.biz/ and click "Special price"

Wenshan

You can try http://www.qualtechcircuits.com/

Best,

Hui Nie

We use San Francisco Circuits (San Mateo). They offer expedited service, and are very flexible. Our contact there is:

Andrew Gonzales
agonzales@sfcircuits.com

Tell Andrew that I referred you.

Good Luck,
Dariusz Golda

I'm using 'Sierra Proto Express' for several years already. Never had a
problem. Just get the online quotation and see what their prices are.
https://www.protoexpress.com

Sergei

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-08 06:09:11: BCl3 flow

Received BCl3 flow error again. (It was fine yesterday)

Friday, September 4, 2009

Re: Local PCB service

Hi,

I'm using 'Sierra Proto Express' for several years already. Never had a
problem. Just get the online quotation and see what their prices are.
https://www.protoexpress.com

Sergei

Chong Xie wrote:
> Hello all,
> Would anyone let me know a fast local PCB service vendor? I need to make some (~50) PCB boards with simple pattern.
>
> thanks,
> chong
>

Local PCB service

Hello all,
Would anyone let me know a fast local PCB service vendor? I need to make some (~50) PCB boards with simple pattern.

thanks,
chong

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-03 17:17:07: Chamber B RF fault

Replaced the fuse on magnet controller. Run dummy wafers
using chamber b oxide recipe and monitor magnet at 60 gauss
current on 3 phases at 1amps each.

Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-09-03 17:17:07: Chamber B RF fault

Standerd oxide etch recipe dose not work.
Machine returns the alerm "RF magnet phase current is too low" in the etching step.
Tried 3 times, results were same.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Comment p5000etch SNF 2009-09-02 18:48:54: Ch.A turbo fault

Reset the turbo controller and restarted the turbo. Also flowed BCl3 with no problems.

Re: Problem p5000etch SNF 2009-08-28 12:17:45: BCl3 flow high

Auto MFC zero set the offset too high. Turn off the auto zero and set the offset to 0.

Fwd: [foundryoutreach] Call for Proposals - The Molecular Foundry


Delivered-To: rissman@stanford.edu
Delivered-To: rissman@snf.stanford.edu
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Date: Wed, 02 Sep 2009 07:20:12 -0700
From: Molecular Foundry <foundry@lbl.gov>
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Subject: [foundryoutreach] Call for Proposals - The Molecular Foundry
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Call for User Proposals:  The Molecular Foundry

Call for Proposals Begins:  Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Submission Deadline:Â Â Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Â

Dear Colleagues,

The Molecular Foundry at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), a Department of Energy (DOE) national nanoscience user facility, is currently accepting requests for user access to its instruments, capabilities and skilled technical staff from scientists and engineers who are seeking to enhance their own research projects.  Requests from potential users, in the form of web-based proposals, must be received not later than October 14, 2009 to be considered in this current call.Â

The mission of LBNL’s Molecular Foundry is to provide researchers from academic, government and industrial laboratories from around the world access to instruments, materials, technical expertise and training in nanoscience.  Access to the Foundry is free of charge for research that is in the public domain and intended for open publication.  Users wishing to generate as well as maintain confidential information and data will pay full-cost-recovery rate, but also have greater latitude regarding collaboratively generated intellectual property. Â

The Molecular Foundry hosts six Facilities focusing on the multidisciplinary development and understanding of “soft” (biological and polymeric) and “hard” (inorganic and microfabricated) nanostructured building blocks and their integration into complex functional assemblies. These research facilities serve as a particularly valuable resource for users pursuing multidisciplinary research in nanoscience (e.g., physicists interested in learning biological techniques, biologists seeking nanofabrication expertise, experimentalists pursing theoretical studies). All projects that may benefit from Foundry capabilities are welcome, particularly those which relate to our broad research themes and reflecting areas of expertise of the Molecular Foundry staff. The Foundry strongly encourages project submissions that take advantage of our other LBNL user facilities, including the Advanced Light Source, Energy Sciences Network, Joint Genome Institute, the National Energy Research Scientific Center, and the National Center for Electron Microscopy. 

Prospective users are invited and strongly encouraged to contact Molecular Foundry staff in the respective theme areas to discuss proposal ideas and to learn more about special capabilities of particular interest (visit the “Our Scientists” section at the Foundry web site). We encourage the discussion of your proposal's central ideas to ensure the Foundry has the appropriate facilities, equipment and staff to perform your requested research.  Decisions reached in this round of proposal submission will be announced approximately eight weeks after submission deadline; for this call we anticipate a notification date of December 21, 2009.  All approved projects will receive user access and work may begin as soon as scheduled after this notification. Â

For further information, please visit:

The User Program
http://foundry.lbl.gov/user_program/index_user.html /Â Â Â

Molecular Foundry Staff Scientists
http://foundry.lbl.gov/people/2_scientific_staff.html

LBNL User Facilities
http://www.lbl.gov

We look forward to receiving your new proposal.  Should you have any questions regarding this process, please contact us at foundry@lbl.gov or by phone at 510-486-7493.

Sincerely,
David A. Bunzow

--   The Molecular Foundry http://foundry.lbl.gov/ foundry@lbl.gov ph: 510.486.6312