The Editors'
Choice Best Product Awards Program was established in 1989 to recognize superior
performance of equipment, materials, software and other products that advance
wafer processing, chip assembly or packaging, or process testing capabilities;
enhance semiconductor or related manufacturing; improve employee productivity or
working conditions; or help a manufacturer provide a safer workplace or be more
environmentally responsible.
The Editors' Choice program differs from other product awards in that
products must be nominated by their users, not by the companies that make or
sell them. All 20 products presented on the following pages were nominated by
one or more knowledgeable users, and
editors used extensive comments from users in choosing the winners. Eligible
products must have been proven in a semiconductor or related manufacturing
environment before July, 1999.
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The developers of Palomar Technologies' CBT 6000
celebrate the winning of 1999's Grand
Award. |
Applied
Materials
Applied Materials (Santa Clara, Calif.) has three winning products in
this year's competition.
The Endura Electra Cu Barrier & Seed performs preclean, Ta or TaN
barrier deposition and copper seed layer deposition in a continuous vacu
um to provide oxide-free interfaces. The company's ion metal plasma (IMP)
technology is used to deposit an amorphous, low-resistivity phase of Ta
and a <111> copper surface with 40% bottom coverage in
dual-damascene via and trench structures.
The Producer CVD system provides both PECVD and SACVD deposition of
premetal, intermetal and blanket dielectric layers. Its twin chamber
design allows it to process two to six wafers simultaneously. The system
can deposit TEOS oxides, silane oxides, nitrides and the company's
advanced dielectric materials. The company claims the highest throughput
per footprint area, and the system includes integrated metrology for
advanced thickness control.
SEMVision is an automated defect review and classification SEM designed
for in-line use in production. It uses multiple perspective SEM imaging
(MPSI) to redetect defects found by optical or e-beam imspection and
perform automatic defect classification (ADC). The ADC helps determine the
cause and characteristics of defects to speed yield ramping and excursion
control. |
 Applied
Materials' Endura Electra Cu Barrier & Seed

 Applied Materials' SEMVision
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Boin
WAFERMAP for Windows 95/NT from Boin (Tomerdingen, Germany) provides
data collection, editing analysis and visualization for measured
parameters on semiconductor wafers. It can import data from many different
metrology tools, manual and automatic, handling the various data formats.
It allows data editing and interpolation using any user-defined site
distribution, and it provides wafer map comparison capability. Results can
be exported in a variety of formats for use in other applications. |
 Boin's WAFERMAP
for Windows 95/NT
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Entegris
Galtek GS valves from Entegris provide the chemical resistance of
all-PFA wetted surfaces and 1 million cycle reliability in a space-saving
design. The 1/4-inch orifice
valves occupy p 3 in3 in the pneumatic configuration, while
providing the temperature, pressure and corrosion resistance performance
of larger valves. They can be used in tools that require many valves
(>100) for corrosive or ultrapure fluids. |
 Entegris' Galtek GS Valves |
ESEC
ESEC's (Phoenix) Gold Ball Wire Bonder 3018 features a 5-in2
bonding area suitable for most substrate types. Its recipe import and part
indexing capabilities allow new recipe creation and changeover in a matter
of a few minutes. Once a recipe has been created, it can be ported to
other 3018 bonders with no tweaking. The bondhead has an airbearing design
to improve its lifetime, and its optical alignment system provides
production capability down to 60 µm pitches. |
 ESEC's Gold Ball Wire Bonder 3018 |
i2
Technologies
The RHYTHM Semiconductor Solution from i2 Technologies (Irving, Texas)
coordinates business processes from strategic planning to second-by-second
execution consistent with global business priorities. By tuning fab
execution to the other components in the supply chain, a fab can
significantly reduce WIP, inventory and production cycle time, as well as
prioritize manufacturing of key products more effectively. The
semiconductor solution is a set of templates specific to semiconductor
manufacturing applied to the RHYTHM suite, making it an off-the-shelf
solution. |
 i2 Technologies' RHYTHM Semiconductor Solution |
KLA-Tencor
KLA-Tencor's (San Jose, Calif.) ASET-F5 measures the thickness,
refractive index and extinction coefficients of single- and multiple-layer
films without referencing or extrapolating. It uses ultraviolet
spectroscopic ellipsometry to measure ultra-thin films and film stacks
deposited by diffusion and CVD. Broadband dual-beam spectrophotometry
measures films for etch, CMP and advanced lithography applications. The
combination measures across a continuous spectrum from 190 to 800 nm.
|
 KLA-Tencor's ASET-F5 |
Kulicke & Soffa
Industries
Kulicke & Soffa's (Willow Grove, Pa.) model 8028 automatic ball
bonder has a 50 x 65 mm bond area and can bond up to 12 wires per second
on a 60 µm pitch. It features advanced motion control and looping
algorithms to provide a wide variety of looping processes. Its SECS/GEM
communication interfaces allow integration with multiple information
management systems. Recipes can be created offline and ported to multiple
bonders. The company claims the lowest cost of ownership among wire
bonders. |
 Kulicke & Soffa's Model 8028 Automatic Ball
Bonder |
Lam Research
The Teres CMP system from Lam Research (Fremont, Calif.) uses a
high-speed linear belt approach to maintain high removal rates while
reducing downforce. Cutting the downforce reduces the likelihood of
dishing and corrosion, as well as the sensitivity of these problems to
feature size. The choice of downforce and pad speed is flexible, allowing
high downforce if desired. Its air-bearing platten is designed to control
wafer uniformity independently of removal rate. The multi-wavelength
optical endpoint detection system allows robust endpoint detection
algorithms. |
 Lam Research's Teres |
Leica
Microsystems
The INS 3000 ADC NT from Leica Microsystems (Deerfield, Ill.) is an
offline image-based defect management system that performs automatic
review of defects, redection and classification of defects. Trending by
defect type and identifying the source of killer defects, as well as
initial detection, are automated to avoid mistakes caused by operator
error and fatigue. The system's optics provide high image quality, which
allows higher throughput and more reliable classification. |
 Leica Microsystems' INS 3000 ADC NT |
MKS
Instruments
The HPS Effluent Management Subsystem from MKS (Andover, Mass.) is a
collection of modules adaptable to specific effluent-handling
applications. Heated valves and pipes prevent condensation of most
effluent components. Virtual Wall pipes use a heated envelope of nitrogen
on the inside to prevent condensation and contact polymerization of
effluents such as TEOS. Process-specific traps remove effluent
condensables at the desired points in the flow. |
 MKS Instruments' HPS Effluent Management Subsystem
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Palomar
Technologies
This year's Grand Award winner, the CBT 6000 wire bonder from Palomar
Technologies (Vista, Calif.), features a 12 x 6 in. bond area and a bond
speed of 8 to 9 wires per second. It allows the use of wide leadframes, or
dual leadframe arrangements for continuous bonding operation. It also
performs wafer-level wirebonding, wafer-level Au ball bumping and
ball-in-corner bonding for read-write head applications. Its 0.82-in.
rectilinear z-stroke gives deep access capability, and its network
communications capability aids in overall throughput enhancement. |
 Palomar Technologies' CBT 6000 |
SensArray
The Active Plasma Thermal Optical System (APTOS) from SensArray (Santa
Clara, Calif.) provides real-time, in situ temperature measurements from
multiple points on a wafer in oxide, poly and metal etch systems under
plasma. A silicon cover strip protects the fiber optic sensors in the
probe wafer from plasma bombardment, as well as ambient light
interference. Its accuracy of ±1°C and repeatability of ±0.5°C compare
favorably with typical temperature-sensitive decal resolutions. |
 SensArray's APTOS |
SEZ Group
SEZ's (Phoenix) Spin-Processor 303 performs up to three wet processing
steps on 300 mm wafers for applications such as backside film removal,
stress relief, metallic and organic contamination removal and frontside
film thinning. The wafer rests on a jet of inert gas, which protects one
side of the wafer while the other is being processed. The wafer is
transferred vertically between chambers, each of which has its own inlets
and outlets. |
 SEZ's Spin Processor 303 |
STI
WAV-1000 automatic visual inspection (AVI) system from Semiconductor
Technologies and Instruments (STI, Richardson, Texas) detects defects as
small as 3 µm in pre- and post-probe inspections and pre- and post-bump
inspections. It uses the associated prober as the wafer handler, and it
can inspect a 6-in. wafer in less than 90 seconds. Options include a wafer
handler, 2-D and 3-D bump inspection, and 1 µm resolution. |
 STI's WAV-1000 AVI System |
Tokyo Seimitsu
(TSK)
The UF200 wafer prober from TSK positions wafers up to 200 mm in
diameter within 4 µm for probing with cantilevered, membrane and vertical
probe cards. The system is designed to eliminate alignment problems from
system vibration and inconsistent pressure to the chuck. The network
controllable prober supports thin wafer probing, varying die sizes on a
wafer, multi-die parallel test, probe and ink mark inspection, and OCR
wafer ID capability. |
 TSK's UF200 Wafer Prober |
Ultratech
Stepper
Saturn Spectrum 3 wafer stepper from Ultratech Stepper (San Jose,
Calif.) provides g, h, and i-line capabilities for flip-chip lithography
applications. The system uses one set of broadband 1X optics, and it can
image photoresistive films from 1 to 100 µm thick. Its alignment system
provides automatic focus adjustment, orientation and alignment using any
alignment marks that may exist, making it suitable for subcontract bumping
applications. |
 Ultratech Stepper's Saturn Spectrum 3 |
W. L. Gore and
Associates
Via on Chip Pitch Substrates from W.L. Gore and Associates (Eau Claire,
Wis.) are based on the company's expanded PTFE dielectric, Microlam, and
have the capability of placing interconnect vias on the same pitch as the
die I/O pads. This allows design flexibility to route more power and
ground traces, shrink the die or maximize the number of signal I/Os for
higher performance. Its CTE is isotropically matched to copper to maintain
the reliability of the interconnects. |
 W.L. Gore's Via on Chip Pitch Substrates |
White Knight Fluid
Handling
AT Series Pumps from White Knight Fluid Handling (Hemlock, Mich.)
feature all-Teflon construction for parts contacting the fluid including a
tongue-and-groove seal instead of an O-ring. Movement of the pump drive is
slowed at the end of each stroke to reduce pulsation without external
suppressors. Synchronized threads are designed to improve the strength of
connections, and optional ceramic shuttle valve parts improve reliability
in high-head-pressure or viscous-fluid applications. |
 White Knight's AT Series Pumps
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