Specific Process Knowledge/Wafer cleaning/7-up & Piranha: Difference between revisions
Line 94: | Line 94: | ||
|} | |} | ||
{{fnb|1}} | {{fnb|1}} In preparing a solution involving an acid, always add the acid last. The exception to this rule is Piranha, in which case you add hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a very strong base, to sulfuric acid (H2SO4), a very strong acid. Why? Because it is potentially explosive and at the very least will cause the solution to become very warm. Picking up a beaker that is this hot will be very painful, might melt your gloves, and may cause you to spill it. |
Revision as of 10:17, 4 March 2014
Feedback to this page: click here
Cleaning of wafers or masks
Cleaning of wafers or masks with sulphuric acid can be done either in a dedicated tank "7-up" or in the fume hood in a beaker "Piranha". Both 7-up and Piranha removes heavy organics. Always use one of these after KOH etch or hot phosphoric acid etch to remove alkali ions before further processing. 7-up and Piranha are also used as cleaning solutions after stripping resist.
The user manual, user APV and contact information can be found in LabManager: 7-up 6" info page in LabManager or 7-up (masks) info page in LabManager
Comparing the 7-up cleans and Piranha clean
7-up wafers | 7-up Masks | Piranha | |
---|---|---|---|
General description |
Cleaning of wafers using the dedicated tank in cleanroom D3. |
Cleaning of masks using the dedicated tank in cleanroom D3. |
Cleaning of wafers using a beaker in the fumehood in cleanroom B1. Used for glass wafers or wafers with metal or other materials that you are not allowed to put in the 7-up for wafers or masks. |
Chemical solution | 98% Sulfuric acid and Ammonium sulfate | 98% Sulfuric acid and Ammonium sulfate | 98% Sulfuric acid and Hydrogen peroxide 4:1 add H2O2 to H2SO4 |
Process temperature | 80 oC | 80 oC | ~70 oC the chemicals will heat up to working temperature during mixing, therefore be careful! First ad H2SO4 then H2O21 |
Process time | 10 min. | 10 min. | 10 min. |
Allowed materials |
|
|
All materials (in beaker). |
Batch size |
1-25 4" or 6" wafers |
1-25 4" or 6" wafers or 1-4 5" masks |
1-5 4" wafer at a time |
Size of substrate |
4-6" wafers |
4-6" wafers or 5" masks |
All sizes that can fit into the beaker in a dedicated holder |
Note 1: In preparing a solution involving an acid, always add the acid last. The exception to this rule is Piranha, in which case you add hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a very strong base, to sulfuric acid (H2SO4), a very strong acid. Why? Because it is potentially explosive and at the very least will cause the solution to become very warm. Picking up a beaker that is this hot will be very painful, might melt your gloves, and may cause you to spill it.