Metallization: Making Conductive Traces on Silicon Chips.

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ProjectsInFlight

ProjectsInFlight

Күн бұрын

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In this video I attempt several methods for applying metal layers on silicon chips in order to find a hobbyist-friendly way of making conductive traces on silicon.
DISCLAIMER: The videos on this channel feature materials, equipment, and activities that may be hazardous. By choosing to replicate or participate in any demonstrated activities, you acknowledge and assume all associated risks. You the viewer are responsible for your own safety. ProjectsInFlight and its creators are not liable for any resulting harm or damages.

Пікірлер: 271
@whompronnie
@whompronnie 10 ай бұрын
Actual technical aspects aside, I was much more impressed and entertained by the critical thinking and problem solving involved in this one. It's very satisfying to see you go through all the stages of hypothesis, experimentation and adaptation
@thethoughtemporium
@thethoughtemporium 10 ай бұрын
The allure of cheap materials is their cost, but the low cost always comes with terrible side effects. You need a proper magnetron if you're gonna do this. Trying to do it without one is like a carpenter that doesn't own a hammer. And if you've got a magnetron, you have a plasma cleaner if you just fill it with oxygen and light it with RF. You can't make chips without a variety of vacuum systems. They're as essential as the furnace. Don't misunderstand, your efforts thus far are awesome. But you're going to hit a wall really really fast IMHO. Keep going, looking forward to seeing how far you make it through this.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
not to spoil and upcoming video too hard but... i already built my thermal evaporator
@janthran
@janthran 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight please tell me it's made out of components from a regular microwave
@elchippe
@elchippe 10 ай бұрын
​@@janthran For coating metals using PVD the more expensive parts are the pumps for the vacuum. The graphite boat, a high current transformer or inductive coil are relative cheap
@evilplaguedoctor5158
@evilplaguedoctor5158 10 ай бұрын
Like your stuff @thethoughtemporium, but I disagree with you here, as is, disagree with telling people 'can't do X because..' especially when they are making very impressive headway doing X. Although usually you are right (and as the replies show, you are) you never know what cool things come from smart people delving into projects they know nothing about, since they don't know you can't, and on the rare occasion, they end up showing you that you can.
@adrianpip2000
@adrianpip2000 10 ай бұрын
@@evilplaguedoctor5158 Agreed. Honestly feels like a pretty out-of-character comment from thethoughtemporium, but I guess now that they've got a big honking lab and apparently plenty resources, only the grandest of plans are worth the effort, or something. Idk, you put it pretty eloquently, but there's also something more in their comment that rubs me the wrong way.
@georgios.dreihardt
@georgios.dreihardt 10 ай бұрын
every time you upload I get excited to see how much progress you've made, can't wait until the day you make your first chip, even if it's something as simple as an And-Gate or something else.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
probably a differential pair i think
@UncleKennysPlace
@UncleKennysPlace 10 ай бұрын
As someone who has coated telescope mirrors with precipitated silver, once you finish them, they are never touched with anything other than running water.
@blahfasel2000
@blahfasel2000 10 ай бұрын
One thing you could try is electroless copper plating, the process they use to create the initial copper layer in plated throughholes in PCBs (in PCB manufacture they then build up that layer to final thickness through electroplating). It's reasonably quick (from what I can find about 15-20 minutes for a 1 micron layer), works on glass, and DIY-kits for it are available online (although not necessarily cheap).
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
i'm not familiar with an electroless plating solution that works on non-metal base layers
@quantum_satellite
@quantum_satellite 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight есть статьи на нескольких русских сайтах - там радиолюбители, используя практически кухонную химию (кроме гипофосфита кальция - его покупают в интернет-магазине или магазине радиотоваров), получают первичную металлизацию (в их случае - металлизацию отверстий в стеклотекстолите). Если интересно, я могу отправить Вам на почту ссылки на эти статьи
@UncleKennysPlace
@UncleKennysPlace 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight Well, the inside of your glass bottles seemed to work.
@blahfasel2000
@blahfasel2000 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight Electroless plating is an autocatalytic chemical deposition process specifically for non-conductive surfaces, used for example to metallize plastic surfaces or as I wrote plate the insides of vias/through-holes in PCBs. It actually works somewhat similar to your silver mirror process, except that a catalyst is attached to the surface first (in a so called activation step) so that the chemical reaction that produces the plating metal only happens at the surface that you want to plate instead of in the entire plating solution. Wikipedia has an article about the fundamentals of the process, just look up "electroless deposition". Maybe you're confusing it with electroplating?
@animehair05silently88
@animehair05silently88 10 ай бұрын
​@@projectsinflighti was wondering if you could start with a silver layer like this and then use electrolysis to make it stronger and adhere better, maybe using the tube furnace to either get the silver to ball up and let the copper or aluminum or other metal have better access to the silicon (after you make enough of a layer for electrolysis to keep working) or maybe even melt it enough to to form an alloy of copper and silver
@Hyo9000
@Hyo9000 10 ай бұрын
I think you can avoid the problem of silver coalescing into small blobs by first alloying the deposited silver with a bit of copper. You can deposit some copper very quickly (you don't need much) with a copper sulphate solution and a DC voltage. As soon as you have some deposition, take it out and bake the chip. Over time, the silver and copper will alloy into each other (fairly quickly as well, since copper in particular is amazing at solid state diffusion), and you'll end up with a layer of some grade of sterling silver instead of pure silver. The sterling silver should allow you to anneal it without it coalescing into blobs and losing all electrical continuity.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
this is a really good idea and i'm gonna test it as soon as i can
@mikemac5070
@mikemac5070 10 ай бұрын
This is exactly what it looks like when you democratize science. fantastic work and critical thinking!
@prof969chaos
@prof969chaos 10 ай бұрын
Just an idea but check out plating plastic with metals videos. Now that you have basic conductive layer using the mirror method, you could use some light electroplating to increase durability significantly on your deposited layer. This would likely create a thicker more continuous layer without require anything to major in material or equipment. The electroplating rub on method that is often used with gold plating and other expensive metals should allow relatively controlled deposited layer that is actually adhered to itself and should be relatively quick and easy to do. I hope this is helpful in improving you design. Can't wait to see what your next version is like, awesome work
@BirdbrainEngineer
@BirdbrainEngineer 10 ай бұрын
This is what engineering is about! Though I do suspect that you'll end up having trouble down the line with using silver. So probably better to slowly start working on that thermal evaporator or sputtering magnetron sooner rather than later :P
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
already on it :) i got a turbo pump off ebay
@mortlet5180
@mortlet5180 10 ай бұрын
Thermal evaporation wasn't really used in IC fabrication past the 70's to early 80's, as it isn't really that much cheaper or easier than magnetron sputtering, but it does have many unique disadvantages. If you do intend on acquiring dedicated equipment for metal thin film deposition, I would *strongly* suggest going with a magnetron sputtering setup, even when choosing between a DIY bell-jar-based magnetron system and a commercial thermal evaporator. As for the current process, getting an adherent film on a homogeneous, smooth and flat SiO2 surface is great and all, but I fear insurmountable issues lay ahead if you try to use this process to contact exposed silicon through holes in the SiO2 insulation.
@mduvigneaud
@mduvigneaud 10 ай бұрын
I'm commenting before I finish watching the video just because. I make soap and I can very much attest that dissolving NaOH in water produces a *lot* of heat and can even boil the water if you add it too quickly. The "go slow and be careful" is very good advice for anyone not familiar with it.
@uis246
@uis246 2 күн бұрын
There was entire video about it on "Огненное ТВ".
@BrainSlugs83
@BrainSlugs83 10 ай бұрын
Wow! This is amazing progress. I really want to see you make a functional chip. Maybe something simple like a few not gates, or other 7400 logic. I can imagine a future where instead of making just printed PCBs, maker spaces might be building their own self contained ASIC fabs for their projects. This is freaking amazing!! Edit: p.s. This is the first channel I've ever hit the little bell on. I don't want to miss an update!!
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
i suspect a differential pair will be my first IC
@AnalogDude_
@AnalogDude_ 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight complete with current mirror?
@James2210
@James2210 8 ай бұрын
It's not the nitric acid that allows dissolving silver metal but rather the nitrate ion. You can actually add a small amount of potassium nitrate to another acid and it should work just as well as aqua regia. Don't remember where I saw this, but it was another chem youtuber
@GermanMythbuster
@GermanMythbuster 10 ай бұрын
This is my favorite Project on KZbin right now. Thank you so much for your amazing work ❤❤
@McLovinMods
@McLovinMods 10 ай бұрын
8:45 never underestimate the strength of silver fulminate, even small amounts you can barely see
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
yeah i've heard stories of high school chemistry teachers accidentally blowing up their storage closets after this demo
@McLovinMods
@McLovinMods 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight imagine trying to explain that one to the school administrators
@timonix2
@timonix2 10 ай бұрын
this is a weird combination between surprisingly simple and complex. Stradling the line between, I could do this and I really don't want to do this
@dondywondy
@dondywondy 10 ай бұрын
As a previous commenter noted, the critical thinking and problem solving are very interesting/entertaining but I also enjoy your speaking style, your clear enunciation and intonation. Thanks for sharing your work; I know it takes a lot of effort to research, plan, execute and record, then edit and post these videos. Very nice!
@nekomakhea9440
@nekomakhea9440 10 ай бұрын
In commercial mirror making, I think they use wet deposition of tin or chromium as an adhesion layer, or occasionally some metal oxides. Tin (II) Chloride mixed with HCl, if I remember right, but it's annoyingly hard to find any open access articles for it right now. I kinda suspect it will be really hard to avoid using vacuum processes for silver deposition of high enough quality and adhesion for this use case though.
@McLovinMods
@McLovinMods 10 ай бұрын
This is the kind of amazing content that is so often sorely missing from this site! Thank you so much for the highly detailed info
@mykolan8190
@mykolan8190 9 ай бұрын
Також би хотів зробити в домашніх умовах)
@paulroberto2286
@paulroberto2286 10 ай бұрын
BABE! WAKE UP! NEW PROJECTS IN FLIGHT VIDEO JUST DROPPED!! Man, I look forward to your videos! I'm so invested in seeing you succeed ;)
@WaffleStaffel
@WaffleStaffel 10 ай бұрын
It's fascinating to watch you solve problem after problem with improvisation, this is a great series. It looks like the acetic acid is working well, but if you're so inclined, you can make a "poor man's" nitric acid by mixing sulfuric acid and potassium or sodium nitrate. Potassium nitrate is commonly available as Spectracide "stump killer."
@oogabuuga
@oogabuuga 10 ай бұрын
I know it's generally frowned upon, so i apologize in advance, but you talking about coating glass in metal made me remember this video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/Y53LYn-epLd1l7s It's a "homemade plasma diffuser" by Thought Emporium. I'm very certain that you can draw inspiration from this and build your own.
@HennerZeller
@HennerZeller 10 ай бұрын
This is some methodical and metriculous work that brought you to this success, well done and congratulations! Back in the day, we used to selectively create small silver particles directly where it was exposed to light, without extra photo resist (a.k.a. common silver photography). I am wondering if such process could create a useful conductive layer, though I suspect that the particles will be far apart and not connected.
@ahuman5592
@ahuman5592 10 ай бұрын
sick
@NoPegs
@NoPegs 10 ай бұрын
@ProjectsInFlight What if you put the post-etch post-acetone deposited silver layer into an electroless nickel plating solution for a few minutes to firm it up a little bit (physically and electrically.) I would be interested to know the answer to this one. --Josh S.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
what's the procedure for the electroless nickel?
@NoPegs
@NoPegs 9 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight Caswell sku "EZP" should get you up to speed on the procedure.
@00011theman
@00011theman 10 ай бұрын
I think with silver you're going to run into issues pretty fast as you try to make more complex designs and add more processes onto it. There's some thermal evaporator build series on KZbin that could give you a good starting point.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
not to spoil an upcoming video too hard but... i already built a thermal evaporator
@prof969chaos
@prof969chaos 10 ай бұрын
Forgot to mention this to anyone testing electroplating the mirror finish deposit on silicon, would likely require the use of alternative electroplating solution as the ph of tradition electroplating solution would likely be too acid. A simple alternative could be using DES, deep eutectic solvent, which is essential mixing two solid chemicals that make a liquid chemical. Often this process can be done with just mixing the chemical together, might require mild heating. The ph of is often closer to neutral than water based plating solutions. There are a large variety of DES that could be used for this but I would want to use something biodegradable like choline chloride with ethylene glycol, choline chloride with urea or even just urea or choline with metal salt that is deposited, ie silver chloride. DES can be formed using metal halogens as being one of the chemicals. Good luck to anyone trying.
@cookie2glue
@cookie2glue 10 ай бұрын
This made my Thursday. Thank you! It's very motivating to see you persevere through all of the challenges of this project.
@6alecapristrudel
@6alecapristrudel 10 ай бұрын
Mr Projects, would you like an ACIDIC SILVERING process i stumbled upon? Maybe it won't destroy your photoresist and you could try the lift-off method. You need your silver nitrate, citric acid, disodium EDTA and ascorbic acid, yes, vitamin C. Parts are sensitised with SnCl2 and AgNO3. I've used it to plate things like flowers, plastic dice, and glass of course. You can ask here for deets. You can also check out Brashear's method for silvering telescope mirrors for the SnCl2 thing and other ideas in general, they end up with thicker layers that can be polished using the alkaline silver method.
@Cotonetefilmmaker
@Cotonetefilmmaker 2 ай бұрын
this was awesomely done and definitely "enough" of a step forward. It just looks like the silver adhesion is gonna be a pain in your ass forever. Would titanium coating ever be a reasonable step to add ? It might be worth the investment of time. OR maybe go back to it once you hit a brick wall with the adhesion.
@elchippe
@elchippe 10 ай бұрын
What about quickly dipping the wafer in molten aluminum and then etch away the excess thickness with HCL or HCL-H2O2 until reach a desire thickness? Another Idea would be to laminate the wafer with aluminum foil and the put in the furnace for sometime until melts.
@haukur1
@haukur1 10 ай бұрын
I wonder if aluminum also has workarounds to make it viable without expensive special purpose equipment. I think that is, or used to be, a commonly used as the conductive element.
@KangJangkrik
@KangJangkrik 9 ай бұрын
No wonder why replicating ASML or TSMC is near impossible, it's too challenging for hobbyist!
@TheJagjr4450
@TheJagjr4450 9 ай бұрын
Do you think if you physically etched the chip face would the deposited silver be adhered better... using either ceramic, carbide, garnet, or even cut glass as a media? I have a small glass etching "airbrush" made by PASCHE which can do small fine work at lower pressures.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
etching the surface would likely help adhesion, but it's likely that would damage any devices that exist on the silicon at that point.
@TheJagjr4450
@TheJagjr4450 9 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflight my mistake I thought prior to coating there was nothing on the silicon. I thought it was blank.
@tonyvtech25
@tonyvtech25 9 ай бұрын
I DONT KNOW NOTHING ABOUT QUEMISTRY BUT IS INTERESTING. LOL, WHAT ABOUT ELETROPLATING SILVER TO THE DEFOGGER REPAIR LIQUID. 🤷🏻‍♂️
@jacobeisbrenner764
@jacobeisbrenner764 4 ай бұрын
Im really enjoying this series as I just found it a few days ago. One suggestion which could be of use is to maybe create your own spincoater. This could potentially help with your silver deposition if spun at slow enough speeds using a dropper.
@phillupson8561
@phillupson8561 10 ай бұрын
Loving these videos and your progress, also a huge thank you for sharing the issues you faced and how you solve them rather than skipping straight to the "here's one i prepared earlier" style.
@metaprotium
@metaprotium 4 ай бұрын
I think electroplating the silver with some other metal *before* annealing would prevent it from beading up. the top layer of metal would stay solid and squish the silver down.
@owenkegg5608
@owenkegg5608 5 ай бұрын
I wonder if etching couldnt just be performed with a fiber laser at very low power to vaporize the silver. I imagine the silicon might disagree with the process unfortunately. I'd love to try if i can ever find an excuse to get the material.
@atheatos
@atheatos 10 ай бұрын
Nice experimentation. I do not thing it is a good idea to go with silver in the end. It does not stick onto silicon that means it is nor practical or reliable for chips. You measure the conductivity for the top though the silver... but probably the resistance on the interface with transistors is way higher. Aluminum is probably the way.
@farazsaleem2647
@farazsaleem2647 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for share your efforts and experiences. Pleas make a video on transistor making at home by common available chemicals.
@gestaltlabart
@gestaltlabart 10 ай бұрын
I loved the video, but the vapor deposition is not that complicated ... did it with a cheap ac-vacuum-pump in a pressure cooking pot and a car battery as powersupply for next to nothing
@pvc988
@pvc988 10 ай бұрын
Maybe spray-on photoresist like Positiv 20 could be used to avoid fiddling with the teflon tape. And maybe some thin layer of electroplated copper could improve the durability and conductivity of the silver. It won't improve adhesion though. Pre-etching the SiO2 layer a little bit might help with that by modifying the surface.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
sadly i cannot find positiv 20
@V8Power5300
@V8Power5300 10 ай бұрын
Let's be real, you are gonna build a metal evaporator pretty soon. I don't think you will satisfied with the durability
@uimaddie
@uimaddie 10 ай бұрын
This is really cool! I was wondering whether it would be possible to use the initial silver plating to then use electroplating for a thicker layer of e.g. copper that would survive the annealing process and better adhere to the silicon surface?
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
i'm definitely gonna try this if i can. this is a very good idea
@xanokothe
@xanokothe 9 ай бұрын
Very impressive! At this point would you consider vacuum deposition again?
@girl4632
@girl4632 3 ай бұрын
In any design, if any material/metal laid over photoresist and photoresist being removed the metal too will be removed, or in some cases its not.
@turun_ambartanen
@turun_ambartanen 10 ай бұрын
Assuming the metal is indeed pure-ish silver you can use the resistance to figure out the film thickness. (van der pauw method)
@pingvin2-zw5oe
@pingvin2-zw5oe 9 ай бұрын
i have a good idea for you . would you like to create the solar cell on a chip ? Graphen as a conductive electrode on top of the cell. you can make flexible cell wich consists array of the tiny subcells , because graphen regularly has tiny flakes , and the array of subcells are better for its flexibilety and for expluatation properties. I can provide you with the simpl blueprint
@cristalscrystals7148
@cristalscrystals7148 6 ай бұрын
Honestly I’m amazed you can get Riston to stick to a polished wafer, that is no easy task! In the past I’ve used spray-on negative pcb resists on silicon wafers with good adhesion but they can be a pain to remove, required warm baths of 2M hydroxide. Good luck with the evaporator, in my experience, it’s cheaper and faster to use coiled tungsten baskets as opposed to boats. The boats require 100s of amps whereas a tungsten basket gets just as hot with maybe 50-60amps. They work really well for evaporating chromium because it doesn’t melt it just sublimes at the right temperature, if ur using gold or aluminum then sometimes the boats are your only option. Also as a hobbyist I would definitely shy away from the expensive deposition monitors and just use a dremel to break open a 1-10Mhz crystal oscillator and use a USB oscilloscope to measure the changing in frequency with a small bjt driven amplifier.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 6 ай бұрын
hey, you seem like you've got a lot of knowledge on the subject. if you want to connect feel free to email me at projectsinflight at gmail dot com and i'd love to talk if you have time :)
@TechGorilla1987
@TechGorilla1987 10 ай бұрын
@21:18 - My thinking is to take a thin sheet of PEI like I use for 3D printing beds and sandwich the chip between those for the lamination? Heck, even an iron won't melt PEI. I way out of my element here though.
@Hepad_
@Hepad_ 10 ай бұрын
Is it possible to do microfluidics with the etching technique ?
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
microfluidics are usually a thicker layer so etching it chemically is probably not likely to leave a nice vertical wall. i think usually they use a photoresist epoxy mixture for that
@alfredias801
@alfredias801 10 ай бұрын
very cool! It might be interesting to try electroless copper plating on the silver traces to increase their robustness instead of the copper paint
@thomasjbrandt9003
@thomasjbrandt9003 10 ай бұрын
Another etchant for silver is Ferric Nitrate. You end up with water soluble silver nitrate.
@forbiddenera
@forbiddenera 10 ай бұрын
17:31 I thought you were gonna say..sometimes the best solution..is found in the kitchen
@NiKolyan96
@NiKolyan96 9 ай бұрын
сюжет достойный экранизации. переживал до самого конца.
@techexpert-ww6yq
@techexpert-ww6yq 5 ай бұрын
amazing video bro 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍❤❤❤❤❤❤
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 5 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@vmiguel1988
@vmiguel1988 10 ай бұрын
That is a great research that you conducted here but unfortunately the bond is not reliable enough, you would never be able to wire bond to those pads.
@lazymass
@lazymass 10 ай бұрын
You are insane :) insanely good
@forbiddenera
@forbiddenera 10 ай бұрын
11:11 exactly what I thought was happening..😮 no idea how I guessed that right 😂
@STWNoman
@STWNoman 2 ай бұрын
Sir can I come and work with you for free , I want to learn from you please
@t.josephnkansah-mahaney7961
@t.josephnkansah-mahaney7961 10 ай бұрын
Could you do this as a base layer, then a silver layer? kzbin.info/www/bejne/n5nCdWmFgd-kpZYsi=BuJXos6UsZxaPFLz
@BHSAHFAD
@BHSAHFAD 10 ай бұрын
why don't you just get a euv machine from asml?
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
i have been experimenting with 254nm lithography and have already been struggling with light transmission through materials at that wavelength. can't imagine how much worse it would be at EUV
@Hyo9000
@Hyo9000 10 ай бұрын
@@projectsinflightasianometry has a couple of very good explainers about EUV, though you probably already know that channel. The tldr is… EUV is just way too hard 😂. I do believe e-beam is more suited to small-scale, local fabrication though. I wonder how fine can one go with e-beams in a DIY setup. I’m looking forward to see you take on that matter, whenever you build your own :)❤
@TheKutia
@TheKutia 9 ай бұрын
finnaly i wasted 2 years of my life trying to do exactly this, never finished. thank you
@TheElectronicDilettante
@TheElectronicDilettante 9 күн бұрын
Would the silver layer adhere better if you were to etch the glass sample first? Basically like sanding a surface before painting… Cool video!!!
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 күн бұрын
It would, but we need the surface to be smooth when making semiconductor devices, so we cannot etch it just to make metal adhere better
@fredericv7194
@fredericv7194 10 ай бұрын
You could try to plate the silver layer with copper or another plating compound
@canonicaltom
@canonicaltom 9 ай бұрын
I wonder how electroless nickel plating on glass would do for this.
@Ziraya0
@Ziraya0 10 ай бұрын
Starting to feel like you could be making devices any moment
@ds-k7878
@ds-k7878 4 ай бұрын
5:21 silver conductive epoxy 8331
@kokodin5895
@kokodin5895 9 ай бұрын
i wonder if pasive electroplating could improve the sructural strength of the base metal , there are cold tining solutions avalable for normal electronics but it is ostly ment for copper but if it work it could stick together loose silver bits into single metal foil made out of tin and silver. i am not sure if it would stick to silicon by itself and even aplied to silver it would still relay mostly on silver to silicon bonds
@PexiTheBuilder
@PexiTheBuilder 10 ай бұрын
Nope, those wires are to melt ice from windows. Fans are for getting rid of fog.
@brandonwyffels8002
@brandonwyffels8002 10 ай бұрын
Can anyone tell me the difference between thermal evaporation and sputtering? Also, love following this series.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
thermal evap: heat metal until it vaporizes and atoms escape due to thermal energy sputtering: ionize a gas, use magnets to accelerate the ions into a metal target, ions hit with such force they eject metal atoms, metal atoms fly out and coat your substrate
@mostafagaberahmed6657
@mostafagaberahmed6657 3 ай бұрын
respect you patience , great work thank you
@marlynsina-on8434
@marlynsina-on8434 9 ай бұрын
I just used Ferric chloride to etch silver coating 😊
@TheTrumanZoo
@TheTrumanZoo 9 ай бұрын
amazing work.
@DjamLDzGamerDjo
@DjamLDzGamerDjo 8 ай бұрын
Do us a video comparison between x86 and arm
@Less_Serious
@Less_Serious 7 ай бұрын
8:23 "It just works" -Skyrim man
@pseudoplankton7044
@pseudoplankton7044 10 ай бұрын
100th comment. Cant wait for thenext part!
@excitedbox5705
@excitedbox5705 10 ай бұрын
This is awesome. You are quickly becoming my favorite channel. For the home lab a tiny vacuum chamber should be plenty and I think if we could make a few custom Mason jar lids with a vacuum adapter and various tools it should allow anyone to do thermal deposition, CVD, PVD, and ALD for under a few hundred $. It would be big enough to fit 2" wafers and old DLP projector optics allow projection lithography to be done very cheaply.
@herp_derpingson
@herp_derpingson 5 ай бұрын
I really liked your conductive paint, so I looked up online, yes! There is a thing called doped silicon ink. You can just "print your own transistor" with doped silicon on paper(?) with a suitable printer.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 5 ай бұрын
oh, interesting! feel free to email me the link. my email is projectsinflight at gmail dot com.
@diegotorresreyna5338
@diegotorresreyna5338 10 ай бұрын
I would recommend using sputtering
@tibblescat2918
@tibblescat2918 6 ай бұрын
when they "silver" mirrors it think they use tin first
@AlejandroMeri
@AlejandroMeri 9 ай бұрын
6:58 "we need a 10% glucose solution which is 1g of glucose plus 10ml of water " But wouldn't that be 1g of glucose plus 9ml of water? How is the % of a solution interpreted in chemistry?
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
yeah, that was a mistake on my part. i should probably add a note to the video correcting that
@tahallium
@tahallium 10 ай бұрын
Why isn’t sodium hydroxide used instead of
@napalmholocaust9093
@napalmholocaust9093 10 ай бұрын
Buy a big spray can of Nickel Shield electromagnetic shielding. It lays down a continuous conductive layer.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
do you know where to buy that?
@nekomakhea9440
@nekomakhea9440 10 ай бұрын
I've been wondering about silver for hobby IC labs for a while, great to see it in a video. A future problem you might run into with silver interconnect is electromobility; low melting point metals tend to have atoms pushed out of place over time by electrons colliding with them as current flows, altering electrical characteristics, I think it's just a problem with smaller wires though, as aluminum interconnect is widely used in the thicker global interconnect layers and also has a low melting point.
@ptacnik1988
@ptacnik1988 9 ай бұрын
Bro, your glucose concentration is actually 9.09% not 10% not sure if 1% would trow off your results. Thank you for sharing this video it really inspires me to get back in the lab.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
yeah sorry that was an oversight. fortunately the reaction is not too sensitive to glucose concentration
@lynsmith3154
@lynsmith3154 10 ай бұрын
What am I missing here? Computer chips have a silicon base on which they deposit various layers. You are using a silica base in the glas slide seemingly as a proxy for the silicon chip. Two totally different materials. I don't understand. What am I missing?
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
silicon on the surface of the chip is commonly converted to silicon dioxide as an insulating layer between devices on the same chip. silicon dioxide is basically the same as glass
@MrTrepid
@MrTrepid 5 ай бұрын
To solve the silver beading problem try annealing the layer with an additional Si or glass chip laying flat on top of the target chip. The surface tension should spread out the Ag layer (the method has been used for growing thin films of metallic single crystals from metallic solutions)
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 5 ай бұрын
Hey, you seem to know your stuff. if you ever want to chat my email is projectsinflight at gmail dot com.
@meatmanek
@meatmanek 10 ай бұрын
When you first started talking about a chemical process for depositing silver, I was sure you were going to go with a photographic process, like tintype or daguerreotype. Both produce silver images on glass and would skip the need for photoresist, as you could just expose the traces directly. (I'm not sure if gelatin is left behind in the process, or if the silver crystals are touching or not.)
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
i'm not an expert but it seemed like the daguerreotype process needed a silver layer as it's starting point, so i'm not sure if it would make anything easier. i could be wrong though
@TradeWorks_Construction
@TradeWorks_Construction 4 ай бұрын
I Love videos like this! Creative solutions for normally complex or difficult tasks that normally require extremely specialized & EXPENSIVE machines to accomplish. Said machines are almost always so far outside the realm obtainable to all but laboratories or people with large free capital. It was a great video where you get brought along for the ride through the trials and tribulations. Unnecessary content was removed and only the most fundamental parts were kept which means 100’s upon hundreds of hours of footage had to be edited and broken into distinct stages. Before reviewing and finalizing transitions and adding the audio commentary. If anyone can’t appreciate the skills needed to edit let alone the immense time invested to get a result, then i urge them to try to record just a single one of their own multi day projects to see what actually goes into creating something that keeps people attention.
@VeLawrence
@VeLawrence 5 ай бұрын
Hi man, weren't you able to finish the semiconductor device? I was expecting the remaining part of the process I think you do an amazing job here, best regards!
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 5 ай бұрын
oh, that video is coming don't worry
@helderalmeida3993
@helderalmeida3993 5 ай бұрын
well done, enjoyed the whole process!
@secondarycontainment4727
@secondarycontainment4727 10 ай бұрын
Why use silicone wafers insted other materials? How well did the sivler adhere to the glass? ...why not just use glass?
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
the overall goal is to develop a process to be used in silicon chips, so i wanted to use silicon chips and not just glass, even though the silicon dioxide layer on the chip is basically the same as glass
@ur1friend437
@ur1friend437 10 ай бұрын
Love all your effort and I am trying to guess how to keep the silver layer stable for the moment the semiconductor heats up.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 9 ай бұрын
the semiconductor substrate shouldn't need to be heated for any fabrication step after the metal is added, and devices shouldn't operate at temperatures above about 200C
@sealpiercing8476
@sealpiercing8476 10 ай бұрын
OK so rather than a plasma cleaner, UV ozone is a good final cleaning step and dead simple. It will make things more reproducible. Just get a UV lamp with the right envelope so the 185 nm light gets through and produces ozone. Expose the surface to be cleaned to the output of the UV lamp at relatively close range. At ambient temperatures it trivially eats few-nm layers of organics and makes everything pass the water break test with flying colors every time, the water just zips across the surface at first contact, so it's good after wet cleaning. If the surface is heated, you can even eat through um thick layers of organics. Logistical issues: run the lamp in an enclosure, but UV ozone will slowly erode anything organic. A simple setup is to have the electrodes outside of an enclosure, and the silica envelope of the lamp goes through the enclosure. Watch out for some supposedly single ended lamps that aren't really single ended, they just have a PTFE coated wire going to the other end. Also disposing of the ozone can be a pain, but it is decomposed by 254 nm light, so if you get a second non-ozone-producing lamp you can use that to destroy ozone. Putting the setup near a fume extracting device is a good idea regardless. This may be a bit much, but it's a lot cheaper and easier than a plasma cleaner and gives as good or better results for many applications.
@nocturnhabeo
@nocturnhabeo 10 ай бұрын
Would a normal o3 generator work to clean things? Assuming comparable safety measures.
@sealpiercing8476
@sealpiercing8476 10 ай бұрын
@@nocturnhabeo Not nearly as well--less effective than 254 nm UV alone. The ozone isn't actually the most active part. The UV lamp produces 185 nm and 254 nm light, which produce and decompose ozone respectively, and in the process produce atomic oxygen. The UV light is itself absorbed by organics, which causes additional reactions rendering them more reactive to oxidizing agents. An ozone generator and 254 nm UV light might be similarly effective with the right parameters. OK I did a quick search on google scholar. It looks like the 185 nm UV is probably doing most of the work, both in forming atomic O from air and in directly attacking chemical bonds. The 254 nm UV is largely irrelevant or mildly counterproductive, but mercury vapor lamps are cheap so still probably the thing to use.
@projectsinflight
@projectsinflight 10 ай бұрын
this is very interesting- thank you for the detailed write up
@abdennour183
@abdennour183 4 ай бұрын
You can use paint of photo resist
@ocramnodroc
@ocramnodroc 9 ай бұрын
Would be neat to see a working circuit using this method. So neat and way cleaner then most chip manufacturing processes. If you give it a coat of UV Epoxy that would effectively make it a durable product that is also quick to apply. Love this.
@Xsiondu
@Xsiondu 10 ай бұрын
WOW. Just WOW I'm amazed with how much you are accomplishing. God I love living in the future!
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