Customer SolutionsMeasuring the Thickness of Micromachined Silicon Wafers Using Machine Vision
Author(s):Thomas Digges Jr., Virginia Semiconductor; Robert A. Ross, Virginia Semiconductor
Industry:Semiconductor
Product:Data Acquisition, LabVIEW, Motion Control, Vision
The Challenge:Using nondestructive techniques for automated measurement of the thickness of silicon wafers containing micromachined structures.
The Solution:Developing a PC-based optical micrometer using off-the-shelf tools for data acquisition, image processing, and motion control in order to reduce development time and improve marketability.Introduction For example, a MEMS pressure transducer might consist of one or more micromachined diaphragms measuring 25 µm to 5 mm in diameter, and as thin as 10 µm. Applied pressure produces a deflection in the silicon diaphragm, which produces an electrical signal that can be amplified and calibrated to pounds per square inch (psi). Virginia Technologies, Inc. was retained by Virginia Semiconductor, Inc. to develop an optical micrometer capable of measuring MEMS device thickness with resolution in the µm range. Our goal was to use off-the-shelf tools for data acquisition, image processing, and motion control in order to reduce development time and improve marketability. We achieved this goal using LabVIEW, DAQ, IMAQ, and ValueMotion products from National Instruments. We chose LabVIEW for our application software because with it we could rapidly generate a graphical user interface for display, analysis, and control. The extensive VI libraries of NI-DAQ for data acquisition, NI-IMAQ and IMAQ Vision for image acquisition and processing, and the ValueMotion VI library for motion control provided all the functions required for a complete system. The OMMS-1 can accurately map the thickness of micromachined features as thin as 10 µm and as small as 100 µm in width. The instrument can measure feature step heights with a resolution of approximately 0.5 µm. The operator positions a wafer riding on an XY-positioning stage to various locations for evaluation using a mouse-driven graphical user interface. Absolute thickness maps are stored in a database for easy process monitoring and tracking. The OMMS-1 instrument uses lasers whose energies are focused through the silicon wafer under test. The instrument then maps the energy attenuated by the wafer to the wafer thickness. The user defines any number of 0.25 by 0.25 in. regions on the wafer for evaluation. Once a particular region is selected, the XY-positioning stage centers that region under a CCD array. The user then begins the evaluation process by simply pushing a button on the LabVIEW panel. After the image is acquired and processed, we use the IMAQ Vision VI libraries extensively to process the acquired image and calculate wafer thickness information. A LabVIEW intensity graph displays the thickness of each pixel in the evaluation region as an 8-bit grayscale value. The user can then select vertical, horizontal, or diagonal line profiles showing the thickness value across the evaluation area. Dr. Thomas Digges Virginia Semiconductor Corporation 1501 Powhatan Street Fredricksburg, VA 22401 Tel: (540) 373-2900; or
Robert A. Ross Virginia Technologies, Inc. 2015 Ivy Road, Suite 423 Charlottesville, VA 22903 Tel: (804) 970-2200 View the entire user solution in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. |
