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US3118050A - Electron beam devices and processes - Google Patents

Electron beam devices and processes Download PDF

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US3118050A
US3118050A US20349A US2034960A US3118050A US 3118050 A US3118050 A US 3118050A US 20349 A US20349 A US 20349A US 2034960 A US2034960 A US 2034960A US 3118050 A US3118050 A US 3118050A
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electron beam
electron
holder
work
compartment
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James S Hetherington
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Alloyd Electronics Corp
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K15/00Electron-beam welding or cutting
    • B23K15/0013Positioning or observing workpieces, e.g. with respect to the impact; Aligning, aiming or focusing electronbeams
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J37/00Discharge tubes with provision for introducing objects or material to be exposed to the discharge, e.g. for the purpose of examination or processing thereof
    • H01J37/30Electron-beam or ion-beam tubes for localised treatment of objects
    • H01J37/302Controlling tubes by external information, e.g. programme control
    • H01J37/3023Programme control
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S164/00Metal founding
    • Y10S164/05Electron beam

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to devices and processes involving the application of an ⁇ electron beam to a part being worked and, more particularly, to devices and processes in which a work-piece is treated, i.e. cut, etched, alloyed, etc. by one or more incident electron beams.
  • an impinging electron beam It is possible to vaporize, liquify or sinter portions of a Work-piece in a substantial vacuum by an impinging electron beam.
  • Such an electron beam if applied intermittently in the form of high amplitude pulses, serves to heat incremental regions of the work-piece in such a way that a major proportion of the transmitted energy is absorbed rapidly by the increment toward which the electron beam is ldirected and a negligible proportion of the transmitted energy is transferred slowly to adjacent increments. Since the electron beam can be focused sharply and positioned precisely and since the workpiece is disposed in a substantial vacuum that is continuously exhausted, the geometrical and chemical conditions are such as to permit treatment of the workpiece on a microminiature scale. In such a system as the beam impinges upon the lwork-piece, the power generated by the beam and the .information carried by the beam constitute distinct considerations.
  • the primary object of the present invention is to develop power in and impart information to the electron beam by using it as a medium for imaging an enlarged source configuration upon a .microminiature work-piece to -be treated.
  • the enlarged configuration for example may be a slotted mask, through which a collimated beam of electrons is directed, or a photoemitting surface, from which electrons are emitted in response to an optical image. Since, once the source configuration and the Iwork-piece are relatively positioned and the vacuum and electro-optical conditions are determined, the treatment proceeds Without mechanical movement, microminiature results of unprecedented dependability are possible.
  • the invention accordingly comprises the devices possessing the construction, combination of elements and arrangement of parts, and the processes possessing the various steps, their sequence and their interrelations, which are exemplified in the following detailed disclosure, and the scope of which will be indicated in the appended claims.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention, partly in fragmentary mechanical perspective and partly in electrical block diagram;
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic view of another embodiment of the present invention, partly in ,fragmentary mechanical perspective and partly in electrical block diagram;
  • FIG. 3 illustrates materials undergoing the steps of a process embodying the present invention
  • FIG. 4 illustrates materials undergoing the steps of another process embodying the present invention.
  • each of the devices described herein as embodying the present invention comprises a source configuration in the form of an apertured mask through which electrons 'are directed from a collimated electron beam or 3,118,050 Patented Jan. 14, 1964 a photo-emittin g surface from which electrons are emitted by the action of incident light, a control system -for pulsing the beam from the source configuration, a magnetic lens system for imaging the beam at a focal region, and holder at the focal region .for positioning the work with respect to the beam, the source configuration being substantially larger than the rfocal region.
  • the electron beam is modulated lfor a pulse amplitude ranging up to kv., a pulse yduration ranging from .01 microsecond to ⁇ 1000 microseconds, a pulse repetition rate ranging up to 5000 per second and a pulse current ranging up to 500 milliamperes.
  • the source configuration should be sufiiciently larger than the focal region, i.e. at least 10 times as large, to minimize the current density at the source configuration for the purpose of limiting its heating and facilitating its adjustment. In other words, the larger the source configuration is with respect to the workpiece, the smaller is the undesired heating effect at the source configuration and the easier is its registration with the iWork-piece.
  • the lens system by analogy to photography, makes it possible to vary the intensity of the electron beam not only in a single step between cutoff and cut-on but also throughout an infinite range of steps therebetween.
  • the lens system may provide a field of varying intensity ⁇ (analogous to shades of gray) if desired.
  • the hermetic enclosure is continuously evacuated by a mechanical Ifore-pump, a fiuid diffusion pump and a gettering pump, which cooperate to maintain the pressure within the hermetic enclosure at an extremely low value, preferably less than l0-3 fmm. Hg, notwithstanding any gaseous discharge from the work-piece.
  • FIG. l illustrates an apparatus embodying the present invention as comprising a hermetic housing 10 having a laterally extending box-like lower compartment 12 and a vertically upstanding sectional compartment for enclosing and supporting the operating components of the apparatus, which are now to be described.
  • Laterally extending compartment 1-2 is provided with a closure 16 through which work-pieces 1'8 may be inserted into compartment 12 before the device is placed in operation.
  • 'Ihe work-pieces are carried by a holder 20, which is guided for reciprocal movement by a pair of rails 22, 24 and a threaded shaft 26.
  • One end of shaft 26 projects into a threaded bore 28 and its other end is rotated by a suitable motor 30.
  • a binocular microscope 32 is prolvided for observing the work-piece when properly positioned in compartment 12.
  • the work-piece may be treated by an electron beam that is generated by an electron gun 34, collimated by a magnetic
  • Electron gun 34 includes a filament 42 for emitting electrons thermionically, a grid 44 for controlling the transmission of electrons therethrough, an anode 46 for accelerating electrons transmited through grid 44 and an insulating spacer 48.
  • Filament 42 is energized through an isolation transformer 50, which is energized by a filament power source 52.
  • Grid ⁇ 44 is maintained normally at a negative potential with respect to filament 42 by a suitable direct current source ⁇ 54, but is subjected to pulses of voltage from a pulse generator 56 in order to control high voltage applied to filament 42 by a high voltage source S ⁇ 7.
  • the number, amplitude, and frequency of pulses are determined by a suitable conrtol circuit 58.
  • Col'limating lens 36 is in the form of a hollow annulus, the inner tubular surface of which is provided with a circumferential slot 60 and the interior of which contains a suitable coil 62. Coil 62 is energized by an adjustable direct current supply 64. The collimated beam of electrons from collimating lens 36 impinges upon mask 38 which is mounted on a suitable conducting support 66. Support 66 is adjustable in two horizontal dimensions by suitable micrometer screws 68. Support 66 is provided with a series of fiducial notches 70 through which rays of the e'lectron beam may pass.
  • focusing system 40 includes ⁇ a pair of magnetic lenses 72, 74, each in the form of a hollow annulus, the inner tubular surface of which is provided with a circumferential slot 76. Both lenses are energized by independently adjustable direct current supplies 78.
  • Holder 2.0 is provided with a series of iiducial notches 80. Within each of these notches is a terminal, insulated from the holder, to which a ray of electrons from its counterpart 70 in mount 66 is transmitted.
  • mount 66 may be registered with mount 20 in extremely precise fashion.
  • Balanced pair circuit 82 is a simple conventional comparator circuit of the type shown in FIG. 2 of U.S. Patent No. 3,038,078 issued in the name of Walter P. Kern on June 5, 1962.
  • a series of work-pieces 18 are positioned within the open seats in holder 20.
  • closure 16 is closed in order to hermetica'lly seal the compartments of the device.
  • an electron beam from electron gun 34 is directed through collimating lens 36 and mask 38.
  • the beam from mask 38 is focused by lens system 40 onto a work-piece 18 properly positioned in registration with mask 38.
  • Proper registration of mask 38 and work-piece 18 is simply determined by adjusting micrometer screws 68 until balanced pair indicator 82 signifies proper registration.
  • the work may be observed through binocular microscope 32 as processing progresses.
  • screw ⁇ and motor arrangement a series of work-pieces 18 may be processed automatically without any necessity for opening the compartment.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates an alternative embodiment of the present invention as comprising a housing 90 having a laterally extending box-like compartment 92 and a vertically upstanding tubular compartment 94, both of which communicate with each other and are hermetically sealed, and a light-tight photographic compartment 96.
  • a source of illumination 98 Within light-tight compartment 96, in sequence, are a source of illumination 98, an optical collimating lens system 100, a series of photographic transparencies 102 and a focusing objective lens 104.
  • transparencies 102 is imaged by theforegoing optical system upon the lower face 106 of an optically flat disk 108, which hermetically seals chamber 94 from chamber 96.
  • At lower face 106 is a semi-transparent cesium oxide coating that emits electrons in response to incident light. Electrons emitted by coating 106 are accelerated by grid 110 and focused by a magnetic lens system 112 onto a work-piece 114, which is mounted and positioned in the same manner as its counterpart in the device of FIG. l.
  • Grid 110 serves as an anode to accelerate the electrons emitted by coating 106 and is energized by a suitable direct current supply 116, which is fed through a transformer 118 by a suitable pulse to generator 120.
  • the lenses of system 112 which are similar in every respect to their counterparts 4in the lens system of FIG. l, are fed by suitable adjustable direct current supplies 122.
  • rings 124, 126 and 128, which are provided with beads 130, 132 and 134, respectively, of distinctive material to be evaporated.
  • Each of beads 130, 132 land 134 is provided with a reflector that prevents evaporated material from escaping into undesired parts of the device.
  • Rings 124, 126 and 128 are designed -to be heated selectively by the passage of an electric current from power sources 136, 138 and 140 in such a way as to cause evaporation from the beads they carry toward the work-piece which is being processed.
  • a system for automatically processing ⁇ work-pieces in the foregoing Way is shown as including a program control 142, which sequences the operation of a slide projector positioner 122, a pulse generator 120, a heater 136, a heater 138 and a heater 140.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates the steps of a process for fabricating a thermocouple in the device of FIG. 2 with an appropriate sequence of vacuum deposition steps effected by heating beads 130, 132 and 134 and etching and machining steps effected by Aelectron bombardment under the control of a series of transparencies 102.
  • First an iron coat is deposited upon a ceramic base 152.
  • Next iron coat 150 is partially etched away by electron bombardment to leave a Wire 154.
  • a ceramic coat 1'56 is deposited by evaporation.
  • a hole 158 is machined by the electron bombardment through ceramic coat 156.
  • a Constantin coat 160 is deposited by evaporation.
  • Constantin coat 160 is etched away to provide a wire 162.
  • the product of this process is a microminiature iron-Constantin thermocouple.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates the steps of a process for fabricating a transistor in the ldevice of FIG. 2 with an appropriate sequence of vacuum deposition steps effected by heating beads and etching and machining steps effected by electron bombardment under the control of a series of transparencies 102.
  • First a silicon coat 164 and an indium coat 166 are deposited by evaporation onto a silicon base 168. Then coats 164 and 166 are etched away to provide a series of buttons 170. Finally each button 170 is fused at its silicon-indium face to provide in sequence silicon, silicon-indium and indium strata 172, 174 and 176, which constitute a microminiature transistor.
  • Electrombeamrnwrnchigingfagmgratus comprising means providing antacuum.-..compggtment,wa ⁇ h-ol der in saidwcompartment/at v avfirshaxial ppsitlipfgrpa vk: piece, awsorce including means for emitting an m iiux in the axial direction toward said holder and means at a second position spaced from said holder for determining the original configuration of said electron fiux transversely of said direction, a lens system for imaging said configuration with said electron iiux to provide a reduced configuration at said first position, a control for moving said source and said holder relative to one another in two dimensions perpendicular to said axial ⁇ direction in order to register said source and said holder, said original configuration being at least ten times as great in extent as said reduced configuration, and means for pulsating said electron flux at a pulse duration ranging from .01 to 1000 microseconds.
  • the electron beam machining apparatus of claim 1 wherein said means for emitting an electron flux comprises a photoemitting surface and said means for determining said original configuration in a mask adapted to differentially attenuate light that may be incident toward said photoemitting surface.
  • Micro-miniature etching apparatus comprising a hermetic enclosure and mounted therein, in sequence, a thermionic filament, a grid, a spacer, an anode, said grid and said ⁇ anode being insulated from each other by said spacer, said grid and said anode being dished inwardly toward each other and being centrally apertured, a collimating lens in the form of a hollow annulus and having a circumferential slot at its inner tubular surface and within the hollow region of said annulus a coil, a first support for a mask, said first support providing a plurality of alignment openings yand means for adjusting the position of said trst support within said enclosure, a plurality of focusing lenses, each focusing lens of ⁇ said plurality being in the form of a hollow annulus and having a circumferential slot at its inner tubular surface and Within the hollow regions of said annulus a coil, a second support for a workpiece, said second support having a plurality of detecting elements
  • Micro-miniature etching apparatus comprising an enclosure and mounted therein in a sequence, a source of electromagnetic radiation, collimating means for said electromagnetic radiation, a photographic transparency, a
  • focusing lens for imaging said transparency at a focal surface with said electromagnetic radiation, a photoemitting element for generating an electron flux corresponding to electromagnetic radiation incident upon said photoemitting element, lens means for imaging rsaid electron flux at a focal surface and holding means for positioning a workpiece at said last mentioned focal surface, and means for moving said transparency and said holding means in two dimensions relative to each other perpendicular to the direction of said sequence in order to register said transparency and said holding means.
  • micro-miniature etching apparatus of claim 5 comprising a plurality of alignment elements at said transparency and a plurality of detecting elements at said workpiece, said alignment elements and said detecting elements being similarly positioned, and indicating means responsive to signals from said detecting elements in order to indicate the correctness of the registration of said transparency and said lworkpiece.

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Description

Jam 14, 1964 .1. s. HETHERINGTON 3,118,050
ELECTRON BEAM DEVICES AND PROCESSES Filed April 6, 1960 S'Sheets-Sheet 1 Power High Voll'age ((5 Adjusi'oble I D. C. Pulse Supply General'or Pulse W Coni'rol Adjusi'oble D. C.
32 74 Suplies Q82 IBalonced Pair i Indiccor INVENTOR Jam 14, 1954 J. s. HETHERINGTON 3,118,050
ELECTRGN BEAM DEVICES AND PROCESSES Filed April 6, 1960 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 HMI Q8 l I J i Slide Projeci'or Posl'ioner FIG. 2
f n2 l L i Adjusl'able D. C. Supplies l l Heqier l l Power l I Hecer 2 I Power Heal'er 3 Power INVENTOR ATTORNEYS Jan 14, 1964 .1.5. HETHERINGTON 3,118,050
ELECTRON BEAM DEVICES AND PROCESSES Filed April 6, 1960 3 Sheets-Sheet 3 |52Vacuum Depcsii' Iron Coa+ Y |50 mmm Ceramic Base Iron Coai' Pari'ially EI'ched Away 7 mm Ceramic Base |56 Iron Wire |54 ''ffwmmmwmamnmm Vacuum Deposii' Ceramic Insulai'or |50 mmm Ceramic Base Iron Wire |58`E+ch Oui Aperfure Ceramic Insulai'or Ceramic Base w- Iron Ire Vacuum Deposil' Consi'anl'in Coai' Iron Wire Ceramic Insulaior |62 Cons'l'anin Wire Ceramic Base 6em-Silicon Bm ilicon Base w11@ m [(Q Eich Away Indium and Silicon Indium INVENTOR Alloy amori, by f Elec'l'ron Beam Heai'ing |68 S'l Sl B te t icon licon ase BY W ATTO R N EYS United States Patent O 3,118,050 ELECTRON BEAM DEVICES AND PROCESSES James S. Hetherington, Boston, Mass., assignor, by mesne assignments, to Alloyd Electronics Corporation, Cambridge, Mass., a corporation of Delaware Filed Apr. 6, 1960, Ser. No. 20,349 6 Claims. (Cl. 219-117) The present invention relates to devices and processes involving the application of an `electron beam to a part being worked and, more particularly, to devices and processes in which a work-piece is treated, i.e. cut, etched, alloyed, etc. by one or more incident electron beams.
It is possible to vaporize, liquify or sinter portions of a Work-piece in a substantial vacuum by an impinging electron beam. Such an electron beam, if applied intermittently in the form of high amplitude pulses, serves to heat incremental regions of the work-piece in such a way that a major proportion of the transmitted energy is absorbed rapidly by the increment toward which the electron beam is ldirected and a negligible proportion of the transmitted energy is transferred slowly to adjacent increments. Since the electron beam can be focused sharply and positioned precisely and since the workpiece is disposed in a substantial vacuum that is continuously exhausted, the geometrical and chemical conditions are such as to permit treatment of the workpiece on a microminiature scale. In such a system as the beam impinges upon the lwork-piece, the power generated by the beam and the .information carried by the beam constitute distinct considerations.
The primary object of the present invention is to develop power in and impart information to the electron beam by using it as a medium for imaging an enlarged source configuration upon a .microminiature work-piece to -be treated. The enlarged configuration for example may be a slotted mask, through which a collimated beam of electrons is directed, or a photoemitting surface, from which electrons are emitted in response to an optical image. Since, once the source configuration and the Iwork-piece are relatively positioned and the vacuum and electro-optical conditions are determined, the treatment proceeds Without mechanical movement, microminiature results of unprecedented dependability are possible.
Other objects of the present invention will in part be obvious and will in part appear hereinafter.
The invention accordingly comprises the devices possessing the construction, combination of elements and arrangement of parts, and the processes possessing the various steps, their sequence and their interrelations, which are exemplified in the following detailed disclosure, and the scope of which will be indicated in the appended claims.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the present invention, reference sho-uld be had to the -following detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying `drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention, partly in fragmentary mechanical perspective and partly in electrical block diagram;
FIG. 2 is a schematic view of another embodiment of the present invention, partly in ,fragmentary mechanical perspective and partly in electrical block diagram;
FIG. 3 illustrates materials undergoing the steps of a process embodying the present invention; and
FIG. 4 illustrates materials undergoing the steps of another process embodying the present invention.
Generally, each of the devices described herein as embodying the present invention comprises a source configuration in the form of an apertured mask through which electrons 'are directed from a collimated electron beam or 3,118,050 Patented Jan. 14, 1964 a photo-emittin g surface from which electrons are emitted by the action of incident light, a control system -for pulsing the beam from the source configuration, a magnetic lens system for imaging the beam at a focal region, and holder at the focal region .for positioning the work with respect to the beam, the source configuration being substantially larger than the rfocal region. Preferably the electron beam is modulated lfor a pulse amplitude ranging up to kv., a pulse yduration ranging from .01 microsecond to `1000 microseconds, a pulse repetition rate ranging up to 5000 per second and a pulse current ranging up to 500 milliamperes. Preferably the source configuration should be sufiiciently larger than the focal region, i.e. at least 10 times as large, to minimize the current density at the source configuration for the purpose of limiting its heating and facilitating its adjustment. In other words, the larger the source configuration is with respect to the workpiece, the smaller is the undesired heating effect at the source configuration and the easier is its registration with the iWork-piece. The lens system, by analogy to photography, makes it possible to vary the intensity of the electron beam not only in a single step between cutoff and cut-on but also throughout an infinite range of steps therebetween. For example, the lens system may provide a field of varying intensity `(analogous to shades of gray) if desired. During operation of the device, the hermetic enclosure is continuously evacuated by a mechanical Ifore-pump, a fiuid diffusion pump and a gettering pump, which cooperate to maintain the pressure within the hermetic enclosure at an extremely low value, preferably less than l0-3 fmm. Hg, notwithstanding any gaseous discharge from the work-piece.
FIG. l illustrates an apparatus embodying the present invention as comprising a hermetic housing 10 having a laterally extending box-like lower compartment 12 and a vertically upstanding sectional compartment for enclosing and supporting the operating components of the apparatus, which are now to be described. Laterally extending compartment 1-2 is provided with a closure 16 through which work-pieces 1'8 may be inserted into compartment 12 before the device is placed in operation. 'Ihe work-pieces are carried by a holder 20, which is guided for reciprocal movement by a pair of rails 22, 24 and a threaded shaft 26. One end of shaft 26 projects into a threaded bore 28 and its other end is rotated by a suitable motor 30. A binocular microscope 32 is prolvided for observing the work-piece when properly positioned in compartment 12. The work-piece may be treated by an electron beam that is generated by an electron gun 34, collimated by a magnetic |lens 36, differentially attenuated by a mask 38, land focused by a magnetic lens system 40. Compartments 12 and 14, in operation, lare continuously evacuated by fore and diffusion pumps, shown generally at 17.
Electron gun 34 includes a filament 42 for emitting electrons thermionically, a grid 44 for controlling the transmission of electrons therethrough, an anode 46 for accelerating electrons transmited through grid 44 and an insulating spacer 48. Filament 42 is energized through an isolation transformer 50, which is energized by a filament power source 52. Grid `44 is maintained normally at a negative potential with respect to filament 42 by a suitable direct current source `54, but is subjected to pulses of voltage from a pulse generator 56 in order to control high voltage applied to filament 42 by a high voltage source S`7. The number, amplitude, and frequency of pulses are determined by a suitable conrtol circuit 58. Col'limating lens 36 is in the form of a hollow annulus, the inner tubular surface of which is provided with a circumferential slot 60 and the interior of which contains a suitable coil 62. Coil 62 is energized by an adjustable direct current supply 64. The collimated beam of electrons from collimating lens 36 impinges upon mask 38 which is mounted on a suitable conducting support 66. Support 66 is adjustable in two horizontal dimensions by suitable micrometer screws 68. Support 66 is provided with a series of fiducial notches 70 through which rays of the e'lectron beam may pass. As shown, focusing system 40 includes `a pair of magnetic lenses 72, 74, each in the form of a hollow annulus, the inner tubular surface of which is provided with a circumferential slot 76. Both lenses are energized by independently adjustable direct current supplies 78. Holder 2.0 is provided with a series of iiducial notches 80. Within each of these notches is a terminal, insulated from the holder, to which a ray of electrons from its counterpart 70 in mount 66 is transmitted. By means of a suitable balanced pair circuit 82, mount 66 may be registered with mount 20 in extremely precise fashion. Balanced pair circuit 82 is a simple conventional comparator circuit of the type shown in FIG. 2 of U.S. Patent No. 3,038,078 issued in the name of Walter P. Kern on June 5, 1962.
In operation, first a series of work-pieces 18 are positioned within the open seats in holder 20. Next closure 16 is closed in order to hermetica'lly seal the compartments of the device. Next, -while these compartments are evacuated continuously, an electron beam from electron gun 34 is directed through collimating lens 36 and mask 38. The beam from mask 38 is focused by lens system 40 onto a work-piece 18 properly positioned in registration with mask 38. Proper registration of mask 38 and work-piece 18 is simply determined by adjusting micrometer screws 68 until balanced pair indicator 82 signifies proper registration. The work may be observed through binocular microscope 32 as processing progresses. By reason of the rail, screw `and motor arrangement, a series of work-pieces 18 may be processed automatically without any necessity for opening the compartment.
FIG. 2 illustrates an alternative embodiment of the present invention as comprising a housing 90 having a laterally extending box-like compartment 92 and a vertically upstanding tubular compartment 94, both of which communicate with each other and are hermetically sealed, and a light-tight photographic compartment 96. Within light-tight compartment 96, in sequence, are a source of illumination 98, an optical collimating lens system 100, a series of photographic transparencies 102 and a focusing objective lens 104.
One of transparencies 102 is imaged by theforegoing optical system upon the lower face 106 of an optically flat disk 108, which hermetically seals chamber 94 from chamber 96. At lower face 106 is a semi-transparent cesium oxide coating that emits electrons in response to incident light. Electrons emitted by coating 106 are accelerated by grid 110 and focused by a magnetic lens system 112 onto a work-piece 114, which is mounted and positioned in the same manner as its counterpart in the device of FIG. l. Grid 110 serves as an anode to accelerate the electrons emitted by coating 106 and is energized by a suitable direct current supply 116, which is fed through a transformer 118 by a suitable pulse to generator 120. The lenses of system 112, which are similar in every respect to their counterparts 4in the lens system of FIG. l, are fed by suitable adjustable direct current supplies 122.
Within compartment 92 is a series of rings 124, 126 and 128, which are provided with beads 130, 132 and 134, respectively, of distinctive material to be evaporated. Each of beads 130, 132 land 134 is provided with a reflector that prevents evaporated material from escaping into undesired parts of the device. Rings 124, 126 and 128 are designed -to be heated selectively by the passage of an electric current from power sources 136, 138 and 140 in such a way as to cause evaporation from the beads they carry toward the work-piece which is being processed. By a suitable sequence of evaporating and etching steps,
4 a variety of microminiature structures may be produced. A system for automatically processing `work-pieces in the foregoing Way is shown as including a program control 142, which sequences the operation of a slide projector positioner 122, a pulse generator 120, a heater 136, a heater 138 and a heater 140.
FIG. 3 illustrates the steps of a process for fabricating a thermocouple in the device of FIG. 2 with an appropriate sequence of vacuum deposition steps effected by heating beads 130, 132 and 134 and etching and machining steps effected by Aelectron bombardment under the control of a series of transparencies 102. First an iron coat is deposited upon a ceramic base 152. Next iron coat 150 is partially etched away by electron bombardment to leave a Wire 154. Next a ceramic coat 1'56 is deposited by evaporation. Next a hole 158 is machined by the electron bombardment through ceramic coat 156. Next a Constantin coat 160 is deposited by evaporation. Finally Constantin coat 160 is etched away to provide a wire 162. The product of this process is a microminiature iron-Constantin thermocouple.
FIG. 4 illustrates the steps of a process for fabricating a transistor in the ldevice of FIG. 2 with an appropriate sequence of vacuum deposition steps effected by heating beads and etching and machining steps effected by electron bombardment under the control of a series of transparencies 102. *First a silicon coat 164 and an indium coat 166 are deposited by evaporation onto a silicon base 168. Then coats 164 and 166 are etched away to provide a series of buttons 170. Finally each button 170 is fused at its silicon-indium face to provide in sequence silicon, silicon-indium and indium strata 172, 174 and 176, which constitute a microminiature transistor.
This application is a continuation in part of co-pending patent application Serial No. 7049, led February 5, 1960 in the name of l ames S. Hetnerington for Comprehensive Electron Beam Machining Devices.
Since certain changes may be made in the above devices and processes without departing from the scope of the invention herein involved, it is intended that all matter described in the foregoing description and shown in the accompanying drawing be interpreted in an illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
What is claimed:
l. Electrombeamrnwrnchigingfagmgratus comprising means providing antacuum.-..compggtment,wa`h-ol der in saidwcompartment/at v avfirshaxial ppsitlipfgrpa vk: piece, awsorce including means for emitting an m iiux in the axial direction toward said holder and means at a second position spaced from said holder for determining the original configuration of said electron fiux transversely of said direction, a lens system for imaging said configuration with said electron iiux to provide a reduced configuration at said first position, a control for moving said source and said holder relative to one another in two dimensions perpendicular to said axial `direction in order to register said source and said holder, said original configuration being at least ten times as great in extent as said reduced configuration, and means for pulsating said electron flux at a pulse duration ranging from .01 to 1000 microseconds.
2. The electron beam machining apparatus of claim 1 wherein said means for Idetermining said original configuration is a mask for said electron ux.
3. The electron beam machining apparatus of claim 1 wherein said means for emitting an electron flux comprises a photoemitting surface and said means for determining said original configuration in a mask adapted to differentially attenuate light that may be incident toward said photoemitting surface.
4. Micro-miniature etching apparatus comprising a hermetic enclosure and mounted therein, in sequence, a thermionic filament, a grid, a spacer, an anode, said grid and said `anode being insulated from each other by said spacer, said grid and said anode being dished inwardly toward each other and being centrally apertured, a collimating lens in the form of a hollow annulus and having a circumferential slot at its inner tubular surface and within the hollow region of said annulus a coil, a first support for a mask, said first support providing a plurality of alignment openings yand means for adjusting the position of said trst support within said enclosure, a plurality of focusing lenses, each focusing lens of `said plurality being in the form of a hollow annulus and having a circumferential slot at its inner tubular surface and Within the hollow regions of said annulus a coil, a second support for a workpiece, said second support having a plurality of detecting elements, said mask being at least ten times greater in extent than said workpiece, said dctecting elements and said alignment openings being similarly positioned, the collimating and focusing lenses serving to image said mask on said workpiece with an electron flux emitted by said thermionic filament, said collimating and focusing lenses serving to image said alignment openings on said detecting elements, means for evacuating said enclosure, means for applying power to said filament, means for establishing an intermittent high potential between said anode and said grid in order to impart sequential pulsations to said uX, and means for indicating the correctness of the alignment of said mask and said workpiece in response to signals generated by said detecting elements, said sequential pulsations being characterized by a pulse duration ranging from .01 to 1000 microseconds.
5. Micro-miniature etching apparatus comprising an enclosure and mounted therein in a sequence, a source of electromagnetic radiation, collimating means for said electromagnetic radiation, a photographic transparency, a
focusing lens for imaging said transparency at a focal surface with said electromagnetic radiation, a photoemitting element for generating an electron flux corresponding to electromagnetic radiation incident upon said photoemitting element, lens means for imaging rsaid electron flux at a focal surface and holding means for positioning a workpiece at said last mentioned focal surface, and means for moving said transparency and said holding means in two dimensions relative to each other perpendicular to the direction of said sequence in order to register said transparency and said holding means.
6. The micro-miniature etching apparatus of claim 5 comprising a plurality of alignment elements at said transparency and a plurality of detecting elements at said workpiece, said alignment elements and said detecting elements being similarly positioned, and indicating means responsive to signals from said detecting elements in order to indicate the correctness of the registration of said transparency and said lworkpiece.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,267,752 Ruska et al. Dec. 30', 1941 2,778,926 Schneider Jan. 22, 1957 2,793,281 Steigerwald May 21, 1957 2,839,699 Szegho et al .Tune 17, 1958 2,844,706 Lorenz July 22, 1958 2,860,251 Pakswer et al Nov. l1, 1958 2,932,720 Stohr Apr. 12, 1960 FOREIGN PATENTS 1,141,535 France Sept. 2, 1959

Claims (1)

1. ELECTRON BEAM MACHINING APPARATUS COMPRISING MEANS PROVIDING A VACUUM COMPARTMENT, A HOLDER IN SAID COMPARTMENT AT A FIRST AXIAL POSITION FOR A WORKPIECE, A SOURCE INCLUDING MEANS FOR EMITTING AN ELECTRON FLUX IN THE AXIAL DIRECTION TOWARD SAID HOLDER AND MEANS AT A SECOND POSITION SPACED FROM SAID HOLDER FOR DETERMINING THE ORIGINAL CONFIGURATION OF SAID ELECTRON FLUX TRANSVERSELY OF SAID DIRECTION, A LENS SYSTEM FOR IMAGING SAID CONFIGURATION WITH SAID ELECTRON FLUX TO PROVIDE A REDUCED CONFIGURATION AT SAID FIRST POSITION, A CONTROL FOR MOVING
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Cited By (27)

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US3180751A (en) * 1961-05-26 1965-04-27 Bausch & Lomb Method of forming a composite article
US3206336A (en) * 1961-03-30 1965-09-14 United Aircraft Corp Method of transforming n-type semiconductor material into p-type semiconductor material
US3236994A (en) * 1962-07-23 1966-02-22 Hitachi Ltd Electron beam working method
US3260102A (en) * 1963-12-11 1966-07-12 Rosemount Eng Co Ltd Calibration method and device for heat flux sensors
US3340377A (en) * 1962-07-12 1967-09-05 Jeol Ltd Method of treating material by a charged beam
US3347701A (en) * 1963-02-05 1967-10-17 Fujitsu Ltd Method and apparatus for vapor deposition employing an electron beam
US3369101A (en) * 1964-04-30 1968-02-13 United Aircraft Corp Laser micro-processer
US3385949A (en) * 1964-10-23 1968-05-28 Hughes Aircraft Co Ion gun apparatus for treatment of surfaces with beams of very small size
US3387109A (en) * 1963-07-30 1968-06-04 Centre Nat Rech Scient Apparatus for effecting optical viewing and marking of a workpiece
US3400243A (en) * 1964-08-10 1968-09-03 Mech Tronics Corp Electron beam welding machine
US3431389A (en) * 1965-10-15 1969-03-04 Tudor Corp Method for working materials by means of an energy beam
US3433923A (en) * 1964-08-10 1969-03-18 Mech Tronics Corp Electronic beam welding machine
US3433922A (en) * 1964-08-10 1969-03-18 Mech Tronics Corp Electron beam welding machine
US3436510A (en) * 1967-06-14 1969-04-01 Litton Precision Prod Inc Electron beam machining apparatus for producing high definition encoders
US3638231A (en) * 1968-05-27 1972-01-25 Tno Device for recording with electron rays
US3653063A (en) * 1967-12-28 1972-03-28 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd Electronic printing device comprising an array of tunnel cathodes
US3860783A (en) * 1970-10-19 1975-01-14 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Ion etching through a pattern mask
US3875414A (en) * 1973-08-20 1975-04-01 Secr Defence Brit Methods suitable for use in or in connection with the production of microelectronic devices
US3876883A (en) * 1972-06-30 1975-04-08 Ibm Method and system for focusing and registration in electron beam projection microfabrication
US4061814A (en) * 1974-04-03 1977-12-06 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and masking structure for configurating thin layers
US4075488A (en) * 1974-09-06 1978-02-21 Agency Of Industrial Science & Technology Pattern forming apparatus using quadrupole lenses
US4156124A (en) * 1977-04-14 1979-05-22 Optical Engineering, Inc. Image transfer laser engraving
US4213053A (en) * 1978-11-13 1980-07-15 International Business Machines Corporation Electron beam system with character projection capability
US4686349A (en) * 1984-06-22 1987-08-11 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Apparatus for improving surface quality of rotary machine parts
US5153441A (en) * 1990-06-26 1992-10-06 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam exposure apparatus
US5532446A (en) * 1992-03-14 1996-07-02 Leybold Durferrit Magnetic deflection system for a high-power electron beam
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US2839699A (en) * 1948-02-19 1958-06-17 Rauland Corp Image converter tube
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US5552675A (en) * 1959-04-08 1996-09-03 Lemelson; Jerome H. High temperature reaction apparatus
US5628881A (en) * 1959-04-08 1997-05-13 Lemelson; Jerome H. High temperature reaction method
US3206336A (en) * 1961-03-30 1965-09-14 United Aircraft Corp Method of transforming n-type semiconductor material into p-type semiconductor material
US3180751A (en) * 1961-05-26 1965-04-27 Bausch & Lomb Method of forming a composite article
US3340377A (en) * 1962-07-12 1967-09-05 Jeol Ltd Method of treating material by a charged beam
US3236994A (en) * 1962-07-23 1966-02-22 Hitachi Ltd Electron beam working method
US3347701A (en) * 1963-02-05 1967-10-17 Fujitsu Ltd Method and apparatus for vapor deposition employing an electron beam
US3387109A (en) * 1963-07-30 1968-06-04 Centre Nat Rech Scient Apparatus for effecting optical viewing and marking of a workpiece
US3260102A (en) * 1963-12-11 1966-07-12 Rosemount Eng Co Ltd Calibration method and device for heat flux sensors
US3369101A (en) * 1964-04-30 1968-02-13 United Aircraft Corp Laser micro-processer
US3400243A (en) * 1964-08-10 1968-09-03 Mech Tronics Corp Electron beam welding machine
US3433923A (en) * 1964-08-10 1969-03-18 Mech Tronics Corp Electronic beam welding machine
US3433922A (en) * 1964-08-10 1969-03-18 Mech Tronics Corp Electron beam welding machine
US3385949A (en) * 1964-10-23 1968-05-28 Hughes Aircraft Co Ion gun apparatus for treatment of surfaces with beams of very small size
US3431389A (en) * 1965-10-15 1969-03-04 Tudor Corp Method for working materials by means of an energy beam
US3436510A (en) * 1967-06-14 1969-04-01 Litton Precision Prod Inc Electron beam machining apparatus for producing high definition encoders
US3653063A (en) * 1967-12-28 1972-03-28 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd Electronic printing device comprising an array of tunnel cathodes
US3638231A (en) * 1968-05-27 1972-01-25 Tno Device for recording with electron rays
US3860783A (en) * 1970-10-19 1975-01-14 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Ion etching through a pattern mask
US3876883A (en) * 1972-06-30 1975-04-08 Ibm Method and system for focusing and registration in electron beam projection microfabrication
US3875414A (en) * 1973-08-20 1975-04-01 Secr Defence Brit Methods suitable for use in or in connection with the production of microelectronic devices
US4061814A (en) * 1974-04-03 1977-12-06 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and masking structure for configurating thin layers
US4075488A (en) * 1974-09-06 1978-02-21 Agency Of Industrial Science & Technology Pattern forming apparatus using quadrupole lenses
US4156124A (en) * 1977-04-14 1979-05-22 Optical Engineering, Inc. Image transfer laser engraving
US4213053A (en) * 1978-11-13 1980-07-15 International Business Machines Corporation Electron beam system with character projection capability
US4686349A (en) * 1984-06-22 1987-08-11 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Apparatus for improving surface quality of rotary machine parts
US5153441A (en) * 1990-06-26 1992-10-06 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Electron-beam exposure apparatus
US5532446A (en) * 1992-03-14 1996-07-02 Leybold Durferrit Magnetic deflection system for a high-power electron beam

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