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Nanoparticles removal in post-CMP (Chemical-Mechanical Polishing) cleaningNg, Dedy 30 October 2006 (has links)
Research was performed to study the particle adhesion on the wafer surface after the chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) process. The embedded particles can be abrasive particles from the slurry, debris from pad material, and particles of film being polished. Different methods of particle removal mechanism were investigated in order to find out the most effective technique. In post-CMP cleaning, surfactant was added in the solution. Results were compared with cleaning without surfactant and showed that cleaning was more effective with the combined interaction of the mechanical effort from the brush sweeping and the chemistry of the surfactant in the solution (i.e., tribochemical interaction). Numerical analysis was also performed to predict the particle removal rate with the addition of surfactants. The van der Waals forces present in the wafer-particle interface were calculated in order to find the energy required to remove the particle. Finally, the adhesion process was studied by modeling the van der Waals force as a function of separation distance between the particle and the surface. The successful adaptation of elasticity theory to nanoparticle-surface interaction brought insight into CMP cleaning mechanisms. The model tells us that it is not always the case that as the separation distance is decreased, the attraction force will be increased. The force value estimated can be used for slurry design and CMP process estimation.
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Nanoparticles removal in post-CMP (Chemical-Mechanical Polishing) cleaningNg, Dedy 30 October 2006 (has links)
Research was performed to study the particle adhesion on the wafer surface after the chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) process. The embedded particles can be abrasive particles from the slurry, debris from pad material, and particles of film being polished. Different methods of particle removal mechanism were investigated in order to find out the most effective technique. In post-CMP cleaning, surfactant was added in the solution. Results were compared with cleaning without surfactant and showed that cleaning was more effective with the combined interaction of the mechanical effort from the brush sweeping and the chemistry of the surfactant in the solution (i.e., tribochemical interaction). Numerical analysis was also performed to predict the particle removal rate with the addition of surfactants. The van der Waals forces present in the wafer-particle interface were calculated in order to find the energy required to remove the particle. Finally, the adhesion process was studied by modeling the van der Waals force as a function of separation distance between the particle and the surface. The successful adaptation of elasticity theory to nanoparticle-surface interaction brought insight into CMP cleaning mechanisms. The model tells us that it is not always the case that as the separation distance is decreased, the attraction force will be increased. The force value estimated can be used for slurry design and CMP process estimation.
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BRINGING PARTICLE SCALE PROPERTIES INTO DESCRIPTIONS OF POWDER BEHAVIOR VIA THE ENHANCED CENTRIFUGE METHODCaralyn A Stevenson (11786483) 03 December 2021 (has links)
Many industrial
processes involve powders in some form when making products, and the behavior
of the powders processed is impacted by the adhesion of the individual particles
which comprise it. This adhesion behavior, in turn, is critically influenced by
the complementarity between the topography of a surface and the shape and
roughness of the particles that adhere to that surface. Problems such as poor
flowability, dust hazards, and equipment wear arise due to uncontrolled
particle adhesion and can lead to production challenges. Computational models
have been developed to predict the behavior of highly idealized powders (i.e.,
powders comprised of simple geometries such as spheres) under various processes
but are limited in their ability to model and optimize the manufacturing and
handling of powders comprised of many complex particles. This work focuses on
further developing an experimental and modeling framework, called the Enhanced
Centrifuge Method (ECM), that maps particle-scale and surface properties onto
experimentally-validated ‘effective’ adhesion distributions that describe the
adhesion between particles in powders. These distributions represent an
engineering approach that allows powders comprised of particles of complex
shape and roughness, which are challenging to model, to be described as if they
were perfect, smooth spheres, which are comparatively simple to model. The
complexity associated with the shape and size distributions of the individual
particles is captured by the ‘effective’ adhesion parameters. These ‘effective’
adhesion parameter distributions provide a quantitative guide as to how the
specific particle properties are interacting with the surface topography which
directly impacts the overall powder adhesion. The initial framework of the ECM
is constructed around characterizing the van der Waals adhesion of silica and
polystyrene powders. The impact of the surface topography and the particle
properties of each of the powders is captured in ‘effective’ Hamaker constant
distributions. These distributions provide a quantitative guide for
specifically how the particles interact with the surface topography based on
the respective scales of the particle and surface features. The ECM framework
is further adapted here to investigate the effects of topographical changes of
stainless steel due to polishing on the adhesion properties of three different
pharmaceutical powders to the stainless steel. In this adaptation of the ECM
framework, the force of adhesion was described by modifying the Johnson,
Kendall, and Roberts (JKR) model describing elastic-like particle contact to a
flat plate. Within the modified JKR adhesion description, the work of adhesion
is tuned to be an ‘effective’ work of adhesion parameter. These size-dependent
‘effective’ work of adhesion distributions provide a quantifiable measure of
the change in the powder and surface adhesion that reflects the size, shape,
and topographical features on the powder and surface with which the powder
interacts. To investigate environmental effects on the adhesion properties, the
ECM framework is also extended to characterize the effect humidity has on
altering surface and particle interactions of the three pharmaceutical powders
to stainless steel. In addition to the work with the pharmaceutical powders,
the investigation of the effect of humidity on the powder’s adhesion includes a
study of the influence of water on the interactions between silica particles and
a silica substrate. In all cases, the ‘effective’ adhesion force distributions
developed through the ECM provide the ability to quickly determine
quantitatively how environmental and process conditions alter particle and
surface properties, and overall powder behavior.
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Forces governing the dynamics of fine particles near surfaces and suspended in airRajupet, Siddharth January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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SOIL ADHERENCE TO SOLID SURFACES: RELATION WITH FOULING AND CLEANINGDetry, Jean 23 June 2009 (has links)
This doctoral research was realized within the frame of the SMARTNET Project which aimed at developing coatings to improve the cleanability of stainless steel, targeting open surface applications.
Throughout this thesis, the radial-flow cell was selected to study the removal of different soils due to its ability to generate well-controlled wall shear stress distributions on the investigated surfaces. Model surfaces were selected for their different physico-chemical and mechanical properties to study the interactions between the soils and the surfaces in detail.
A thin layer chromatography sprayer giving a narrower and more reproducible droplet sizes distribution was preferred to mimic splashing and produce controlled spatters. The first experimental campaign involving oil droplets showed that the analytical models available to relate the detachment radius with the critical wall shear stress (minimal wall shear stress required for soil detachment) and the soil adhesion strength in the radial flow cell could only be applied for weakly adherent soils for which removal occurs below 3 Pa, due to the complex hydrodynamics near the inlet.
Consequently, the flow inside the radial-flow cell has been characterized using computational fluid dynamics over the whole inlet laminar regime and validated experimentally. Studying the adherence of starch granule aggregates in the radial-flow cell revealed that the conversion of critical radius into critical wall shear stress may be biased when the adhering aggregate height is not negligible with respect to the channel height and when the adherence is such that flow rates above creeping flow conditions are required
for soil detachment.
The influence of several environmental factors and substrate properties was then examined to improve the understanding of the mechanisms affecting soiling and cleanability. By influencing droplet spreading and competition between capillary forces at the granule-substrate and granule-granule interfaces, substrate wettability affects the shape and compactness of the adhering aggregates, the efficiency of shear forces upon cleaning, and finally the adherence of soiling particles. Macromolecules originating from the starch granules suspension are adsorbed on the substrate from the liquid phase or carried by the retracting film and
accumulated at the granule-substrate interface. They influence granule adherence by acting as an adhesive
joint, the properties of which seem to be influenced by the detailed history of drying and exposure to humidity.
On compliant substrates, the aggregate-substrate interactions induce stresses at the granule-substrate interface which may lead to substrate deformation and promote a more intimate contact between the granules and their substrate, thereby appreciably increasing adherence.
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Study of dynamic effects in microparticle adhesion using Atomic force microscopyKaushik, Anshul 17 February 2005 (has links)
The adhesion and removal of particles from surfaces is a contemporary
problem in many industrial applications like Semiconductor manufacturing,
Bioaerosol removal, Pharmaceuticals, Adhesives and Petroleum industry. The
complexity of the problem is due to the variety of factors like roughness,
temperature, humidity, fluid medium etc. that affect pull-off of particles from
surfaces. In particle removal from surfaces using fluid motion, the dynamic effects
of particle separation will play an important role. Thus it is essential to study the
dynamic effects of particle removal. Velocity of pull-off and force duration effects
are two important dynamic factors that might affect pull-off. Particle adhesion
studies can be made using the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM). The velocity of
pull-off and force duration can be varied while making the AFM measurements.
The objective of the current work is to obtain the dependence of pull-off force on
pull-off velocity. Experiments were conducted using AFM and the data obtained
from the experiments is processed to obtain plots for pull-off force vs. particle size
and pull-off force vs. pull-off velocity. The pull-off force is compared with the predictions of previous contact adhesion theories. A velocity effect on pull-off force
is observed from the experiments conducted.
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MICROMECHANICAL ADHESION FORCE MEASUREMENTS BETWEEN CYCLOPENTANE HYDRATE PARTICLESDieker, Laura E., Taylor, Craig J., Koh, Carolyn A., Sloan, E. Dendy 07 1900 (has links)
Cyclopentane hydrate interparticle adhesion force measurements were performed in pure cyclopentane liquid using a micromechanical force apparatus. Cyclopentane hydrate adhesion force measurements were compared to those of cyclic ethers, tetrahydrofuran and ethylene oxide, which were suspected to be cyclic ether-lean and thus contain a second ice phase. This additional ice phase led to an over-prediction of the hydrate interparticle forces by the capillary bridge theory. The adhesion forces obtained for cyclopentane hydrate at atmospheric pressure over a temperature range from 274-279 K were lower than those obtained for the cyclic ethers at similar subcoolings from the formation temperature of the hydrate. The measured cyclopentane interparticle adhesion forces increased linearly with increasing temperature, and are on the same order of magnitude as those predicted by the Camargo and Palermo rheology model.
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Colloidal particle-surface interactions in atmospheric and aquatic systemsChung, Eunhyea 04 April 2011 (has links)
Colloidal particles suspended in a liquid or gas phase often interact with a solid-liquid or solid-gas interface. In this study, experimental data through atomic force microscopy and neutron reflectometry and theoretical results of colloidal particle-surface interactions were obtained and compared. Atmospheric and aquatic environments were considered for the interactions of microbial colloidal particles and nano-sized silica particles with planar surfaces. Spores of Bacillus thuringiensis, members of the Bacillus cereus group, were examined as the microbial particles, simulating the pathogens Bacillus cereus and Bacillus anthracis which are potentially dangerous to human health. Model planar surfaces used in this study include gold which is an electrically conductive surface, mica which is a highly charged, nonconductive surface, and silica.
In atmospheric systems, the interaction forces were found to be strongly affected by the relative humidity, and the total adhesion force of a particle onto a surface was modeled as the addition of the capillary, van der Waals, and electrostatic forces. Each component is influenced by the properties of the particle and surface materials, including hydrophobicity and surface roughness, as well as the humidity of the surrounding atmosphere. In aquatic systems, the interaction forces are mainly affected by the solution chemistry, including pH and ionic strength. The main components of the interaction force between a microbial colloidal particle and a planar surface were found to be the van der Waals and electrostatic forces.
The results obtained in this research provide insights into the fundamental mechanisms of colloidal particle interactions with environmental surfaces in both atmospheric and aquatic systems, contributing to the understanding of the phenomena driving such interfacial processes as deposition, aggregation, and sedimentation. Thus, the results can help us describe the behavior of contaminant colloidal particles in environmental systems and subsequently devise better means for their removal from environmental surfaces.
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Surface modifications for improving contamination sensitivity in batterypack applicationsMorkos, Bishoy, Abdulai, Joel January 2024 (has links)
Various potential methods and techniques for modifying surfaces to make themless sensitive to contamination have been researched for various applicationsbefore, to varying degrees of success. These are discussed in detail to potentiallyapply them in the automotive sector, to face the increasing technical cleanlinessrequirements, that are linked to more complexity in design and electrification. TheTheoretical background in dust adhesion and contact mechanics is discussed, withdevelopments in analytical and numerical methods highlighted. Then, someexamples of the surfaces in question are presented, and their topographiesmeasured. Potential techniques are identified from previous experimental research in otherfields, and their applicability and feasibility are discussed within the limits ofavailable data, then an attempt at a structured approach for choosing candidatesfor further experimental testing on a case by case basis is laid out, and suggestionsfor more comprehensive research into effective parameters and analytical methodsare made.
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