Claudio, HMDS chemical symbol NH-Si(CH3)Si(CH3). The NH is very actively looking for Hydrogen. If you dehydrate correctly the only Hydrogen on the wafer is at the end of a Hydroxyl ion that is bound to the wafer by a very strong bond. The NH sees 2 of these Hydrogen atoms and liberates them and combines with them producing NH3, ammonia. This is given off and the Si(CH3) replaces the Hydrogen atom. This leaves an inorganic Si atom linking on to the wafer and three organic molecules (CH3), Methyl waving up in the air looking for an organic material to bond with. I like to think of this as a Methyl tree and the organic liquid settles in the branches. Bill Moffat, CEO Yield Engineering Systems, Inc. 2185 Oakland Rd., San Jose, CA 95131 (408) 954-8353 cell 408 590 4577 bmoffat@yieldengineering.com www.yieldengineering.com -----Original Message----- From: mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org [mailto:mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org] On Behalf Of CLAUDIO T MUNOZ Sent: Friday, February 09, 2007 12:32 PM To: mems-talk@memsnet.org Subject: [mems-talk] Adhesion Mechanism between HMDS and PMMA Dear Members, In one of my project I am characterizing PMMA films deposited on silicon substrate. To enhance adhesion I was told to use HMDS (hexamethyldisilozane). My question is: What is the chemical or physical interaction between the PMMA film and the HMDS layer that makes the latter a good adhesion promoter for PMMA. Would PMMA films wet better over hydrophilic substrates as SiOx? I say this thinking on the possibility that PMMA could form strong hydrogen bonding with the SiOx substrate. I am specifically concerned about the mechanism of adhesion between PMMA and HMDS. I believe some of our dear members might probably share some ideas to help me to understand my question.