Jesse, I may not have been the original poster, but I am also attempting to evaporate metals (Titanium or Gold) on uncrosslinked SU-8 2050. Titanium evaporates in an e-beam evaporator at a relatively low process pressure of 5e-7 millibars. However, I am not sure about the sublimation temperature nor the intensity of the glow of the light while Titanium is being evaporated. I need to evaporate about 25-30nm Titanium on uncrosslinked SU-8 to use this layer as a UV mask for subsequent i-line patterning as well as a good adhesion layer between SU-8 and gold. It has been reported that Chromium films of at least 25nm is sufficient to block UV light, but I am not so sure of Titanium. Can anyone advise on this matter? Mr. Jeffrey Mun Pun YUE Division of Bioengineering Block E3, #05-18, Nanobioanalytics Lab 9 Engineering Drive 1 National University of Singapore Singapore 117576 Tel: (65) 65165985, Fax: (65) 68723069 E-mail: g0500396@nus.edu.sg -----Original Message----- From: mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org [mailto:mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org] On Behalf Of Jesse D Fowler Sent: Tuesday, March 06, 2007 1:04 AM To: General MEMS discussion Subject: [mems-talk] Depositing metals onto plastics and SU-8 Hello original poster! I can't find the original email about this, but if I remember properly, the poster wants to deposit onto un-crosslinked (unexposed SU-8). Something important to think about is what effect the brightly glowing source is going to have on your photosensitive substrate. I don't know if the source glows at the proper wavelength to expose SU-8, but I do know that it's bright enough that we don't look at it without a welding glass. At least, in an evaporator. I understand there's a glowing plasma in a sputterer, as well. But, I don't know how bright that is. Is your process going to get messed up if the SU-8 is exposed by the metal deposition method? What if it's only partially exposed? If so, you're probably going to have to do a few experiments to find a solution.