Good morning, In case of Si/W/Au, I have tried to deposit a very thin layer of Titanium on W. A 10nm Ti layer works since if create a diffusion barrier to adhere W and 500nm Au. I dont know what is the thickness of Au film you need but the best thickness of Ti layer can be differed according to the Au film thickness. The same thing will happen when you deposit Au on the Si wafer but remember, if you deposit with sputtering, do not use a slow velocity of deposition since it will create the very high grains developed on the surface of thin film. Furthermore, there're some kind of photoresist that can stay on tungsten not very bad. But for the substrate of W, normally, you cannot have a thick layer of photoresist. My suggestion is that you etch the surface by the sputtering plasma after you deposit W. It can better the result. Good luck. Kim-Anh BUI-THI Stagiaire de ThalC(s Recherche et Technologie 91767 - Palaiseau Cedex Portable : + 33 6 37 955 998 --Forwarded Message Attachment-- From: rbk@email.unc.edu To: mems-talk@memsnet.org Date: Fri, 13 Jun 2008 10:10:39 -0400 Subject: Re: [mems-talk] Gold pad bonding problem I have a similar issue when I tried to place photoresist on top of tungsten metal. Adhesion was poor and the photoresist flaked more than usual. I used HF which removed the oxide layer and allowed for better adhesion of my photoresist. HF removed tungsten oxides, but does not etch the W metal. Here are some refs to that effect. Hockett, L. A.; Creager, S. E. Review of Scientific Instruments 1993, 64, 263-264. Paparazzo, E.; Moretto, L.; Selci, S.; Righini, M.; Farne, I. Vacuum 1999, 52, 421-426. Also, we electrically deposited gold onto tungsten microwires. The HF helped the adhesion of the gold as well. That reference is Hermans, A.; Wightman, R. M. Langmuir; 2006; 22(25); 10348-10353. Just an idea. Good Luck. -Richard