Hi Lin, Are you carrying out your softbaking on a hotplate or in a convection oven? The latter can lead to wrinkles because the resist's surface layer dries out at a higher rate than inner regions. If you are using a hotplate, the effect should be reduced because heating is from below, and solvent evap from inner regions maintains solvent concentrations in the surface layer. Nevertheless, dry-out differential could still be pronounced on a hotplate, particularly as your layer is ralatively thick. I suggest a prolonged and/or ramped softbake so the solvent can gradually escape the resist, without the surface layer drying out too quickly and forming wrinkles. Alternatively, I recall that one of my colleagues, facing a similar problem with thick SU-8, placed a glass petri dish (upside down and) over thick SU-8 during softbake on the hotplate. The dish was placed on glass slides to raise it from the hotplate plate, creating a vent for solvent evaporation. Hope this helps. Good luck! Michael >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org [mailto:mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org] >> On Behalf Of Li, Lin (MU-Student) >> Sent: Thursday, 3 July 2008 3:00 AM >> To: mems-talk@memsnet.org >> Subject: [mems-talk] SU8-2075 >> >> I have been using SU8-2075 to make 100um thick structure. But I have >> difficulty in reducing the wrinkles and the roughness. >> I tried 65C and 95C softbaking 5min and 10min each or even tried to cool >> down and bake repetively as the manual suggested. >> Could you let me know any recipe or methods to solve this problem?