Hi David, In my experience this line of Futurrex resists are very sensitive to both bake temperatures. I also found that they seem to require slightly higher temperatures than listed in the Futurrex literature. We did 160C/2:00 and 110C/1:00 for very thin germanium chips. Consider putting a upside down beaker over the glass slide when it is on the hotplate to help even out the temperature a bit. We generally developed for ~20 sec in a 3:1 mixture of water and RD6 (http://grover.mirc.gatech.edu/data/msds/160.pdf) -Alex On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 9:26 AM, David Casalewrote: > Hi Brad, > > The exposure dose I am shooting for is around 300mJ/cm^2 on 2.5 micron > thick resist, I am controlling by time not by actual dose, but I try to be > consistent in terms of exposure time and how long the lamp has been on, etc. > I am using lab hotplates, nothing made for resist processings (vacuum chucks > etc.). Temperature uniformity once the plate is at steady state isn't bad, > ±3°F over my active area, but I haven't checked with substrate in place. The > substrate is also 0.060" glass, so it's very thick in comparison to a Si > wafer. The %TMAH is the standard 0.24N stuff, I believe it works out to be > 2.4% but I'd need to check the data sheet, Microposit 319. Do you suggest > using a diluted developer? I didn't have much luck when I tried 3:1 dilution > in getting much development at all. > > I can run a bunch of samples at the same exposure and vary PAB/PEB to see > how it turns out. I am used to s18xx resists, and all that the baking is > doing is getting rid of casting solvent, exposure is most important, just > varies a bit depending on how much residual solvent there is. Do you happen > to know if the PEB is used to finish crosslinking, or for diffusion purposes > as well (I couldn't get a clear answer from the sales guy I spoke with)? I > have had samples where the image appeared to be reversed even. Mind you, > this was just shaking down the resist and trying to get a feel for it > quickly, I have an OK procedure now but I have found that it is really hard > to get consistent results, but the PEB and PAB haven't been my concern, I > was playing with exposure dose. So maybe I will try again, varying PEB. Is > 150°C OK for PEB? I have been doing 4 minutes @100°C for PAB and 10 minutes > @150°C for PEB. > > Thanks, > David Casale