semiconductor folks!
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@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems @riley@toot.cat @Hemera@meow.social I think some lasers also use helium, either to get the right frequency or temperature. Might be required to etch the gates at the required size?
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semiconductor folks! I've seen a lot of talking heads repeat the claim that "a helium shortage is bad for chip production", never substantiated with useful information. do any of you know:
- what is helium actually used in the processes?
- which specific processes would be affected?
- how much helium (ballpark) is needed per year?
- where, if anywhere, a closed cycle is used?
- what happened to the strategic helium reserve in the US?
@whitequark I think helium makes the bubbles smaller giving the chips a more premium mouthfeel. -
semiconductor folks! I've seen a lot of talking heads repeat the claim that "a helium shortage is bad for chip production", never substantiated with useful information. do any of you know:
- what is helium actually used in the processes?
- which specific processes would be affected?
- how much helium (ballpark) is needed per year?
- where, if anywhere, a closed cycle is used?
- what happened to the strategic helium reserve in the US?
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems it’s used for loads of things, as a carrier gas, for cooling, and the main way to find leaks in an ultra high vacuum system (of which fabs have loads) is by spraying helium around the outside and looking for helium that makes it inside
there’s probably plenty of other uses I’m just ignorant of -
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems it’s used for loads of things, as a carrier gas, for cooling, and the main way to find leaks in an ultra high vacuum system (of which fabs have loads) is by spraying helium around the outside and looking for helium that makes it inside
there’s probably plenty of other uses I’m just ignorant of@xeno do you work in the industry?
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@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems it’s used for loads of things, as a carrier gas, for cooling, and the main way to find leaks in an ultra high vacuum system (of which fabs have loads) is by spraying helium around the outside and looking for helium that makes it inside
there’s probably plenty of other uses I’m just ignorant of@xeno @whitequark yeah but leak detection can't be a high volume use compared to actual production work. Like how often do tools develop leaks if you're not actively working on them?
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@xeno do you work in the industry?
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems oh nope sorry I didn’t parse “semiconductor folks” as people in the industry
I have been doing smal-scale semiconductor research work and I’ve learned from some actual semiconductor people but I am def not one of them -
@xeno @whitequark yeah but leak detection can't be a high volume use compared to actual production work. Like how often do tools develop leaks if you're not actively working on them?
@xeno @whitequark i would expect most leaks to be after maintenance outages then the tool runs leak free for a comparatively long time
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@xeno do you work in the industry?
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems oh nope sorry I didn’t parse “semiconductor folks” as people in the industry
I have been doing small-scale semiconductor research work and I’ve learned from some actual semiconductor people but I am def not one of them -
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems oh nope sorry I didn’t parse “semiconductor folks” as people in the industry
I have been doing small-scale semiconductor research work and I’ve learned from some actual semiconductor people but I am def not one of them@xeno oh no research definitely counts
do you know how much helium is used as a carrier gas? cooling in ESC/BSG systems seems to be "few sccm" which is not a geopolitically relevant amount, neither is leak checking
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@xeno @whitequark yeah but leak detection can't be a high volume use compared to actual production work. Like how often do tools develop leaks if you're not actively working on them?
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems @azonenberg@ioc.exchange that’s true,
I know people in other labs with UHV stuff who have had to install He recycling systems and stuff over the past couple years to deal with the shortage but they might have some niche use for lots of He they never told me about, I was just thinking of “things that use He” -
semiconductor folks! I've seen a lot of talking heads repeat the claim that "a helium shortage is bad for chip production", never substantiated with useful information. do any of you know:
- what is helium actually used in the processes?
- which specific processes would be affected?
- how much helium (ballpark) is needed per year?
- where, if anywhere, a closed cycle is used?
- what happened to the strategic helium reserve in the US?
@whitequark I think it may be used in some plasma etch processes. Dry etching is basically sorcery
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@xeno oh no research definitely counts
do you know how much helium is used as a carrier gas? cooling in ESC/BSG systems seems to be "few sccm" which is not a geopolitically relevant amount, neither is leak checking
@whitequark@social.treehouse.systems I think it varies a lot, I can look up our uni’s rie system that uses He bsg
the other thing with bsg systems is some of them don’t necessarily need He, it’s just optimal given thermal conductivity and inertness. Most bsg systems I know about can also use Ar or N2, but the thermal conductivity probably precludes their use in intense ion milling and stuff. -
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