Tony’s Diamond Chop Saw (Part 2)

5, 20, and 10 mil thick alumina substrates with 50 ohm transmission lines
10, 20, and 5 mil thick alumina substrates with 50 ohm transmission lines

In part 1 I gave an overview of what this project is all about. In this part I will describe the basics of the machine and some of the reasons I made the design choices I did. To start with, I wanted to do this on as small a budget as possible. The main project for which this machine serves ends up being a real money pit, so I have to budget accordingly. Hence the use of hard drive parts and scrap metal. Total spent so far is about $60.

When I first thought about how to cut these little pieces of ceramic, it seemed that there were a few elements that would be tricky on a budget. First thing I did was try and figure out how commercial dicing saws work. Certainly Intel and others have figured out a good way to slice ’em and dice ’em a long time ago… And they did.

Tricky thing #1: Holding the substrate while it is being cut.

After a wafer full of chips is finished being made, it is mounted onto a wide stretchy tape, creatively named “dicing tape.” The tape is pulled over a frame and then the wafer placed on top. Next the taped wafer goes into the dicing machine where it is cut by an insanely fast spinning diamond encrusted blade of blingy wafer death.

To keep the wafer from heating up (chips generally don’t like heat) water is sprayed at the cutting surface. This also helps to wash away crud generated by cutting and to prolong blade life.  Once the wafer has been diced into individual chips, the tape is exposed to UV light or heat. The adhesive on the tape is made to become less sticky when exposed, and at this point the chips can be easily removed with tweezers, or an automated pick-and-place machine.

My first thought was to try and get some of this tape and use it in the same manner, but for smaller pieces. Then someone at work told me about something far more cool, with a far better name, something called Crystalbond! Crystalbond is essentially a mounting adhesive designed for exactly what I want to do. You simply heat it up, it becomes liquid, place the part in the puddle, and then do nothing until it cools off and then solidly holds your part. I managed to find 5 lifetime’s supply on eBay for dirt cheap, but several other places sell it. Anyway after the parts are cut you wash it away with acetone and you are left with clean diced parts.

Tubes of Crystalbond mounting adhesive
Tubes of Crystalbond mounting adhesive

Okay, so the part can be held, but I didn’t want to have to glue a part to my machine every time I wanted to cut something. So instead of gluing the part to the machine I decided to glue the part to small pieces of glass which are a convenient carrier and can be used with my hotplatethat I built for my wire bonder.

Hotplate for wthermosonic wedge bonding
Hotplate for thermosonic wedge bonding

So now I’ve got a piece of easy to handle glass, with one or more substrates to dice which has to be mounted to the machine. I could use tape, a temporary adhesive, or clamps, but why? I just put together a digitally controlled vacuum pump for some composites work, so why not make a vacuum chuck? And even better, I mounted it to a precision X-Y dovetail slide that I purchased on eBay for cheap. Now I can easily position the glass, reposition if necessary, and make measured cuts my moving the X-Y stage and measuring at the same time with a runout gauge. This allows me to make cuts that are accurate to 0.001 inches.

X-Y positioner I bought off eBay
X-Y positioner I bought off eBay

A note here regarding XY stages… I chose specifically a dovetail style positioner because unlike the more common linear bearing style slides, a dovetail slide has static loading.  The benefit is that there is a much greater resistance to vibration and since I am grinding, I want as solid a mount as possible.

Tricky Thing #2: The Blade

This is really a compound Tricky Thing, a combination of finding the blade, holding it, and spinning it. First a little background on dicing saws and blades…

Wafer dicing used to be done (and still is, especially in research situations) with a diamond scribe, basically a pencil with a diamond at the end. A small scratch is made along the crystal plane of the wafer and then carefully bent until a long, very straight crack is made through the wafer.

The same can be done with alumina substrates, although since it is not a mono-crystalline structure, the crack won’t be as straight or as predictable. Scribe dicing is a relatively labor intensive task and chip manufacturers HATE labor, but even more than that they REALLY HATE any time that an actual person touches a wafer.

Wafer dicing today is usually done with a very thin diamond abrasive blade that grinds away the metal or semiconductor until a cut is made. It is nearly identical to the way you might cut tiles when doing a counter top in your kitchen but on a much smaller scale. When cutting tile, if the blade wobbles a bit or is not centered perfectly, you are not likely to notice. With the alumina substrates I’m working with, the pieces are 20-40 times thinner. This implies that any vibration, wobble, or eccentricity errors can cause problems.

Commercial wafer dicing machines use high speed motors that are carefully balanced and rather than using ball bearings, employ costly air bearings. These are essentially out of reach for hobbyists and really not necessary. What is necessary though is a way to hold and spin the blade accurately. Dicing blades are thin, and the thickest ones I could find on eBay were 300 um wide. At 4.6 inches in diameter, a a very large inner diameter, they are also hard to accurately mount on a typical spindle like that found on a Dremel tool.

Diagram depicting blade mounting:  Part A shows the original platter and spacer configuration, Part B shows the modifications I made,  Part C shows the blade mounted.
Diagram depicting blade mounting: Part A shows the original platter and spacer configuration, Part B shows the modifications I made, Part C shows the blade mounted.

All of these issues led me to use a hard drive motor and platters to spin and hold the blade. Hard drives have very long service lives and need bearings of the highest precision. The mounting of the platters is also done in a precise way, as any imbalance would shorten the bearing lifetime and result in undesirable operation.

To make a long story short, I removed (and reused) the spacer ring between the two platters of a hard drive, and reduced the radius of one platter to 3.5″, the inner diameter of the blade. You can see in the picture that the two platters are stacked and there’s a nice surface for gluing the blade down. Machining the platter down was not easy with my tiny lathe, and it ended up being out of round by perhaps 10 mils. It works to roughly locate the blade, but I will need to tack the blade down, measure, adjust, and finally glue into place. 10 mils out of round is really bad because the thickest substrate I’m working with is 10 mils thick. That means that one part of the blade would never actually do any cutting!

Blade test fitted to the saw.
Blade test fitted to the saw.

Tricky Thing #3:  Driving the motor

This seemed to be slightly daunting at first.  Hard disk motors are typically some kind of brushless motor and require special circuitry to run.  I imagined that I would have to build a circuit, or use a motor speed control from a radio controlled plane, etc.  It turns out though that the main circuit board in the hard drive I’m using is dumb enough that even though it has had the equivalent of a frontal lobotomy, it just keeps doing it’s job.   A couple other hard drives I tore apart did not do this.

Motor Control Box
Motor Control Box

The box in the picture above shows the hard drive main circuit board and below that, a 12v/5v switching power supply.  It’s pretty basic and at the flip of the switch on the front panel, the DC supply is connected to the motor driver and voila, the motor spins up.

Schematic Diagram for the Motor Control Box
Schematic Diagram for the Motor Control Box
Well, that’s about it for this part.  In the next part I will discuss the mechanical structure of the saw, fabrication of a few parts, and in the final installment, the use of this machine.

Harrison’s Box

A little over a year ago, I became an Uncle.

This is my nephew, Harrison.

Harrison

For his first birthday, Harrison’s Mom wanted to give him something really special.  Not just an ordinary toy for a one year old, but something strange and wonderful, tactile, interactive, unique.  Thus was born the idea of an “electric box”, an electronic contraption full of switches, lights, buttons, knobs, levers, and sounds.

An elite task force was assembled to create this special gift, codenamed “Harrison’s Box”.  The team consisted of Grandpa, the Woodworker, Jeff (alias mightyohm) the Engineer, and Kylie, the Project Manager.

Upon defining the project, we immediately jumped into phase one, Procrastination.  Deliverables were met, and as the birthday loomed closer, we eased into phase two, Git ‘er’ Done.

Supplies and materials were ordered, wood chips started flying, and soldering irons blazed.  A short time later, the front panel was realized:

Harrison's Box

Harrison’s box consists of (clockwise from the upper left):

  • A buzzer (sound comes out the four holes)
  • A group of red, yellow, and green LEDs that respond to button pushes below
  • A panel meter (for looks!) from the junkbox
  • A pair of robots with blinking red eyes (aka tradeshow schwag)
  • A pong controller, scrounged at the Prototype This! garage sale on Treasure Island
  • Three large, brightly-colored arcade-style pushbuttons and a large joystick
  • A numeric keypad
  • Some random buttons and switches

Almost all of the electronic components, including the arcade buttons and joystick, were sourced from All Electronics.  A few odds and ends came from my junkbox.

The wiring is point to point – zipties and hot glue keep all of the individual wires in place.  Here’s a shot of the wiring for the pushbuttons and the joystick.

Harrison's Box

The buzzer consists of the guts of a cheap bicycle buzzer and a single C cell battery to power it.  Some creative wiring allows a pushbutton elsewhere on the panel to control the buzzer.

Harrison's Box

I salvaged a few high brightness red LEDs from a surplus automotive taillight assembly I picked up at Weird Stuff a few years ago.  A 5 Watt power resistor I had in my junkbox limits the current to the LEDs to a bright but not blinding level.

Harrison's Box

The whole box (with the exception of the buzzer, as noted above) is powered by a pair of AA batteries.

Harrison's Box

Finally, the big day arrived, and it was time to present Harrison (and Mom) with his gift:

Opening the box

Initially the Box was met with some skepticism.  Perhaps Harrison was dwelling on the simple question: Toy or thermonuclear device?  Understandably, there were very cautious button pushes at first.

3544021447_82d005ab4a_o

Moments later, knobs were being turned, switches switched, buttons pushed, and Harrison had learned how to use the joystick.  Look out Steve Wiebe!

Harrison!

The front panel mounts to a small stand that conceals and protects the wiring while also giving Harrison something to hold onto while operating the Box.

Harrison plays with his box

I’m happy to report that Harrison’s Box was a success.

Check out more pictures of the box on flickr.

Tony’s Diamond Chop Saw (Part 1)

dicer_small
This is guest blogger Tony reporting on my latest project, a very small, precise circular chop saw.  Why would anyone want to build such a saw you might ask?  Well, to make parts for another project of course!

So here’s the background….I’m building a ham radio that operates at 47 GHz.  At such a high frequency there are very few components that can be soldered on to circuit boards, let alone components that even come packaged!  The easiest way to build a high performance radio at these frequencies is to use MMICs (Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuits).   These are really just fancy, yet fairly simple circuits made from exotic materials, most commonly Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) instead of the usual Silicon used for normal chips.  Before MMICs were in widespread use, individual transistors had to be used, requiring delicate and hard to make external matching elements.  MMICs are like nice little 50 ohm building blocks.  Low Noise Amplifiers (LNAs), mixers, Power Amplifiers (PAs), phase shifters, etc. etc. are all available in this form.  Trouble is that you have to connect these pieces up to make a functional radio (or at least the microwave portion of it).

My WestBond wedge bonder
My WestBond wedge bonder

Wire bonding is the usual method for connection and is really just a method of welding a wire (or ribbon) from one chip to the next.  It turns out that you actually need space in between the chips, for thermal reasons, RF reasons, and for placing the requisite bypass capacitors.  So what goes in between the chips?  Well, coax cable is pretty much out, and most common circuit board materials start getting pretty lossy at 10+ GHz, and even the good stuff (PTFE-based usually) starts getting kinda lousy at 40+ GHz.   At very high frequencies, materials like ceramics and quartz become worthwhile.  In my radio I chose to use pre-made alumina ceramic substrates (tiny circuit boards).   These come with a gold layer on the back, and a gold line on top etched to perform as a 50 ohm transmission line (just like coax and just what the MMICs want to see).  I bought these with a number of other hams last year in a group buy.  They are fairly expensive being that they are 5 and 10 mils thick!

test bonds
My first test bonds on an alumina ceramic substrate (ugly)

To make the best use of the sections that I bought I decided I needed to cut them to length.  Well how do I do that?  The thickest pieces are 10 mils thick (a piece of printer paper is 4 mils thick) and they are brittle!  Beyond cutting, how do I hold the piece while cutting and when it’s done?  The resulting pieces may be just 100 mils long, and 50 mils wide.   Obviously a pair of vice-grips simply won’t do.

So my first thought was a Dremel tool and tape.  This method could work, but it does not lend itself well to making measured cuts.  At 47 GHz, a few hundredths of an inch is a lot! Also, the available diamond blades for dremel tools are fairly wide and I wanted to waste as little of the  small substrates as possible.  At this point I made  a lucky find on eBay.

In the semiconductor industry, one of the last steps of making a chip is called “wafer dicing.”  After a wafer full of chips is made, they need to be cut out into individual parts.  To do this, wafer dicing machines were developed.  These are CNC saws that use a high speed (as high as 60,000 rpm) air bearing spindles with diamond abrasive blades.   They can cut lines across large dinner plate sized wafers that are as narrow as only a few tens of microns.   Luckily there is enough wafer dicing going on in the world that there is a source of surplus blades on eBay.  Not all blades are well suited for all materials, so do some research if you are interested.  Disco (a Japanese company) is one of the largest dicing blade manufacturers.

dicingblade
Large (4.6 inch diameter) wafer dicing blade in it's packaging.

While reading the last paragraph you may have spotted a few words indicating unobtanium.  Those words are “high speed air bearing spindle.”   Well I chose to use a hard drive motor instead, because they have excellent bearings and are readily availble  for free.  While they don’t move as fast, I don’t care.  I have a few short cuts to make, not millions of chips.

So that is an introduction to what I’m doing.  For the most part the saw has been built using surplus parts and remnant pieces of metal from my favorite local metal supply house M&K Metals in lovely Gardena, CA.   As of this entry, the saw is nearly complete, all that is left is the splash guards.  I’ll be posting the build of this project in several parts, so stay tuned.

And a link to my Flickr photo set for this project: Dicing saw

-Tony

David Nichols’ Tweetster, a wireless Twitter display

David Nichols made this awesome wireless twitter display by combining a hacked Asus WL-520gU wireless router with a Sparkfun serial-enabled LCD display.  The router is running the same OpenWrt distribution I used for my Wifi Radio project, plus a USB thumbdrive that provides some additional flash storage space.  I really like the custom laser cut base that holds the LCD display and the router!

For more pics and info, check out David’s flickr set for the project.

via Make: Online – Tweetster – Wireless tweets display

Celebrating one year of hacks and projects at mightyohm.com!

Wow!  I can’t believe it’s been a year!

Based on the date of my first post, last Wednesday marked the one year anniversary of my blog.

While I pour a toast, here are a few highlights of the past year:

PID Controlled Solder Paste Fridge

PID Controller closeup

The first project I documented on the site, my solder paste fridge was the end result of a weekend effort to turn an old beer chest into a PID-controlled Peltier cooler for storing tubes of solder paste. A year later, the cooler has a permanent home under my workbench and is still going strong, keeping its contents at a chilly 36 degrees F. Besides solder paste, I keep my POR-15 rust proofing epoxy paint and a few tubes of superglue in the fridge (they never dry out!).

Space Invaders!  Making RGB video with the PIC

I needed an excuse to learn assembly language programming on the PIC, and this project fit the bill perfectly.  Instead of slogging through yet another PIC tutorial I decided to “just do it” and the video above shows the result.  One of my favorite projects of last year, I have plans to build more of these and make some electronic artwork for the lab.

Bluetooth Handset Hack

Charging

One aging bluetooth headset plus one obsolete telephone handset equals one retro-fabulous hack that I still use today.  The best part: Look for this one in Make: volume 20!

DIY PID-Controlled Soldering Hotplate

PID Controlled Hotplate

I’m a big fan of the hotplate (aka reflow skillet) method of surface mount soldering.  Over the course of a few months I designed, machined, and assembled this PID-controlled soldering hotplate to help build the first few prototypes of my AVR HV Rescue Shield kit.  Hacking around in the garage is always fun, but creating a new tool is one of the most rewarding things I have can think of.

Here’s a video of the hotplate in action, reflowing the step-up converter on the Rescue Shield:

The AVR HV Rescue Shield

AVR HV Rescue Shield

What started as a simple hack to save a crippled AVR microcontroller eventually became a kit that I’ve sold to AVR enthusiasts around the world.  The AVR HV Rescue Shield includes a cool custom PCB, integrated 5V-12V step-up power supply, and is completely open source.   I only made one batch of these, and when they’re gone, they’re gone, so head over to the AVR HV Rescue Shield product page to order one today!

Wifi Radio Project

Finished Wifi Radio

Certainly the most famous project on the site, my Wifi Radio project has inspired many readers to start playing with cheap wireless routers and embedded Linux.  If you haven’t seen it before, the finished project sounds something like this:

I brought the Wifi Radio to the Maker Faire in San Mateo in May.  Everyone loved it, including some of the Make: staff, which got me a blue ribbon for the project.  Awesome!

Onward!

Well, that’s it for year one…  If I missed one of your favorite posts from the past year, leave a comment!  If you’re new to the blog, happy reading, you have some catching up to do.  🙂

Here’s to another fantastic year of hacks, projects, kits, tools, and resources at mightyohm.com!