Workpiece chuck

6019164
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Inventors

Getchel, Paul A.
Cole, Sr., Kenneth M.
Lyden, Henry A.
Stone, William M.
Lopez, Robert
Schey, Thomas
Butcher, Dana G.

Application #

115206

Filed

Jul-14-1998

Published

Feb-1-2000

Current US Class

118/728
165/185
165/80.1
165/80.2
165/82
269/21
269/903

International Classes

F28F 007/00; B25B 011/00

Field of Search

165/80.1 165/80.2 165/81 165/185 165/80.4 165/82 118/728 118/725 118/724 269/21 269/903

Assignee

Temptronic Corporation (Newton, MA)

Examiners

Leo; Leonard

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Samuels, Gauthier & Stevens LLP

US Patent References

4462462   Thermal conductio...
4607220   Method and appar...
4682857   Liquid crystal hot s...
4734872   Temperature contro...
4893914   Test station
5028989   Semiconductor cool...
5610529   Probe station havin...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A workpiece chuck includes an upper assembly on which can be mounted a flat workpiece such as a semiconductor wafer. A lower assembly is mountable to a base that supports the chuck. A non-constraining attachment means such as vacuum, springs or resilient washers applied to the chuck holds the upper assembly to the lower assembly, the lower assembly to the base and can hold the wafer to the top surface of the upper assembly. By holding the chuck together by non-constraining means, the chuck layers can move continuously relative to each other under expansion forces caused by temperature effects, such that mechanical stresses on the chuck and resulting deformation of the chuck and workpiece over temperature are substantially eliminated. A plurality of support members including inclined surfaces provided between an upper and lower portion of the chuck maintain the top surface of the chuck and any workpiece mounted thereon at a constant height over temperature.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A chuck for supporting a workpiece comprising:

an upper portion on which the workpiece can be mounted;

a lower portion by which the chuck can be mounted to a base;

a plurality of support members between the upper portion and the lower portion for supporting the upper portion over the lower portion, each of said support members comprising:

an inclined surface mounted on one of the upper and lower portions; and

a contact surface mounted on the other of the upper and lower portions and in contact with the inclined surface of the support member;

wherein

as the shape of at least one of the upper and lower portions changes, the contact surface of a support member moves along the inclined surface in contact with the contact surface.



Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to chucks used to hold flat workpieces and specifically to chucks which hold workpieces such as semiconductor wafers and control the temperature of the workpieces.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

In the semiconductor integrated circuit industry, the cost of individual integrated circuit chip die is continuing to decrease in comparison to IC package costs. Consequently, it is becoming more important to perform many IC test and evaluation steps while the die are still in the wafer, rather than after the relatively expensive packaging steps have been performed.

Increasingly, in IC processing, semiconductor wafers are subjected to a series of test and evaluation steps. For each step, the wafer is held in a stationary position at a process station where the process is performed. For many processes, it is important that the wafer be held extremely flat. For example, circuit testing is typically performed over a wide temperature range to temperature screen the ICs before assembly into a package. The wafer is typically held on a vacuum platform of a host test machine such as a probing station which electrically tests the circuits on the wafer. The prober includes a group of electrical probes which, in conjunction with a tester, apply predetermined electrical excitations to various predetermined portions of the circuits on the wafer and sense the circuits' responses to the excitations. To ensure that proper electrical contacts are made and to ensure that the mechanical load applied by the probes to the wafer is known and uniform, it would be beneficial to keep the wafer extremely flat and also to maintain the top surface of the chuck, on which the wafer rests, at a constant height.