A MEMS Clearinghouse® and information portal
for the MEMS and Nanotechnology community
RegisterSign-In
MEMSnet Home About Us What is MEMS? Beginner's Guide Discussion Groups Advertise Here
News
MEMSnet Home: MEMS-Talk: low resolution photomask printer
low resolution photomask printer
2002-10-22
Soojin Oh
2002-10-22
Alan D. Raisanen
2002-10-23
Martin O. Patton
AW: Sputter deposition of tin
2002-10-24
Thorsten Uelzen
low resolution photomask printer
Alan D. Raisanen
2002-10-22
Soojin,
I have found inkjet transparencies do not work all that well because
most inks do not absorb enough light. However, copying a printed paper
to a xerographic transparency works quite well for low-resolution work.
The toner absorbs UV and broadband radiation very well. A transparency
mask printed on a xerographic-process laser printer will also work well.
Edge raggedness can be a problem with these techniques, however. We
routinely use xerographic transparencies backed with a blank quartz
plate on our Karl Suss MA-150 mask aligner for low-resolution
applications.

Al Raisanen
Rochester Institute of Technology

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Soojin Oh
Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2002 1:29 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mems-talk] low resolution photomask printer


When making low resolution photomask by printing on
transparency, do the printing companies use special
printers? Also are the transparent films special kind?

I am just wondering if I can print out my data myself
on regular overhead project transparency using high
dpi inkjet printer(such as Lexmark, or Epson). It
seems like they use very fancy kind of
printer(Heidelberg Quickmaster )in the company I use
to send my file to. Thier charge is over $100.00 for
one page print-out!

-Soojin in North Carolina

__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Y! Web Hosting - Let the expert host your web site
http://webhosting.yahoo.com/

_______________________________________________
[email protected] mailing list: to unsubscribe or change your list
options, visit http://www.memsnet.org/mailman/listinfo/mems-talk
Hosted by the MEMS Exchange, providers of MEMS processing services.
Visit us at http://www.memsnet.org/



reply
Events
Glossary
Materials
Links
MEMS-talk
Terms of Use | Contact Us | Search
MEMS Exchange
MEMS Industry Group
Coventor
Harrick Plasma
Tanner EDA
MEMStaff Inc.
Process Variations in Microsystems Manufacturing
Nano-Master, Inc.
University Wafer