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First. let's look at the cross-section of a typical "class 1" cleanroom. Class
1 means roughly that there will be at most 1 particle per foot3 (about 30 liters)
larger than 0,2 µm or so in the air. |
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Even in the small illustration you can see that the "actual" cleanroom where people
make chips, is a small part of the building (the whitish portion just above the lower yellow part). |
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Everything colored is just for moving air around, keeping its temperature and humidity constant,
add some fresh air from the outside and to get rid of "spent" air. |
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A particular interesting place in a cleanroom building is the "basement" right under
the actual cleanroom. It houses a large part of the "equipment", e.g. pumps, liquid and gas inlets, outlets, and
cleaning parts, transformers, power equipment, heaters etc. It also houses miles of tubing for delivering away and taking
gases and liquids. Some pictures: |
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Water treatment |
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Pumps and piping |
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Real cleanrooms are shown in the next two pictures (from the Siemens compound in München-Perlach) |
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The building on the lower left are cleanrooms; the "little" one (1000 m2)
to the left (with the blue topping) was the 1 µm research line, the two bigger ones (at right angles; 2000
m2 each) were used for the development of the 4Mbit and 16 Mbit DRAM and for the pilot production. |
© H. Föll (Semiconductor Technology - Script)