Micron
Systematic Variation of Transistor Characteristics From High Volume Wafer Fabrication
In this project, students will leverage their engineering and data science skill sets to tackle a real world manufacturing data set. The initial stage of the project will focus on data engineering, analysis, and method building. Upon assessment of data correlations, students will narrow scope and dig deeper into a portion of semiconductor fabrication process to identify root cause. DRAM CMOS and/or interconnect devices exhibit systematic variation in threshold voltage resulting from the hundreds of process steps use to fabricate them. We suspect that some process variation [tool-to-tool, wafer-to-wafer] is directly correlated. Identify the process steps, whose variability have the greatest influence on wafer level parametrics (Vt, Resistance, Capacitance, etc). Under this problem statement, students will identify influential process steps and attempt to build a physical root cause assessment. Additional data or process details may be provided on a need base as the project proceeds. Through this project students will have the opportunity to utilize their engineering and data science training on a real world problem set and network, with the intent of exploring careers in the growing area of domestic semiconductor manufacturing and R&D.
Faculty Adviser
Luna Yue Huang,
Associate Teaching Professor,
Related News

Fri, 09/20/2024 | UW Civil & Environmental Engineering
Smarter irrigation for a greener UW
A new project combines satellite data with ground sensors to conserve water and create a more sustainable campus environment.

Mon, 09/09/2024 | UW Mechanical Engineering
Testing an in-home mobility system
Through innovative capstone projects, engineering students worked with community members on an adaptable mobility system.

Mon, 08/19/2024 | UW Mechanical Engineering
Students strive to ensure accurate AED shock dosage
ShockSafe, developed by students with the help of mentors from Philips and Engineering Innovation in Health (EIH), can distinguish between children and adults during cardiac arrest emergencies.

Wed, 08/07/2024 | Snohomish County News
Snohomish County, University of Washington partnership boosts efficiency in enterprise scanning center
UW Industrial and Systems Engineering Capstone Project set to save Snohomish County over $40,000 annually.