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Building Design for Advanced Technology Instruments Sensitive to Acoustical Noise

Michael Gendreau
   
 
  Speaker:
Michael Gendreau
Colin Gordon and Associates
 
 
This presentation includes:
- A review of the basic terminology and criteria used in the acoustical design of advanced technology facilities,
- Discussion of the mechanisms by which acoustic noise can interfere with instruments, and
- Details of what the building contributes in terms of sources of noise (internal and external) and protection from those sources.




(669 KB)
     

Environmental Enclosure for the MIT Nanoruler

Mark Schattenburg
   
 
  Speaker:
Mark Schattenburg
MIT
 
 
The Nanoruler is a novel metrology and grating writing/reading system that is designed to rapidly pattern large gratings with a pattern distortion approaching 1 nm, some 100X smaller than current technology. These patterns are intended to be used for the metrology of nanoelectronic and opto-electronic patterns. It performs this task by utilizing a technique called scanning beam interference lithography, invented in our laboratory. This method is a hybrid of holographic patterning and ruling, combining the best features of both. The accuracy of the resulting grating is critically dependant on the accuracy of the high-performance air bearing stage, and this is limited primarily by the laser interferometer. The accuracy of the interferometer, in turn, is overwhelmingly dominated by atmospheric disturbances such as temperature and pressure fluctuations. For the Nanoruler we needed an environmental chamber with stringent control of temperature, pressure, humidity, vibration and acoustics. Working with a vendor we have completed and are testing a chamber that we hope will meet our needs. We will report on why these levels of control are required and preliminary data on chamber performance.




(1.3 MB)
     

Acoustic and Vibration Control in Vacuum: A Case Study

John Lawall
   
 
  Speaker:
John Lawall
NIST
 
 
This presentation discusses the approach of an experimental physicist to the problem of control of seismic and acoustic disturbances in a vacuum environment. I will start with a brief discussion of vibration isolation by means of a passive resonant system, illustrated with experimental data taken with springs and elastomers. I will then show the vibration level present on the floor of a good underground laboratory environment, and the amount of suppression one achieves with conventional optical tables. Next, I will show the system we have built at NIST in order to prototype optical interferometers in a high-vacuum environment. The environmental isolation mechanisms are activated sequentially, in order to illustrate the isolation achieved by each stage and the compromises that some stages entail. This approach helps to illustrate what fraction of the vibrations is of acoustic origin and what fraction is seismic, and the importance of controlling both is made manifest. Disturbances are measured with both an accelerometer and a high-finesse Fabry-Perot interferometer. One important conclusion of this work is that the vibration imposed by a maglev turbomolecular pump is easily controlled to the extent that it is unlikely to contribute significantly to the ultimate vibration of even a very quiet system.
It will be shown that our relatively simple system offers vibration isolation not only vastly surpassing that of a conventional floating optical table, but in fact better than the ion-pumped NIST X-ray interferometer.


(403 KB)
     

Debugging Acoustical Interference; Is it from the Building or the Tool? A Case Study

Ron Reinfenberger
   
 
  Speaker:
Ron Reifenberger
Purdue University
 
 
Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPMs) are essential tools in the investigation of many nanoscale phenomena. It can be argued that these microscopes have been instrumental for the rapid spread of nanotechnology throughout the world. These proximal probe microscopes have vertical resolutions approaching 0.001 nm and are capable of topographically imaging individual atoms on clean, flat surfaces. As such, SPMs demand a high degree of isolation from acoustical building noise and vibration for proper operation. It is common practice, when using these instruments, to blame excessive noise on a variety of causes related to the surrounding environment. We will describe a number of case studies performed in our laboratory to discern whether noise encountered in the operation of SPMs are related to building problems or to shortcomings in the design and construction of the instrument itself. A number of simple techniques will be discussed that help to answer this question. We conclude that many simple things can and will go wrong when using a precise instrument like an SPM, even though it may be housed in a multi-million dollar state-of-the-art nano building.

(4.3 MB)
     

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