Manufacturing Processes (ME 361) Lecture-18: Instructor: Shantanu Bhattacharya
Manufacturing Processes (ME 361) Lecture-18: Instructor: Shantanu Bhattacharya
Numerical Problem:
For cutting a 150 micron wide slot in a 1mm thick tungsten sheet, an electron
beam with 5 KW power is used. Determine the speed of cutting
Mechanics of EBM process
•Electrons are the smallest
stable elementary particles
with a mass of 9.109X10-31 Kg
and a negative charge of
1.602X10-19 C.
•When an electron is
accelerated through a
potential difference of V volts,
the change is Kinetic energy
can be expressed as ½ (me
)(u2-u02 ) eV, where me is the
electron mass.
•u, is the final velocity, u0 is the initial velocity, and e is the electron charge.
•If we assume initial velocity of the emitting electron to be negligible, the final
expression for electron velocity u in km/sec. is given by:
U = 600 (V)1/2
Numerical Problem:
For cutting a 150 micron wide slot in a 1mm thick tungsten sheet, an electron
beam with 5 KW power is used. Determine the speed of cutting
Effects of E-beam on materials
•Since the machining by E-beam is achieved without
raising the temperature of the surrounding material,
there is no effect on work material.
•Depending on the type of energy beam, lithography techniques can be further divided
into photolithography, electron beam lithography, X-ray lithography and ion lithography.
•The patterning process with photolithography is limited to 2-D structures. This technique
uses a photosensitive emulsion layer called resist, which transfers a desired pattern from
the transparent mask to the substrates.
1. Positioning process: Lateral positioning of the mask and the substrate, which is coated
with a resist, adjusting the distance between mask and substrate.
2. Exposure process: Optical or X-ray exposure of the resist layer, transferring patterns to
the resist layer by changing properties of exposed areas.
Patterning Patterning
S1813 S1813