Etec Systems was an American producer of scanning electron microscopes, electron beam lithography tools, and laser beam lithography tools from 1970 until 2005. It was located in Hayward, California, and Hillsboro, Oregon.

Etec Systems
Founded1970
Defunct2005
FatePurchased by Applied Materials
Productsscanning electron microscopes
laser beam lithography tools

Company history

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Former Etec building in Hillsboro, Oregon

Etec Corporation of Hayward, California, was formed in 1970 as a producer of scanning electron microscopes (SEMs), but later became a producer of electron beam lithography tools, and SEM manufacture was discontinued.

Etec later merged with ATEQ of Beaverton, Oregon (Portland area), which manufactured laser beam lithography tools. The combined company was named "Etec Systems" and offered a portfolio of lithography relying on both electron and laser beams. These products targeted the photomasks and reticles used in integrated circuit manufacturing. In 1999 the Beaverton, Oregon portion of the company was moved to Hillsboro, Oregon.

Etec was purchased by Applied Materials in 2000, and organized within the Applied Materials corporation as an autonomous business group. In 2000, Etec employed 600 workers in Hayward.[1]

In 2002, Applied Materials announced it was reviewing a plan to shut down Etec.[2] Etec Systems was absorbed into its parent company Applied Materials in October 2005.[3]

Products

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Scanning electron microscopes

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Originally formed in 1970, Etec produced scanning electron microscopes of very high quality; many instruments are still working well 30 years later.[citation needed] Designed by Nelson Yew, the Autoscan has produced excellent images, outperforming modern instruments subject to digital noise and other problems.

As the MEBES became the major product, the company was bought by Perkin Elmer, and the SEM manufacture was discontinued.

Electron beam lithography tools

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Some time after 2002 the product line that constituted the original Etec offering (MEBES – Manufacturing Electron Beam Exposure System) was discontinued. Most MEBES III tools have been decommissioned in favour of Etec CORE and ALTA laser lithography tools, which have a faster throughput and use a more environmentally friendly IP3500 type resist which does not require a solvent-based development process. However, there continue to be a number of MEBES III and IV in use throughout the world currently.

Laser beam lithography tools

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With the purchase of Etec in 2005, the Etec line of laser-based lithography tools continues to be developed and produced by Applied Materials. A Swedish firm Micronic AB and a German firm Heidelberg Instruments is a competitor in laser-based mask-making solutions. However, the demand for Applied Material's laser lithography tool has allowed it to be still be the most widely available and used tool in the photomask industry.

References

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  1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-01. Retrieved 2011-11-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ LaPedus, Mark (March 11, 2002). "Applied 'reviewing' plan to shut down e-beam tool operation, sources say".
  3. ^ "Applied Materials exits photomask business". www.laserfocusworld.com. Archived from the original on 2018-04-07. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
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45°32′51″N 122°53′53″W / 45.5474°N 122.898°W / 45.5474; -122.898