Patents by Inventor Peter Torin Kindersley

Peter Torin Kindersley has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 6965116
    Abstract: Dose uniformity of a scanning ion implanter is determined. A base beam current is measured at the beginning and/or the end of a complete scan over the whole substrate area. This base beam current is measured at a time when the measurement should be unaffected by outgassing from a substrate being implanted and a base dose distribution map is then calculated for the scan in question. During the scan itself beam instability events are detected and the magnitude and position in the scan of the detected instability events is measured. Corresponding deviations in the calculated base dose map are determined and subtracted from the previously calculated base dose distribution map to provide a corrected distribution map. By determining overall dose uniformity substractively in this way, good overall accuracy can be obtained with lesser accuracy in the measurement of the beam instability events.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 23, 2004
    Date of Patent: November 15, 2005
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Dennis W. Wagner, Biagio Gallo, Peter Torin Kindersley, David Eugene Aberle, Jonathon Yancey Simmons
  • Patent number: 5886355
    Abstract: Ion implantation equipment is modified so as to provide filament reflectors to a filament inside of an arc chamber, and to remove the electrical insulators for the filament outside of the arc chamber and providing a means of shielding, thereby reducing the formation of a conductive layer on said insulators and greatly extending the lifetime and reducing downtime of the equipment. The efficiency of the equipment is further enhanced by means of an interchangeable liner for the arc chamber that increases the wall temperature of the arc chamber and thus the electron temperature. The use of tungsten parts inside the arc chamber, obtained either by making the arc chamber itself or portions thereof of tungsten, particularly the front plate having the exit aperture for the ion beam, or by inserting a removable tungsten liner therein, decreases contamination of the ion beam. Serviceability of the arc chamber is improved by means of a unitary clamp that separately grips both the filament and filament reflectors.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 20, 1996
    Date of Patent: March 23, 1999
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Nicholas Bright, Paul Anthony Burfield, John Pontefract, Bernard Francis Harrison, Peter Meares, David R. Burgin, Andrew Stephen Devaney, Peter Torin Kindersley