Abstract: A solvent extraction apparatus which includes a heating plate, a vessel for containing a solvent, an extraction thimble to obtain a sample to be extracted from said vessel and a cooler for condensing evaporated solvent vapors. The cooler is connected to the vessel for containing the solvent, preferably by an adaptor. A lifting rod is provided which passes through the cooler which, at its lower portion, is provided with a drip rim on which the extraction thimble is detachably fixed. The thimble can be moved vertically by the lifting rod and the flow of solvent into and out of the cooler can be regulated by the lifting rod.
Abstract: Intrinsic, transient optical emission from a CMOS integrated circuit is used to determine the internal switching of such a circuit including the temporal evolution of its logic states. By joining an appropriate optical microscope to a suitable, photon counting, multichannel optical detector which is capable of time resolution better than 100 psec, and a spatial resolution of better than 60 microns, full temporal information, including the relative phases of switching events, can be obtained from many devices in a circuit simultaneously. The time and spatial resolution are suitable for analyzing timing problems in present and future sub-micron-scale CMOS integrated circuits with switching speeds up to at least 10 GHz. The invention comprises a combination of an optical microscope and a detector capable of providing optical waveforms and/or spatial images of the light emitted during electrical switching by the individual devices which comprise an integrated circuit.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
July 18, 1996
Date of Patent:
August 17, 1999
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation
Inventors:
Jeffrey Alan Kash, James Chen-Hsiang Tsang