Patents by Inventor Geoffrey Ryding

Geoffrey Ryding 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: 8227763
    Abstract: A sequence of series-connected transformers for transmitting power to high voltages incorporates an applied voltage distribution to maintain each transformer in the sequence below its withstanding voltage.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 25, 2009
    Date of Patent: July 24, 2012
    Assignee: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Richards, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore Smick
  • Publication number: 20120146555
    Abstract: A d. c. charged particle accelerator comprises accelerator electrodes separated by insulating spacers defining acceleration gaps between adjacent pairs of electrodes. Individually regulated gap voltages are applied across each adjacent pair of accelerator electrodes. In an embodiment, direct connections are provided to gap electrodes from the stage points of a multistage Cockcroft Walton type voltage multiplier circuit. The described embodiment enables an ion beam to be accelerated to high energies and high beam currents, with good accelerator stability.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 20, 2011
    Publication date: June 14, 2012
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Steven Richards, Paul Eide, Theodore H. Smick, Malcolm Barnett
  • Publication number: 20120146554
    Abstract: A d. c. charged particle accelerator comprises accelerator electrodes separated by insulating spacers defining acceleration gaps between adjacent pairs of electrodes. Individually regulated gap voltages are applied across each adjacent pair of accelerator electrodes. In embodiments, the individually regulated gap voltages are generated by electrically isolated alternators mounted on a common rotor shaft driven by an electric motor. Alternating power outputs from the alternators provide inputs to individual regulated d. c. power supplies to generate the gap voltages. The power supplies are electrically isolated and have outputs connected in series across successive pairs of accelerator electrodes. The described embodiment enables an ion beam to be accelerated to high energies and high beam currents, with good accelerator stability.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 8, 2010
    Publication date: June 14, 2012
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Theodore H. Smick, Geoffrey Ryding, William H. Park, Ronald Horner
  • Publication number: 20120104273
    Abstract: Multiple control electrodes are provided asymmetrically within the plasma chamber of an ion source at respective positions along the length of the plasma chamber. Biasing the control electrodes selectively can selectively enhance the ion extraction current at adjacent positions along the length of the extraction slit. A method of generating an ion beam is disclosed in which the strengths of the transverse electric fields at different locations along the length of the plasma chamber are controlled to modify the ion beam linear current density profile along the length of the slit. The method is used for controlling the uniformity of a ribbon beam.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 2, 2010
    Publication date: May 3, 2012
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Drew Arnold, William H. Park, Ronald Horner
  • Patent number: 8168941
    Abstract: An ion beam angle calibration and emittance measurement system, comprising a plate comprising an elongated slit therein, wherein the elongated slit positioned at a rotation center of the plate and configured to allow a first beam portion to pass therethrough. A beam current detector located downstream of the plate, wherein the beam current detector comprises a slit therein configured to permit a second beam portion of the first beam portion to pass therethrough, wherein the beam current detector is configured to measure a first beam current associated with the first beam portion. A beam angle detector is located downstream of the beam current detector and configured to detect a second beam current associated with the second beam portion. The plate, the current beam detector and the beam angle detector are configured to collectively rotate about the rotation center of the plate.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 22, 2009
    Date of Patent: May 1, 2012
    Assignee: Axcelis Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Marvin Farley, Donald Polner, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore Smick, Takao Sakase, Ronald Horner, Edward Eisner, Paul Eide, Brian Freer, Mark Lambert, Donovan Beckel
  • Patent number: 8124946
    Abstract: A system and method for magnetically filtering an ion beam during an ion implantation into a workpiece is provided, wherein ions are emitted from an ion source and accelerated the ions away from the ion source to form an ion beam. The ion beam is mass analyzed by a mass analyzer, wherein ions are selected. The ion beam is then decelerated via a decelerator once the ion beam is mass-analyzed, and the ion beam is further magnetically filtered the ion beam downstream of the deceleration. The magnetic filtering is provided by a quadrapole magnetic energy filter, wherein a magnetic field is formed for intercepting the ions in the ion beam exiting the decelerator to selectively filter undesirable ions and fast neutrals.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 3, 2009
    Date of Patent: February 28, 2012
    Assignee: Axcelis Technologies Inc.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore Smick, Marvin Farley, Takao Sakase, Bo Vanderberg
  • Patent number: 8101488
    Abstract: Embodiments of the present invention provide for a system for accelerating hydrogen ions. A hydrogen generator holding a supply of water is configured to generate a flow of hydrogen gas from the supply of water. An ion source structure is configured to generate a plurality of hydrogen ions from the flow of hydrogen gas. An accelerator tube is configured to accelerate the plurality of hydrogen ions. The supply of water has an isotopic ratio of deuterium that is smaller than the isotopic ratio of deuterium in Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 25, 2010
    Date of Patent: January 24, 2012
    Assignee: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Theodore H. Smick, Steven Richards, Geoffrey Ryding, Kenneth H Purser
  • Patent number: 8044374
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and the wheel is formed with tensioned spokes supporting a rim carrying the wafer supports. The spokes may be used for carrying cooling fluid to and from the wafer supports. In one embodiment, a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Date of Patent: October 25, 2011
    Assignee: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick, Kenneth Harry Purser, Hilton Glavish, Joeph Daniel Gillespie
  • Patent number: 7989784
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel. The beam is generated by an ion source providing an extracted ribbon beam having at least 100 mm major cross-sectional diameter. The ribbon beam may be passed through a 90° bending magnet which bends the beam in the plane of the ribbon. The magnet provides intensity correction across the ribbon to compensate for the dependency on the radial distance from the wheel axis of the speed at which parts of the wafers pass through the ribbon beam.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Date of Patent: August 2, 2011
    Assignee: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Hilton Glavish, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick, Kenneth Harry Purser
  • Patent number: 7982197
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and the wheel is formed with tensioned spokes supporting a rim carrying the wafer supports. The spokes may be used for carrying cooling fluid to and from the wafer supports. Detachable connections in the cooling fluid conduits in the vacuum chamber may comprise tandem seals with an intermediate chamber between them which can be vented outside the vacuum chamber, or independently vacuum pumped. In one embodiment, a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Date of Patent: July 19, 2011
    Assignee: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Theodore H. Smick, Geoffrey Ryding, Kenneth Harry Purser, Joseph Daniel Gillespie
  • Patent number: 7939812
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel. The beam is generated by an ion source providing an extracted ribbon beam having at least 100 mm major cross-sectional diameter. The ion source may use core-less saddle type coils to provide a uniform field confining the plasma in the ion source. The ribbon beam may be passed through a 90° bending magnet which bends the beam in the plane of the ribbon.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Date of Patent: May 10, 2011
    Assignee: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Hilton Glavish, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick
  • Publication number: 20110073781
    Abstract: An ion implanter has an implant wheel with a plurality of wafer carriers distributed about a periphery of the wheel. Each wafer carrier has a heat sink for removing heat from a wafer on the carrier during the implant process by thermal contact between the wafer and the heat sink. The wafer carriers have wafer retaining fences formed as cylindrical rollers with axes in the respective wafer support planes of the wafer carriers. The cylindrical surfaces of the rollers provide wafer abutment surfaces which can move transversely to the wafer support surfaces so that no transverse loading is applied by the fences to wafer edges as the wafer is pushed against the heat sink by centrifugal force. The wafer support surfaces comprise layers of elastomeric material and the movable abutment surfaces of the fences allow even thermal coupling with the heat sink over the whole area of the wafer.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 30, 2010
    Publication date: March 31, 2011
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: William H. Leavitt, Theodore H. Smick, Joseph Daniel Gillespie, William H. Park, Paul Eide, Drew Arnold, Geoffrey Ryding
  • Publication number: 20110042578
    Abstract: This invention relates to an ion beam monitoring arrangement for use in an ion implanter where it is desirable to monitor the flux and/or a cross-sectional profile of the ion beam used for implantation. It is often desirable to measure the flux and/or cross-sectional profile of an ion beam in an ion implanter in order to improve control of ion implantation of a semiconductor wafer or similar. The present invention describes adapting the wafer holder to allow such beam profiling to be performed. The substrate holder may be used progressively to occlude the ion beam from a downstream flux monitor or a flux monitor may be located on the wafer holder that is provided with a slit entrance aperture.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 28, 2010
    Publication date: February 24, 2011
    Inventors: Adrian Murrell, Bernard F. Harrison, Peter Edwards, Peter Kindersley, Robert Mitchell, Theodore Smick, Geoffrey Ryding, Marvin Farley, Takao Sakase
  • Publication number: 20110032736
    Abstract: A voltage supply incorporates two voltage supplies connected in a mirror-image series arrangement to generate a DC voltage between the respective common terminals of the voltage supplies.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 6, 2009
    Publication date: February 10, 2011
    Applicant: Twin Creeks Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Richards, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore Smick
  • Patent number: 7872247
    Abstract: A guide tube for an ion beam in an ion implanter which is located adjacent a semiconductor wafer being implanted has an outwardly tapering central bore, thereby alleviating problems of beam strike as the ion beam passes through the guide tube.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 11, 2007
    Date of Patent: January 18, 2011
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Gregory Robert Alcott, Lee Spraggon, Robert Mitchell, Martin Hilkene, Matthew Castle, Marvin Farley
  • Publication number: 20100327190
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel. The beam is generated by an ion source providing an extracted ribbon beam having at least 100 mm major cross-sectional diameter. The ribbon beam may be passed through a 90° bending magnet which bends the beam in the plane of the ribbon. The magnet provides intensity correction across the ribbon to compensate for the dependency on the radial distance from the wheel axis of the speed at which parts of the wafers pass through the ribbon beam.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Publication date: December 30, 2010
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Hilton Glavish, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick, Kenneth Harry Purser
  • Publication number: 20100327181
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and the wheel is formed with tensioned spokes supporting a rim carrying the wafer supports. The spokes may be used for carrying cooling fluid to and from the wafer supports. In one embodiment, a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Publication date: December 30, 2010
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick, Kenneth Harry Purser, Hilton Glavish, Joeph Daniel Gillespie
  • Publication number: 20100327189
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and the wheel is formed with tensioned spokes supporting a rim carrying the wafer supports. The spokes may be used for carrying cooling fluid to and from the wafer supports. Detachable connections in the cooling fluid conduits in the vacuum chamber may comprise tandem seals with an intermediate chamber between them which can be vented outside the vacuum chamber, or independently vacuum pumped. In one embodiment, a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Publication date: December 30, 2010
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick, Kenneth Harry Purser, Joseph Daniel Gillespie
  • Publication number: 20100327178
    Abstract: A hydrogen ion implanter for the exfoliation of silicon from silicon wafers uses a large scan wheel carrying 50+ wafers around its periphery and rotating about an axis. In one embodiment, the axis of rotation of the wheel is fixed and a ribbon beam of hydrogen ions is directed down on a peripheral edge of the wheel. The ribbon beam extends over the full radial width of wafers on the wheel. The beam is generated by an ion source providing an extracted ribbon beam having at least 100 mm major cross-sectional diameter. The ion source may use core-less saddle type coils to provide a uniform field confining the plasma in the ion source. The ribbon beam may be passed through a 90° bending magnet which bends the beam in the plane of the ribbon.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 30, 2009
    Publication date: December 30, 2010
    Applicant: TWIN CREEKS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: Hilton Glavish, Geoffrey Ryding, Theodore H. Smick
  • Publication number: 20100224130
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for processing a substrate utilizing a rotating substrate support are disclosed herein. In one embodiment, an apparatus for processing a substrate includes a chamber having a substrate support assembly disposed within the chamber. The substrate support assembly includes a substrate support having a support surface and a heater disposed beneath the support surface. A shaft is coupled to the substrate support and a motor is coupled to the shaft through a rotor to provide rotary movement to the substrate support. A seal block is disposed around the rotor and forms a seal therewith. The seal block has at least one seal and at least one channel disposed along the interface between the seal block and the shaft. A port is coupled to each channel for connecting to a pump. A lift mechanism is coupled to the shaft for raising and lowering the substrate support.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 13, 2010
    Publication date: September 9, 2010
    Inventors: Jacob Smith, Alexander Tam, R. Suryanarayanan Iyer, Sean Seutter, Binh Tran, Nir Merry, Adam Brailove, Robert Shydo, JR., Robert Andrews, Frank Roberts, Theodore Smick, Geoffrey Ryding