Massachusetts Institute of Technology 3.155J/6.152J Microelectronics Processing technology Fall Term 2003 Instructions for the mems Lab report Your lab report should follow the format of the IEEE Electron Device Letters. The format from the IC Lab report will be used Contents: Your Letter should include the following sections y-line(Author, affiliation, and submission date) Abstract (50-200 words Introduction Experiment Results and discussion Conclusion References Although Letters do not usually have appendices, you should attach the following two appendices the professors can better evaluate your work Appendix B: Calculations See the lecture slides How to Write an IEEE Letter"for details about what should appear in each section and appendix. In addition, the lecture on Monday, October 27 will provide more details Length: Follow the guidance from the IC Lab report on length Limiting the letter's length will be challenging. Use the following to focus your writing Purpose: The purpose of your Letter is to evaluate the mechanical properties of the low-stress silicon nitride structure you fabricated, and to discuss any differences between those properties and the properties predicted by the literature. The literature includes the paper by sekimoto(on the course web site), and literature on mechanical properties(Modulus)of silicon nitride to be posted to the web site next week. YOU SHOULD FOLLOW THE GUIDANCE FROM THE OCTOBER 20th LECTURE TO DETERMINE THE TECHNICAL CONTENT TO BE INCLUDED Audience: You may assume that your audience is familiar with microelectronics Grading: For the MEMS Lab, you will receive a writing grade on your Letter and a technical grade based on your Letter and Appendices. The technical grade will be based on your critical evaluation of the material properties, and your comparison with the literature data. The first draft grade will be based on completeness 3 points: Complete. Acceptable as final draft 2 points: Significant work, but a section or figure is missing, or the writing quality is very I point: Multiple sections &/or graphs are missing or are merely outlinedMassachusetts Institute of Technology 3.155J/6.152J Microelectronics Processing Technology Fall Term 2003 Instructions for the MEMS Lab Report Your lab report should follow the format of the IEEE Electron Device Letters. The format from the IC Lab report will be used. Contents: Your Letter should include the following sections: Title By-line (Author, affiliation, and submission date) Abstract (50–200 words) Introduction Experiment Results and Discussion Conclusion References Although Letters do not usually have appendices, you should attach the following two appendices so the professors can better evaluate your work: Appendix A: Data Appendix B: Calculations See the lecture slides “How to Write an IEEE Letter” for details about what should appear in each section and appendix. In addition, the lecture on Monday, October 27th will provide more details. Length: Follow the guidance from the IC Lab Report on length. Limiting the Letter’s length will be challenging. Use the following to focus your writing: Purpose: The purpose of your Letter is to evaluate the mechanical properties of the low-stress silicon nitride structure you fabricated, and to discuss any differences between those properties and the properties predicted by the literature. The literature includes the paper by Sekimoto (on the course web site), and literature on mechanical properties (Modulus) of silicon nitride to be posted to the web site next week. YOU SHOULD FOLLOW THE GUIDANCE FROM THE OCTOBER 20th LECTURE TO DETERMINE THE TECHNICAL CONTENT TO BE INCLUDED. Audience: You may assume that your audience is familiar with microelectronics. Grading: For the MEMS Lab, you will receive a writing grade on your Letter and a technical grade based on your Letter and Appendices. The technical grade will be based on your critical evaluation of the material properties, and your comparison with the literature data. The first draft grade will be based on completeness: 3 points: Complete. Acceptable as final draft. 2 points: Significant work, but a section or figure is missing, or the writing quality is very rough. 1 point: Multiple sections &/or graphs are missing or are merely outlined