Claims
- 1. An automated system for inspecting a substrate such as a wafer in any form including whole patterned wafers, sawn wafers, broken wafers, and wafers of any kind on film frames, dies, die in gel paks, die in waffle paks, multi-chip modules often called MCMs, JEDEC trays, Auer boats, and other wafer and die package configurations for defects, the system comprising:a wafer test plate; a wafer provider for providing a wafer to the test plate; a visual inspection device for visual inputting of a plurality of known good quality wafers during training and for visual inspection of other unknown quality wafers during inspection; at least one of a brightfield illuminator positioned approximately above, a darkfield illuminator positioned approximately above, and a darkfield laser positioned approximately about the periphery of the wafer test plate, all of which are for providing illumination to the unknown quality wafers during inspection and at least one of which strobes to provide short pulses of light during movement of a wafer under inspection based on a velocity of the wafer; and a microprocessor having processing and memory capabilities for developing a model of good quality wafer and comparing unknown quality wafers to the model.
- 2. The automated system of claim 1 wherein the visual inspection device visually inputs a plurality of pixels from both the known good quality wafers and the unknown quality wafers in a continuous scan.
- 3. An automated method of inspecting a semiconductor wafer in any form including whole patterned wafers, sawn wafers, broken wafers, and wafers of any kind of film frames, dies, die in gel paks, die in waffle paks, multi-chip modules often called MCMs, JEDEC trays, Auer boats, and other wafer and die package configurations for defects, the method comprising:training a model as to parameters of a good wafer via optical viewing of multiple known good wafers; illuminating unknown quality wafers using at least one of a brightfield illuminator positioned approximately above, a darkfield illuminator positioned approximately above, and a darkfield laser positioned approximately about the periphery of a wafer test plate on which the wafer is inspected, all of which are for providing illumination to the unknown quality wafers during inspection and at least one of which flashes on and off during movement of a wafer under inspection at a sequence correlating to a velocity of the wafer; and inspecting unknown quality wafers using the model.
- 4. The automated method of claim 3 wherein the inspecting step includes continuous scanning of the wafer.
- 5. The automated method of claim 3 wherein the optical viewing step includes continuous scanning of the wafer.
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Nos. 60/092,923 filed on Jul. 15, 1998 and 60/092,701, filed on Jul. 14, 1998, and a continuation of U.S. patent application No. 09/352,564, filed on Jul. 13, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,324298 B1. issued Nov. 27, 2001.
US Referenced Citations (15)
Provisional Applications (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60/092923 |
Jul 1998 |
US |
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60/092701 |
Jul 1998 |
US |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09/352564 |
Jul 1999 |
US |
Child |
09/562273 |
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US |