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Hacker Fab Documentation

the first open-source semiconductor fab.

intro.

Our Goals:

  1. Make integrated circuit prototyping as fast as 3D printing

  2. Make DIY version of every nanofabrication tool

  3. Get there with collaborative open source hardware

Right now we use factories and tools that are optimized to manufacture at scale to do our integrated circuit prototyping. There does not exist a set of machines that enable rapid tape-out of semiconductor devices on a budget, nor are there sufficient resources to make/modify fab tools from the ground up.

Nanofabrication is often communicated as complex , where every machine is immutable. We believe that innovation in the industry requires a thorough understanding of these machines from first principles, which will lead us to simpler solutions. Even on machines and processes of magnitudes less complexity than modern industry, there are designs worth sharing.

The use of low-cost, abundant, and fast-turn-around hardware serves a larger purpose than making the fab cheaper. These design constraints are what enable others to recreate, modify, and contribute to our work. The simpler the better.


working on the hacker fab.

You don't need prior nanofabrication experience to create meaningful contributions.

You do need to read the .

You don't need to recreate the entire fab to contribute, .

We communicate entirely over .


this website.

This page is a home for all shared documentation. There are enough resources here to turn an empty room into one that fabricates simple IC's in a matter of months.

Many pages are works-in-progress. It is natural for individual contributors' work-in-progress notes to exist on google drive, notion, etc. Links to these exist at the top of each page, however these notes move to Gitbook as soon as possible.

Any contributor can submit change requests with a free Gitbook account. All of this is on Github, but formatted nicely here on Gitbook. You can contribute directly through Github as well.

For the most up-to-date status on everything, join the .


fab toolkit.

Here is a list of all the tools built or bought necessary to make our devices.

Every build contains:

  • BOM

  • Links to Design Files

  • Links to Code

  • First Principles Understanding of Machine Design (WIP)

fabrication tools.

verification / metrology tools.

chemicals.


background and licensing.

The Hacker Fab was inspired by .

The Hacker Fab was started by Elio Bourcart, Alexander Hakim, and Sam Zeloof.

The first Hacker Fab was opened at , and currently managed by Matthew Moneck, Tathagata Srimani, and Jay Kunselman.

The Hacker Fab is run entirely by independent contributors.

By default, contributions use the following license stack, but may carry an additional NOTICE file depending on the origin of the contribution.

Hardware: CERN-OHL-W

For example, if you release HDL files under CERN-OHL-W and then somebody uses those files in their FPGA, when they distribute the bitstream (either putting it online or shipping a product with it) they do not to make the rest of the HDL design available under CERN-OHL-W as well.

Software: MPL v2.0

The MPL’s “file-level” copyleft is designed to encourage contributors to share modifications they make to your code, while still allowing them to combine your code with code under other licenses (open or proprietary) with minimal restrictions.

Documentation: CC BY-SA 4.0

This license enables reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use. If you remix, adapt, or build upon the material, you must license the modified material under identical terms.

Number of People Who Have Made a Transistor by Hand in a Hacker Fab

75

Number of Hacker Fabs

3 (+1 in progress)

discord.

github.

x.

magic
Required Reading
although you can
Discord
Discord
Sam Zeloof
Carnegie Mellon University
https://ohwr.org/project/cernohl/wikis/faq#q-what-are-all-these-suffixes
https://ohwr.org/cern_ohl_w_v2.pdf
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/MPL/2.0/
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/MPL/2.0/FAQ/
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
https://creativecommons.org/share-your-work/cclicenses/
Cover

Lithography Stepper V2

for $3,015

Carnegie Mellon

Cover

Vacuum Spin Coater V1

for $200

Carnegie Mellon

Cover

RF Sputtering Chamber

Build Chamber + Magnetron for $1,000

Build Power supply for $1,000

Buy dual gas supply components for $5,000

Buy pumping system + gauge for $11,400

Carnegie Mellon

Cover

Thermal Evaporator V1 (work in progress)

for $15,000

Carnegie Mellon

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Tube Furnace V1 (work in progress)

for $200

Projects in Flight

Cover

Plasma Etcher

for $17,400

Plasma Etch PE-25

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Hot Plate

for $125

3-Axis Piezo Nanopositioner

for $500

Electroless Plating

for $500

Cover

Probe Station V1

for $15,800

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DIY SMU

Buy for $800

Optical Spectrometer

Photoresists + Developers

Dielectrics

Conductors

Etchants

Dopant Sources

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