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  2. Substrate (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(chemistry)

    Substrates are often thin and relatively free of chemical features or defects. [3] Typically silver, gold, or silicon wafers are used due to their ease of manufacturing and lack of interference in the microscopy data. Samples are deposited onto the substrate in fine layers where it can act as a solid support of reliable thickness and malleability.

  3. Thin film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_film

    The act of applying a thin film to a surface is thin-film deposition – any technique for depositing a thin film of material onto a substrate or onto previously deposited layers. "Thin" is a relative term, but most deposition techniques control layer thickness within a few tens of nanometres .

  4. Atomic layer deposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_layer_deposition

    Some biological substrates are very sensitive to heat and may have fast decomposition rates that are not favored and yield larger impurity levels. There are a multitude of thin-film substrate materials available, but the important substrates needed for use in microelectronics can be hard to obtain and may be very expensive. [70]

  5. Substrate (materials science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(materials_science)

    Substrate is a term used in materials science and engineering to describe the base material on which processing is conducted. Surfaces have different uses, including producing new film or layers of material and being a base to which another substance is bonded.

  6. Slot-die coating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slot-die_coating

    A simple cross-section schematic of the slot-die coating process. Slot-die coating is a coating technique for the application of solution, slurry, hot-melt, or extruded thin films onto typically flat substrates such as glass, metal, paper, fabric, plastic, or metal foils.

  7. LSAT (oxide) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LSAT_(oxide)

    An LSAT single-crystal substrate (5x5x0.5 mm) LSAT is primarily used in its single crystal form, typically as thin (≤1 mm) wafers. These wafers are used as a common substrate for epitaxial growth of thin films. LSAT substrates are popular for epitaxial oxides and their heterostructures, often in the study of electron correlation phenomena.

  8. Thick-film technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thick-film_technology

    After firing, the substrate resistors are trimmed to the correct value. This process is named laser trimming. Many chip resistors are made using thick-film technology. Large substrates are printed with resistors fired, divided into small chips and these are then terminated, so they can be soldered on the PCB board.

  9. Transparent conducting film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transparent_conducting_film

    Doped metal oxides for use as transparent conducting layers in photovoltaic devices are typically grown on a glass substrate. This glass substrate, apart from providing a support that the oxide can grow on, has the additional benefit of blocking most infrared wavelengths greater than 2 μm for most silicates, and converting it to heat in the glass layer.