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| United States Patent | 4153164 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4153164.html |
| Inventor(s) | Hofmeister; Lucien (Mountain View, CA);
Schulte; Harvey L. (Los Altos, CA) |
| Abstract | A carrier having a plurality of transport channels arranged in stacked
parallel relationship for receiving semiconductive wafers is provided with
a pair of oppositely facing recessed regions extending partially into the
transport channels. In each of these recessed regions a separate
spring-loaded stop member is pivotally mounted for automatic movement to a
raised inoperative position, where itis pivoted out of the transport
channels to permit passage of the semiconductive wafers therethrough, when
the carrier is set down, and for automatic movement to a lowered operative
position, where it is pivoted into the transport channels to block passage
of the semiconductive wafers therethrough and thereby impede spillage of
any semiconductive wafers contained in the carrier, when the carrier is
picked up. Each stop member coacts with a separate cam housing to provide
a self-locking mechanism that is automatically operable for preventing the
semiconductive wafers from moving the stop members to the raised
inoperative position when the carrier is picked up and that is
automatically released when the carrier is set down. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4153164 |
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Carrier for semiconductive wafers |
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| Publication Date |
May 8, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
June 13, 1978 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. A carrier for preventing spillage of workpieces contained therein, said
carrier comprising:
a pair of side plates coupled together for forming a plurality of transport
channels, at least one of said side plates having a recessed region
extending partially into the transport channels;
a stop member pivotally mounted in the recessed region for automatic
movement between an inoperative position out of the transport channels to
permit passage of the workpieces therealong when the carrier is set down
and an operative position protruding into the transport channels to block
passage of the workpieces therealong and prevent spillage of the
workpieces from the carrier when it is picked up; and
a self-locking mechanism operable for automatically preventing the stop
member from moving to the operative position when the carrier is picked up
and for automatically releasing the stop member when the carrier is set
down.
2. A carrier as in claim 1 including a compressible spring for spring
loading the stop member to the operative position when the carrier is
picked up.
3. A carrier as in claim 1 wherein:
each of said side plates has a plurality of oppositely facing flanges for
forming the transport channels in parallel stacked relationship and a
recessed region partially extending into the flanges from an upper portion
to a lower portion of the side plate;
a cam housing is affixed to the upper end of each side plate adjacent to
the recessed region;
a stop member is disposed in the recessed region of each side plate with
one end mounted for axial translational and pivotal movement in the
corresponding cam housing and with the other end mounted for similar
movement in and partially extending from the lower portion of the side
plate so as to automatically move the stop member to the inoperative
position when the carrier is set down, thereby permitting passage of
workpieces into and out of the transport channels; and
a compressible spring is disposed so as to automatically move each stop
member to the operative position when the carrier is picked up thereby
blocking the transport channels and inhibiting spillage of workpieces
contained therein.
4. A carrier as in claim 3 wherein:
said workpieces are semiconductive wafers; and
each stop member includes a top portion, a middle portion, and a bottom
portion, the top portion being disposed for supporting the corresponding
spring thereabout and being partially disposed within the corresponding
cam housing for axial translational and pivotal movement therein, the
middle portion being disposed for pivotal movement into and out of the
transport channels, and the bottom portion being disposed for axial
translational and pivotal movement in the lower portion of the
corresponding side plate.
5. A carrier as in claim 3 wherein:
each cam housing has a cam slot having a vertically extending lower portion
and an obliquely extending upper portion; and
each stop member has a cam follower portion for engagement with the cam
slot of the corresponding cam housing to constrain the stop member to
axial translational and pivotal movement between the operative and
inoperative positions.
6. A carrier as in claim 5 wherein:
the vertically extending lower portion of each cam slot is oriented
parallel to the axes of the stop members, and the obliquely extending
upper portion of each cam slot is upwardly inclined relative to those
axes; and
the cam follower portion of each stop member is engaged with the vertically
extending lower portion of the corresponding cam housing when the stop
member is in the operative position and with the obliquely extending upper
portion of the corresponding cam housing when the stop member is in the
inoperative position. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This patent application is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No.
848,921 filed on Nov. 7, 1977, by Harvey L. Schulte and is assigned to the
same assignee as that patent application.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to carriers for semiconductive wafers and,
more particularly, to such carriers having provision for impeding spillage
of semiconductive wafers therefrom during manual handling of the carriers.
Carriers for holding twelve, twenty-four or more spaced semiconductive
wafers each are employed in many types of semiconductive wafer processing
systems to facilitate batch processing and to minimize damage of the
wafers due to improper handling. Such carriers are employed, for example,
as input magazines for sequentially supplying semiconductive wafers to
automatic wafer handling and processing systems, or as output magazines
for sequentially receiving processed semiconductive wafers from such
systems, or as intermediate (throughput) devices for holding
semiconductive wafers that may require sampling, testing, or some other
special handling at some point during processing by such systems. In
nearly all of these cases the carriers must, at some point, be manually
transported to or from such systems with the attendant risk that in so
doing the semiconductive wafers may slip from the carriers and thereby be
damaged or broken. This risk is particularly great in the case of carriers
of the type permitting unobstructed passage of semiconductive wafers
therethrough. If such carriers are tilted slightly forward or backward
while they are being manually transported, any semiconductive wafers
contained therein will slide out. Although this risk is much less critical
in the case of carriers of the type permitting passage of semiconductive
wafers into or out of the carriers from only one end of the carrier, care
must still be exercised while such a carrier is being manually transported
to avoid tilting it downward in the direction of its open end.
Past efforts to eliminate the risk of spilling semiconductive wafers from
carriers while they are being manually transported have resulted in
elaborate switching mechanisms for locking the semiconductive wafers in
place in the carriers during manual transport thereof. However, the person
transporting a carrier with such a switching mechanism had to remember to
actuate the switching mechanism before picking up the carrier or run the
risk of spilling the semiconductive wafers contained therein, in which
event the risk was, in fact, not reduced at all. Moreover, when placing
the carrier in a wafer handling and processing system the person
transporting the carrier also had to remember to deactuate (or release)
the switching mechanism in order to release the semiconductive wafers to
the handling and processing system. In addition to these drawbacks, such
switching mechanisms are generally complex and add significantly to the
cost of the carrier.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The principal object of this invention is to provide an improved carrier
for semiconductive wafers that has a self-locking mechanism automatically
operable for impeding spillage of the semiconductive wafers from the
carrier when the carrier is picked up and automatically released when the
carrier is set down.
Another object of this invention is to provide an improved carrier of the
foregoing type that is simple in design and operation and that is not
significantly more expensive than a standard carrier.
These objects are accomplished in accordance with the illustrated preferred
embodiment of this invention by providing a carrier having a pair of
fixedly-spaced, oppositely-facing, side plates forming a plurality of
transport channels arranged in parallel stacked relationship for receiving
a like plurality of semiconductive wafers and by further providing each
side plate with a recessed region extending partially into the transport
channels. A separate stop member mounted for both axial translational and
pivotal movement in the recessed region of each side plate is constrained,
by engagement with a corresponding cam housing mounted on the same side
plate, to movement between a lowered operative position, where the stop
member partially protrudes from the bottom of the carrier and is pivoted
into the transport channels, and a raised inoperative position, where the
stop member is retracted so as not to protrude from the bottom of the
carrier and is pivoted out of the transport channels. The stop members are
spring loaded for automatic movement to the lowered operative position
when the carrier is picked up, thereby blocking passage of the
semiconductive wafers through the transport channels and impeding spillage
of the semiconductive wafers from the carrier as it is transported, and
are slidably disposed for automatic movement to the raised inoperative
position when the carrier is set down, thereby permitting free passage of
the semiconductive wafers through the transport channels. Cam slots in the
cam housing are disposed for engagement with corresponding cam followers
of the stop members to provide a self-locking mechanism that is
automatically operable for preventing the semiconductive wafers from
forcing the stop members to the raised inoperative position when the
carrier is picked up and that is automatically released when the carrier
is set down.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a carrier according to the preferred
embodiment of the present invention when the carrier is set down upon the
surface of a support member.
FIG. 2 is a side view of the carrier of FIG. 1 showing the orientation of a
stop member thereof when the carrier is set down upon the surface of a
support member.
FIG. 3 is a top view of the carrier of FIG. 1 when the carrier is picked
up.
FIG. 4 is a side view of the carrier of FIG. 1 showing the orientation of a
stop member thereof when the carrier is picked up.
FIGS. 5 and 6 are cutaway side views of an upper portion of the carrier of
FIG. 1 showing a cam housing and the position and orientation of a
corresponding stop member when the carrier is set down upon the surface of
a support member and when the carrier is picked up, respectively.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring now to FIGS. 1-4, there is shown a carrier 11 with two side
plates 13. Each side plate 13 has a plurality of flanges 15 and a recessed
region 17 with a shaft-support portion 19 having an aperture 21
therethrough. A separate cam housing 23 is affixed (for example, by
screws) to the top surface of each side plate 13 adjacent to the
corresponding recessed region 17. Each recessed region 17 is therefore
bounded at the top end by the corresponding cam housing 23 and at the
bottom end by the corresponding shaft-support portion 19. The side plates
13 are spaced apart a selected distance, with the flanges 15 facing each
other such that corresponding pairs of consecutive flanges on each side
plate 13 form stacked, parallel transport channels 25 into which
semiconductive wafers 16 or other such workpieces may be placed as shown
in FIGS. 1 and 3. Rods 27, which are anchored, for example, by rivets or
screws to the side plates 13, serve to fix the position and separation of
the side plates 13 with respect to each other so as to provide sufficient
clearance for passage of semiconductive wafers 16 through the transport
channels 25. The recessed regions 17 extend partially into the flanges 15
and, hence, the transport channels 25 at a selected angle substantially
perpendicular to the flanges and transport channels.
A stop member 29 is mounted in each recessed region 17 for both pivotal and
axial translational movement between a raised inoperative position as
shown in FIG. 2 and a lowered operative position as shown in FIG. 4. Each
stop member 29 comprises a top shaft portion 31, a middle or flag shaft
portion 33, and a bottom shaft portion 35. The top shaft portion 31 of
each stop member 29 is disposed for pivotal and axial translational
movement within the corresponding cam housing 23, and the bottom shaft
portion 35 of each stop member 29 is disposed for similar movement within
aperture 21 of the shaft-support portion 19 of the corresponding side
plate 13. Matching cam slots 37 are provided in oppositely facing portions
of cam housings 23 for engagement with corresponding cam follower pins 39
provided adjacent to the upper ends of the top shaft portions 31 of the
stop members 29. Each cam follower pin 39 is constrained for movement
within and along the corresponding cam slot between the raised inoperative
and lowered operative positions of the corresponding stop member 29. A
separate compressible spring 41 coaxially disposed around the top shaft
portion 31 of each stop member 29 between the flag shaft portion 33 and
the base of the corresponding cam housing 23 spring loads the stop member
29 to the lowered operative position when the carrier is picked up.
In the lowered operative position of each stop member 29, the flag shaft
portion 35 partially protrudes into the transport channels 25 of the
carrier 11 and the bottom shaft portion 35 partially protrudes from the
bottom of the shaft-support portion 19 of the corresponding side plate 13
a vertical distance substantially equal to the vertical distance between
the opposite ends of the cam slot 37 of the corresponding cam housing 23.
When the carrier 11 is set down upon the surface of a generally flat
support member 42 (such as a holder of an automatic wafer handling and
processing system) as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, the bottom shaft portion 35
of each stop member 29 is automatically forced upward until fully
retracted into the aperture 21 of the corresponding shaft-support portion
19 thereby compressing the corresponding spring 41 and forcing the top
shaft portion 31 of the stop member further into the corresponding cam
housing 23 as best shown in FIG. 5. The cam slot 37 of each cam housing 23
has a vertically extending lower portion and an obliquely extending upper
portion so that as the top shaft portion 31 of the corresponding stop
member 29 moves axially upward into the cam housing, the associated cam
follower pin 39 moves in an upward and outward direction thereby pivoting
the flag shaft portion 33 of the stop member out of the transport channels
25. This releases any semiconductive wafers 16 that may be contained in
the carrier 11 (i.e., permits free passage of semiconductive wafers 16
into, out of, or through the transport channels 25 of the carrier). When
the carrier 11 is picked up from the surface of the support member 42 as
shown in FIGS. 3, 4, and 6, each spring 41 is released from its compressed
state thereby automatically moving the corresponding stop member 29
axially downward to the lowered operative position at which the bottom
shaft portion 35 of the stop member protrudes from the bottom of the
carrier as described above. As the top shaft portion 31 of the
corresponding stop member 29 moves axially downward, the associated cam
follower pin 39 moves in a downward and inward direction pivoting the flag
shaft portion 33 of the stop member into the transport channels 25. This
blocks the passage of semiconductive wafers 16 through the transport
channels 25 and thereby impedes spillage of the semiconductive wafers from
the carrier as it is being picked up and transported.
The vertically extending lower portions of the cam slots 37 are oriented
parallel to the axes of the stop members 29, and the obliquely extending
upper portions of the cam slots are upwardly inclined relative to those
axes. Thus, when the carrier 11 is picked up or being transported, the
engagement of the cam follower pins 39 with the vertically extending lower
portions of the corresponding cam slots 37 prevents the stop members 29
from being moved (for example, due to the weight of the semiconductive
wafers 16 bearing upon the stop members) to the raised inoperative
position until the stop members are forced axially upward to bring the cam
follower pins 39 into engagement with the obliquely extending upper
portions of the cam slots 37 by setting the carrier down upon the surface
of a support member 42. This provides the stop members 29 with a
self-locking mechanism that is automatically operable for locking the stop
members in the lowered operative position when the carrier 11 is picked up
and that is automatically released when the carrier is set down upon the
surface of a support member.
In the carrier 11 described hereinabove the stop members 29 are operable
for preventing spillage of the semiconductive wafers 16 from one open
(input/output) end of the carrier, but not from the other. Thus, it is
necessary to exercise some care not to tilt the carrier 11 downward in the
direction of the other open (input/output) end of the carrier while
transporting the carrier. However, in an alternative embodiment of the
present invention; one or two stop members 29 may be mounted as described
hereinabove adjacent to each open (input/output) end of the carrier 11 to
prevent the semiconductive wafers 16 contained in the carrier from
spilling out of either open (input/output) end of the carrier when the
carrier is being transported. In another alternative embodiment of the
present invention the carrier 11 is provided with a back plate and one or
more stop members 29 mounted as described hereinabove adjacent to the open
(input/output) end of the carrier so that semiconductive wafers 16 may be
safely retained within the carrier between the back plate and the stop
members when the carrier is being transported.
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Description  |
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