Microbump development on small bump pitch (50μM and lower)

Author(s):  
L. Bogaerts ◽  
J. De Vos ◽  
C. Gerets ◽  
G. Jamieson ◽  
K. Vandersmissen ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 3633
Author(s):  
Rytis Augustauskas ◽  
Arūnas Lipnickas ◽  
Tadas Surgailis

Drilling operations are an essential part of furniture from MDF laminated boards required for product assembly. Faults in the process might introduce adverse effects to the furniture. Inspection of the drilling quality can be challenging due to a big variety of board surface textures, dust, or woodchips in the manufacturing process, milling cutouts, and other kinds of defects. Intelligent computer vision methods can be engaged for global contextual analysis with local information attention for automated object detection and segmentation. In this paper, we propose blind and through drilled holes segmentation on textured wooden furniture panel images using the UNet encoder-decoder modifications enhanced with residual connections, atrous spatial pyramid pooling, squeeze and excitation module, and CoordConv layers for better segmentation performance. We show that even a lightweight architecture is capable to perform on a range of complex textures and is able to distinguish the holes drilling operations’ semantical information from the rest of the furniture board and conveyor context. The proposed model configurations yield better results in more complex cases with a not significant or small bump in processing time. Experimental results demonstrate that our best-proposed solution achieves a Dice score of up to 97.89% compared to the baseline U-Net model’s Dice score of 94.50%. Statistical, visual, and computational properties of each convolutional neural network architecture are addressed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (1) ◽  
pp. 000231-000234
Author(s):  
Sascha Lohse ◽  
Alexander Wollanke

Tougher requirements related to the request for smaller, lighter and multi-functional electronic devices impose increased demands on IC packaging. Ever more complex circuitry, fine pitch and micro bump designs and die stacking are examples of how the industry meets these demands. Finding a suitable process technology for 3D packaging can be a challenge. This paper provides information about various connection methods predominantly used in today's 3D packaging. In comprehensive trials, various dies characterized by high bump count (up to 143,000), fine pitch (down to 25 μm) and small bump diameter (down to 13 μm) were placed on a substrate using a semi-automated flip chip bonder. This whitepaper describes test procedures for different 3D integration technologies and presents utilized process parameters and results.


ZooKeys ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 783 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pir Asmat Ali ◽  
Wayne P. Maddison ◽  
Muhammad Zahid ◽  
Abida Butt

EpocillapakhtunkhwaAli & Maddison,sp. n.andStenaelurillusmardanicusAli & Maddison,sp. n.are described from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, Pakistan. Noted for the first time is the presence inEpocillaof a small bump just anterior to the fovea of the carapace, of unknown functional significance, otherwise known in the unrelatedOpisthoncusL. Koch, 1880 andCocalusPocock, 1897. In addition, the female ofMenemerusnigliWesołowska & Freudenschuss, 2012 is described for the first time.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Won-Hyeong Park ◽  
Da-hye Kim ◽  
Ki-uk Kyung ◽  
Sang-Youn Kim

This paper proposes visuotactile primitives with vibrotactile properties for a more systematic haptic representation of virtual objects in touchscreen mobile devices. We define a DOT, a LINE, and a SURFACE as tactile symbols of hitting a small bump, flicking a string, and rubbing a textured surface, respectively. The combination of the proposed primitives induces a more efficient design process for providing various tactile properties of virtual objects to a user. We did experiments to evaluate whether the proposed method haptically represents virtual objects. The results show that the proposed visuotactile primitives can be applied to the haptic representation of graphical objects.


2018 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 298-305
Author(s):  
Philip B. Whyman
Keyword(s):  
The Road ◽  

1949 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-155
Author(s):  
E. J. Isbister ◽  
W. R. Griswold

AbstractMore than 1200 American radar equipments have been fitted to ships and this paper gave same American views on its operation; the views put forward were not necessarily different from those held in this country but certain experiences of inland navigation and blind pilotage which would be new to British operators were described. It was stated that when commercial production of marine radar started in the U.S., opinion was divided on the relative merits of 3 cm. and 10 cm. radar, some manufacturers concentrating on one and some on the other. Although 10 cm. equipment is still manufactured, all manufacturers now have a 3 cm. radar in production.Certain advantages of radar assisted navigation were mentioned and these included the ability to determine another vessel's course and speed by plotting and the considerable saving in fuel and time that could be achieved by the accurate knowledge of the ship's position in coastal waters no matter what the weather.Anomalous propagation in the Great Lakes region was described as being so common that shipmasters often regard the increased range of radar in the area as being the normal range of the set.The use of radar by tugs on the Mississippi and its tributary the Ohio was described. Here up to fifteen barges of 100 ft. are ‘shoved’ by the tugs into narrow locks in weather which sometimes conceals half the tow. The small bump in the trace, representing the lock, is recognized by the pilots. One of the outstanding problems of this form of radar navigation was stated to be that the bridges (of which there are 1700 over the Mississippi) were such good reflectors that discrimination between them was not possible at a mile, at which distance the tow gets into position to pass between the piers.


1973 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 279-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yash Pal

The experimental situation in regard to the extra-galactic diffuse background of photons of energy above 30 keV is critically reviewed in the light of discussions at this Symposium.There seems to be some doubt about the spectral break at 40 keV. There is an indication of a small bump around 2 MeV and of a shoulder around 20 MeV. The spectrum below 1 MeV (down to 30 keV) can perhaps be represented as 25 (E/1 keV)–2.1. This spectrum also gives, roughly, the OSO III upper limit at 100 MeV, though it lies well below the two bumps mentioned above. A good deal of the discussion centres on the problem of backgrounds in different types of experiments to measure the diffuse X- andγ-ray fluxes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 2000.11 (0) ◽  
pp. 9-10
Author(s):  
Tomohiro ANDO ◽  
Kazunori UEKI ◽  
Tsuyoshi TAKANO ◽  
Miyako MIZUTANI ◽  
Toshiaki HARA
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 2473011419S0011
Author(s):  
Jorge Briceño ◽  
Bonnie Chien ◽  
Christopher Miller ◽  
Brian Velasco ◽  
John Y. Kwon

Category: Ankle Introduction/Purpose: Diagnosis of mortise instability in the apparent isolated lateral malleolus fracture can be challenging and often relies on stress radiography. While the gravity stress view (GSV) is commonly utilized, it traditionally requires the patient to assume the lateral decubitus position for imaging of the ankle. This can be difficult and uncomfortable for the patient and may be unsafe in particular situations. Furthermore, transferring the patient back and forth to obtain this positioning is time-intensive for the radiology technician and disruptive to clinic throughput. Therefore, we describe a simple technique that allows acquisition of the GSV of the ankle while the patient remains seated. The technique involves minimal patient movement and is simple for the staff to position appropriately. Methods: The patient is seated on either a stable office chair with arms for safety or in a wheelchair. The affected limb is then placed on a padded stool with the foot extended past the edge of the stool. The patient is instructed to maintain the ankle in a comfortable resting position. They are then encouraged to externally rotate at the ipsilateral hip. If needed, a small bump can be placed underneath the contralateral hip to further increase external rotation of the affected limb at the hip. The ankle and foot should be approximately 15 degrees internally rotated relative to the plane of the floor once the leg has been appropriately positioned. The leg should be held straight with the ankle at the level of the chair seat. This places the ankle in an optimal angle for obtaining a mortise view. The radiograph is then obtained in standard fashion. Results: N/A Conclusion: Obtaining the GSV in the seated position offers several advantages. First, the patient is placed in a seated position, which is more time-efficient than transferring the patient to the radiology table and avoids the potential danger of patients falling. Second, external rotation of the hip is generally well-tolerated in isolated leg injuries. Third, this positioning more reliably places the ankle in approximately 15 degrees of internal rotation to obtain the optimal mortise view and assess mortise symmetry. Finally, patient comfort is increased as this technique obviates transferring patients or placing their hip directly on a rigid radiology table.


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