Jeff, my take is that the Ti is oxidizing in the wet nitrogen, Ti is a
very easily oxidized, in fact it is so reactive that it forms TiN , which
is gold in color, and TiH. If you want the Ti to remain Ti, then you hade
better use dry helium as the environment, or alternatively a very high
vacuum. Ti is so reactive that it can be used as a pump in ultra high
vacuum systems. Hope this helps. Gary
Gary Hillman
Service Support Specialties, Inc.
9 Mars Court
PO Box 365
Montville, NJ 07045
973-263-0640
973-263-8888.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jeffrey Price [SMTP:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, September 01, 2004 3:04 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mems-talk] Ti Waveguides in Lithium Niobate
Hello,
I am trying to diffuse Ti strips into Lithium Niobate. The strips run
from approximately 3 -10 um. After diffusion (which I have run
different permutations ranging from 1-9h and 900-1050C) in a wet
nitrogen environment the waveguides completely disappear. I know that
the index delta should be approximately .01 so they should be difficult
to see, but I can't seem to see anything at all. I was wondering if
anyone has had this problem before or can help me find a solution. Thanks.
Jeff Price
Research Assistant, University of Delaware
[email protected]
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