Service Manuals, User Guides, Schematic Diagrams or docs for : Keithley SCS 4200 2887 4200-SCS LAN Lab WP

<< Back | Home

Most service manuals and schematics are PDF files, so You will need Adobre Acrobat Reader to view : Acrobat Download Some of the files are DjVu format. Readers and resources available here : DjVu Resources
For the compressed files, most common are zip and rar. Please, extract files with Your favorite compression software ( WinZip, WinRAR ... ) before viewing. If a document has multiple parts, You should download all, before extracting.
Good luck. Repair on Your own risk. Make sure You know what You are doing.




Image preview - the first page of the document
2887 4200-SCS LAN Lab WP


>> Download 2887 4200-SCS LAN Lab WP documenatation <<

Text preview - extract from the document
                             WHITE
                             PA P E R




                                         A Local Area Network Laboratory Based on the
                                          Keithley 4200-SCS for Engineering Education
                                                       in Microelectronics

                                                          Avraham Chelly, Ph.D.


                             Introduction
                             The microelectronics laboratory has been an integral part of the modern
                             curriculum in engineering education for years so that undergraduate students
                             can apply what they've learned of their device physics and VLSI courses.
                             In this way, they can perform measurements on "home-made" devices and/
                             or advanced devices imported from the industry in the framework of an
                             end-year project. The continuous progress in microelectronics technology
                             has largely replaced the classic curve-tracer with a modern PC-controllable
                             parameter analyzer, allowing students to make more precise and convenient
                             measurements.
                             However, due to the relative high cost of this type of equipment, equipping
                             a teaching lab with many such measurement units may be unaffordable. As
                             a result, during the last decade, the concept of a remote laboratory through
                             the Internet has been pioneered at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute [1, 2]
                             (AIM-Lab) in collaboration with the Norwegian University of Science and
                             Technology [3] (Lab-On-Web) and developed at MIT [1, 4] (Web Lab) to
                             allow a large numbers of users to share a single piece of advanced equipment
                             from their home or any other location in the world. The limits of this approach
                             are, of course, due to the elimination of the "hands-on" experiments in a lab
                             environment: lack of flexibility (changing the device, changing the instruments,
                             degree of programming flexibility, etc.), but also lack of immediate feedback
                             from the system itself (precision of the manual probe setup, observation of
                             instruments and devices, human environment, etc.), and, last but not least,
Keithley Instruments, Inc.
28775 Aurora Road
Cleveland, Ohio 44139
(440) 248-0400
Fax: (440) 248-6168
www.keithley.com
                                     A    G r e A t e r   M e A s u r e   o f   C o n f i d e n C e
the lack of good laboratory practices (note-taking, discipline, troubleshooting, personal
initiative, and instructor guidance, etc.).
    The concept presented here offers a compromise solution. It allows students in the lab
framework to measure several devices mounted on separate probe stations respectively. These
stations are connected to a state-of-art Keithley Instruments Semiconductor Characterization
System (4200-SCS) and other instruments (C-V meters, pulse generators, etc.) through a
switch matrix. A PC located beside each station allows students to access the 4200-SCS
remotely for measurements through the Local Area Network (LAN). The concept, named
Lab-e-LAN, was originally designed, set up, and successfully run at Bar-Ilan University's
School of Engineering (Israel) for the last two academic years; it was also imported to the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem's School of Engineering (Israel) in 2006.

Lab-e-LAN purposes and architecture
The Advanced Device Characterization Lab is intended for the fourth-year undergraduate
students in the microelectronics track. Twelve three-hour lab sessions are scheduled over the
second semester. The lab present capacity is three pairs of students at a time and is expandable
to six pairs or more. In addition to its use as a teaching lab, the lab allows students to pursue
advanced end-year projects in microelectronics (described below) and also will serve some
research projects in prototype device testing and reliability studies (in development).
    The Lab-e-LAN lab architecture is summarized in Figure 1. The Keithley 4200-SCS is the
core of the lab and was specially selected to fit into the LAN concept thanks to its embedded
industrial PC (Pentium 4) and the powerful Keithley Interactive Test Environment (KITE)
software, which runs under the Windows XP environment. An incremental point was that
Keithley released a "PC or off-line version" of KITE, which allows the user to define the test
and analyze the data from his or her own PC without actually being connected to the 4200-
SCS. A LAN connection is then established from the user's PC using the Windows Remote
Desktop software, for example. In this way, each user is typically connected to the 4200-SCS
for less than one minute, which is all the time needed for file opening, data acquisition, and
saving the results (see the lab protocol described later). Connections between the 4200-SCS
and the other rack-mounted instruments to the switch matrix are made through triax cables
(using the guard potential method [5]).




               A   G r e A t e r    M e A s u r e     o f   C o n f i d e n C e
                              LAN                 Keithley                 LAN
                                                 4200-SCS
                                                   + KITE

                                           TRX               IEEE-488

                                                 Instrument
                                                    Rack

                                           TRX               IEEE-488

                                                 Switching
                                    TRX           Matrix            TRX


                                      Probe         ...         Probe
                                    Station #1                Station #N

                                     PC #1          ...        PC #N
                                     + KITE                    + KITE

Figure 1: The LAB-e-LAN architectural concept and connections type (TRX=triax cable)



Lab-e-LAN Equipment
In the present configuration in Bar-Ilan University's lab, three pairs of students can work in
a same lab session, sharing two different probe stations and one test fixture respectively. The
following instruments can be used on each probe station through the switch matrix:
   1. Measurement instruments (rack-mounted)

       



◦ Jabse Service Manual Search 2024 ◦ Jabse PravopisonTap.bg ◦ Other service manual resources online : FixyaeServiceinfo