Above is a chip decapped bu Bunnie Huang. His interesting blog post here shows him defeating the protection fuses on the chip allowing it's program to be read out.
Professional decapping devices
Nisene Jet Etch the gold standard in decapping. |
There is an amazingly cool device to do this which is commercially available, it's called a Nisene Jet Etch, and costs about $22,000. Now this is great if you are decapping on a daily basis, but it is just too expensive to justify us buying one. :( Another way to do this is by hand. Carefully dripping acid drop by drop onto the chip, however the chip we are interested in, is small. A single drop of acid would easily overflow and destroy the legs. As I want to be able to put the decapped chip back into a circuit, this is a probelm. So, I'm going to attempt to create a device that will (hopefully) provide the ability to decap repeatedly, albeit without all the speed, ease of use and other amazing features of the JetEtch.
The reagent I want to use is nitric acid. This is due to it's speed at eating away epoxy. It does however also eat away at the leadframe with astonishing speed and vigour, so that must be protected. So... this led me into a short foray into things that are resistant to hot concentrated nitric acid. I came across various materials but I settled on PTFE (Teflon) and a rubber called Viton made by DuPont.
PTFE is relatively cheap, easily machineable and relatively cheap. Viton comes in several grades from relatively cheap to super expensive. It is also made in various formats such as sheets and o-rings.
So here is my initial design:
The Decapinator
Decapinator Plan A |
Two PTFE rods drilled out to form two cups, one fits inside the other. The large one (main body) has two holes in the bottom. One for the acid spray and one for the acid waste. The smaller one (chip holder) has a three holes drilled in the bottom. One hole goes through the bottom of the cup, and the other two are drilled into the sides of the cup to allow me to install threaded rods. The acid sprays on a disk of Viton rubber with and aperture cut in the centre which acts as a mask for the chip, ensuring the acid only acts on that area. then there is a PTFE disk cut from the smaller rod which acts as a clamp to hold the chip firmly onto the hole. The chip holder is then inverted and inserted into the main body so that the acid sprays through the centre hole onto the chip.
I ordered my PTFE rods from Direct plastics and they arrived with an enclosed bag of haribo sweets (nice marketing guys!). I chose 50mm and 30mm diameters respectively. This was mainly based on the availability of tools to drill out the centre of the rods. I would normally use a high speed spade bit to cut larger diameter holes, but the long point on those bits would prevent me from getting the tight aperture that I wanted. I settled on a MAD (Multi Angle Drill) bit. These were available in multiple sizes and have only a small centering point that would allow me to get the shape that I wanted, and, align the centre holes nicely. MAD drill bit set:
As you can see from the above image they have very small centre points.
The next was the choice of glassware. Everything had to be borosilicate glass (Pyrex) to withstand the heat without shattering. I chose a wide necked 500ml Erlenmeyer flask because of its wide base which would give stability and good heat contact with the hotplate. As this is going to be top heavy I opted for a lab stand to securely hold the flask in place.
Nitic acid vapour is highly corrosive to items such as rubber, but I couldn't find suitable bungs to resist the acid, so I was leaning to machining down the 50mm rod on a lathe to give me a plug that I could insert into the mouth of the flask and seal with Viton o-rings. This would mean laying my hands on a lathe, and as this was a proof of concept I decided to forgo the new toy and use a rubber stopper instead. This would degrade, but they are cheap and I should get a few uses out of it.
One of my next problems is how to seal the glass tubes delivering and draining the acid into the PTFE. The drain was a problem because I would be taking it out from an angle. I came up with the idea of using a plug cutter. This is normally used to cut a small plug of wood to cover over a screw hole. Normally you would drill it into a piece of wood and then snap off the plug. I figured that if I used it in the PTFE I could then drill through the middle of the plug into the centre cavity, and then slip my drain tube over the plug. See below.
Detail of main body showing viton gasket around
delivery capillary and plug cut drain port.
As for the glass tubes I'm planning to use a 0.8mm inside diameter capillary tube for the acid delivery which should give me a nice fine jet, and a 10mm outside diameter for the drain.
As I mentioned earlier Viton comes in a variety of grades. The only one that would appear to consistantly resist hot concentrated nitric acid is Viton ETP 600-S also known as Viton extreme.
As it turns out Viton Extreme is also rare as rocking horse s**t. One supplier I called said, and I quote: "No F*****g chance". Another said they could only order the minimum order from Dupont and that was 940mm square 1mm thick and cost 1700 quid, plus VAT, plus delivery. I managed to track down a supplier that would supply me with a 200mm square 2mm thick for about 200 pounds. Not cheap, but as I only needed to use a small piece at a time and I could re-use it on another chip if I needed the same size aperture.
So at this point various packages are converging on Aperture Labs from various parts of the UK. Once everything arrives and I start construction I'll document this in another post.