Choose Language Hide Translation Bar

cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
In this talk, we cover tips and strategies for making use of the data and analyses that others in your organization have published to JMP Live. Topics include: Finding content that is meaningful to you (browsing, searching, and sorting). Finding the data used by a report, finding the reports that use a given data set. Bookmarking content once its been found. Interacting with reports (using explicit interactive features, hovering, excluding certain data). Discussing reports and data in comment threads. Calling your colleagues' attention to the content (sending links, @ mentioning). Downloading content to explore further in JMP.   Hello, and welcome to the JMP Discovery Talk titled JMP Live is for you too! My name is Aurora Tiffany Davis. I'm a software developer on the JMP Live product, and I created this talk to show you how JMP Live can be useful to everybody at your organization, not just those people who produce the data and reports. In fact, in this talk, you'll see that for most of the things on JMP Live, you don't even need to have JMP on your machine. Whether or not you have JMP installed on your machine, you can browse, filter, search, and sort the JMP reports that your colleagues have published to your organization's secure JMP Live site. When you find something interesting, you can bookmark it. When you open a JMP report that's been published to JMP Live, you can not only look at it, but in most cases, you can also interact with it in many of the same ways that you can do in JMP itself. You can read and join in on the conversations that are taking place about the analysis at your organization, and you can @mention a colleague to draw their attention to something. You can use JMP Live to learn more about JSL scripting. You can use JMP Live to learn more about the relationships between JMP reports and the data that they rely on at your organization. You can download content from JMP Live. Okay, let's get started with a tour of JMP Live. Now, I'm not going to show you everything in JMP Live, but I want to go over the basics because I want to make sure that you know how to find your way around, how to find out what you can do, and what you can learn. We'll start our tour here at the top with this blue navigation bar. This bar is always present no matter what you're doing and where you move around within JMP Live. We can see that right now we're on the homepage. On the homepage, you see a list of all of the reports that you have access to. In other words, all the reports that are published to a collaboration space that you are a member of. You don't have to worry that everybody in your organization can see every report. That's governed by which collaboration space the report is in. The homepage is a great way to see at a glance what's new because the default sort order is newest first, so new content is going to bubble up to the top here. Now, any place on JMP Live, like this one, where you see a list of reports, you can click on a report to open it, or you can bookmark it to come back to it later. Now, I'm not going to open this report yet. We're going to get to that a little bit later on in our tour. For now, let's look up at the top of the homepage, and I see this top bar. When you see a top bar in JMP Live, it's usually telling you two things: where am I, in this case, on the homepage, and what can I do? What can I do on the homepage? I can filter my results. Maybe I don't want to see all of the reports that I have access to. I can filter according to the text that's in the report title or description. I can filter by which user published the report. I can filter by collaboration space. I can filter by date range, or I can choose just to look at control charts that have active alarms right now. What else can I do on the homepage? I can change my sort order. I mentioned a moment ago that the default sort order is newest first, but maybe instead you want oldest first, or maybe you want to sort alphabetically. What else can I do on the homepage? I can change my display format. Right now, the display format is Grid, which is the biggest format. It shows you a really good preview of what the report looks like, but you might want something more compact instead. Okay, that's a quick overview of the homepage. Now let's move along on the blue navigation bar from Home to Spaces. This shows you a list of all the collaboration spaces that you are a member of. Your organization may have many, many spaces, some of which are really of no interest to you at all, and so we don't show you those spaces here. If I look at the top, I can see where am I, and what can I do? I can search for a particular space, or I can filter the list of spaces that I'm seeing here. I can also click on any one of these collaboration spaces to open it up and take a look inside. Let's open up the Reliability space. When you open up a space in JMP Live, you see a folder tree showing you all the folders that are inside that space. When you click on a folder, you can see all the reports that are in that specific folder. Like any other place where you see a list of reports, you can click on a report to open it, or you can bookmark it to come back to it later on. If we look up here, we see a top bar. Anytime I see a top bar, I know that it can tell me where am I and what can I do? Some of There are many things I can do are familiar to me from the homepage, for example, changing display format, filtering, and sorting, but there are a few things here that are new. For example, I can email a link to a colleague of mine, and this will be a link to this specific folder. I can download a JMP Live folder as a JMP project. This will download to my machine a self-contained JMP project that has a copy of everything in the JMP Live folder, so it'll have a copy of all the reports as well as the data that they rely on. In addition to this top bar, I'm noticing that over here on the left, we also have a sidebar. Whenever you see a sidebar in JMP Live, you should think, what can I learn? What can I learn about a space? I can learn about the posts, the report posts, and the data posts that are inside. That's what we've been doing so far on this space. I can also learn about control chart warnings in this space. Moving along from Spaces, we'll go to the Sitewide Search. Maybe there's a particular project going on in your organization that you're interested in, but you can't recall the name of the person who's been publishing reports. Maybe you don't remember what collaboration space it's in, all you know is the name of the project. This is where you would go to find more. If I'm interested in the Twinkle Tech project, I can type in Twinkle and see a list of reports, which again, I can click on any report in the list or bookmark something to check it out later on. I can also search site-wide for users. Maybe I'm interested to see what Dieter has been up to lately. I can find Dieter easily, and I can click on his name to open up Dieter's user profile. The user profile shows you everything that they have contributed to your organization conversations JMP Live site, or at least everything that you're permitted to see. Up at the top, I can see, again, where am I and what can I do? I can filter, sort, and change display format. I have a sidebar, and I know that means there's what can I learn? I can learn about reports that Dieter has published and also the data that Dieter has published. Moving along from the site-wide search, we come to Notifications, and I can see that I do have one notification. It looks like Michael Goff has mentioned me in a comment on a particular post. I could click on this to open that post up and see what Michael said. This is also where I would change my notification settings. For example, whenever I'm mentioned in a comment, I certainly want to be notified of that. In fact, I also want to get an email about it immediately. But there are other notification types that I'm less interested in, maybe I don't want an email. This is where you go to set up those preferences. Moving along from notifications, the next thing on our blue navigation bar is Bookmarks. During this tour, we've been bookmarking things here and there, and this is where we can go to see a list of all the things we have bookmarked. Up at the top, Where am I? Bookmarks, and what can I do? Filter, sort, and change display format. Moving along from bookmarks, we come next to Help. This is where we have a link to the comprehensive online documentation for JMP Live. During this talk, I'm only showing you some of the things of JMP Live. If you go to this online help, you really see everything. Next, we come to this last section on the navigation bar. This is links and settings that are related specifically to you. This is where you can go to easily open up your own user profile. This looks pretty much just like the user profile that we saw for Dieter. It shows me which reports and which data I have published to JMP Live. Also, in this area is a link to your own personal collaboration space. This is just like any other space, except it's for you specifically. You can publish much content from JMP into this space, and you get to decide who else is allowed to see it. Also, in this area, we have various other settings you can apply. Maybe you want to look at JMP Live in dark mode, you're going to change your display language, that thing. This is also where you can sign out. Okay, now that we've finished our tour of the navigation bar, let's get to the really good stuff. The whole point of JMP Live is sharing interesting sharing JMP content with each other and collaborating. Once you find something that you think is interesting, click on it to open it up. Here, we're opening a report. This is a JMP report that somebody has published to my organization's JMP Live site in this particular report is a map showing the last six months' worth of building permits that were issued by the city of Raleigh, near JMP's headquarters in the US. In most cases, when you open a report in JMP Live, you're not limited to just looking at it. You can also interact with it. When I first opened this report, it's showing me all of the building permits for the last six months, and it's a little busy and a little hard to digest, but the publisher has included an explicit interactive feature in the form of a local data filter, so I can very easily change to just looking at the residential permits. You can also interact with a legend on a report. This legend is showing me various types of building permits. For example, new single family dwellings, also known as new houses are shown in pink, according to the legend. But there's so many points still on my map that it's a little bit hard for me to tell where new houses are being built. If you click on a category within a legend, it will highlight those points in your report. Now I can highlight just the new houses and really easily see where they're being built. You can also hover over a point and a report to learn a little bit more. Now, all this interaction I'm doing: the local data filter, clicking on a column in a legend, hovering, this is my way of asking JMP Live to show me a version of the report that I'm interested in. This is not going to affect what anybody else is going to see if they come to the same report. Also, I'll note that you don't need JMP on your machine to do any of this. All the work that's taking place to facilitate this interaction is taking place on your organization's secure JMP Live server. Let's look up at the top here. I see we have a top bar on a report, which means I can learn where am I. This is a path to my current location. I see that I'm looking at a Map Report and that it is inside of a folder called JMP Live is for you too. That folder is inside of another folder called Discovery Europe 2024. All the pieces of this path are clickable, so you can use this to navigate around and get a sense of where you are. Another part of the answer to the question, "Where am I?" Is in this area here. This is an area where you can navigate back and forth among the reports that are in a folder together. I can see that this map Report is not the only thing in the folder. There's a previous report as well. Let's click this and take a look at the other report in the same folder. This one shows how long it took for the city of Raleigh to issue building permits of various types. Just like in the Map Report, I can click on a category in the legend to highlight points in the report. Just like in the Map Report, I can hover over something in the report to learn more. Unlike in the report, I don't see an explicit interactive feature included by the publisher, so I don't see a local data filter or a column switcher. Nonetheless, there is more interaction that you can do with a report on JMP Live. I'm not very interested in the building permits that were issued quickly because I think that should be normal. I'm going to select the building permits that were issued quickly, and then I will right-click and say Exclude and Hide Selected Rows. Now I'm seeing just the data that I'm interested in, the building permits that took a long time to issue. We might want to research these and find out what's taking so long. We already talked on a report about the where am I section. Let's talk about what can I do. I can bookmark. I can share link. You can even download just one report as a JMP project. We talked about doing that earlier with an entire folder. You can also do it with just one report. I also see a sidebar over here, and I know that a sidebar means what can I learn? What can I learn about a report on JMP Live? I can learn various details such as who published it, when it was published, and more importantly, when it was last updated. I can also learn about the conversation that's going on about this analysis in my organization. I can join in on that conversation by adding a comment, replying to someone, or @mentioning a colleague so that they'll get a notification, just like the notification that I got when Michael Goff mentioned me. What else can I learn about a report on JMP Live? I can learn about the script that generates it. This is actually a fantastic learning opportunity. If you see a report on your organization's JMP Live site that's doing something really interesting, maybe somebody's using a technique that you're not familiar with, or you just find the report really attractive, you can learn how they built that by coming here to the script area, you can copy the script or download it to your machine to dig in and learn more. What else can I learn about a report on JMP Live? I can learn what data it relies on. You can also click this link, so you can move back and forth between the data and the reports that it services to get a better idea of those relationships. Let's do that now and open up the data post that that report relies on. You're seeing here a preview or sneak peek of the data. Up at the top, you see "Where am I?" It looks like the data post name is a little long, so we didn't have a chance to show you the entire path. There just wasn't room. You can click on this triple dot to see the rest of the path. Again, all of these are clickable, so you can use these to move around if you want. We also have this what can I do area, including downloading the data table. We have a sidebar, so we know, what can I learn? I can learn details like who published it, when they published it, more importantly, when it was last updated. We have a comment section, just like we did for a report. Here's something that's new that isn't present in a report but is present for a data post. We can learn about the columns that are in the data table. For any column, we can click this Info icon and find out more information about the data type, modeling type, and so on. We can also choose to just look at some of the columns. Let's deselect some of these columns using this checkbox area and then click Apply. Now we can get a more focused look at the data before we possibly decide to download the whole thing. We can also learn for a given data post which reports rely on it. We can see that this data post is relied on by two different reports. Again, these are links, so you can use this to move back and forth between reports and data. Anytime you land on something in JMP Live that has a sidebar like this, I really encourage you to take a moment to explore the sidebar because there really is a lot that you can learn about what's going on in your organization. Okay, at this point, I think that we've hit all the highlights. We've talked about finding your way around using the navigation bar and the various other links that are in JMP Live. We've talked about interacting with reports and finding out, where am I? What can I do? And what can I learn? I hope that you can see that while JMP Live is super useful to the people that produce the data and reports. It's not just useful for them. It's not even just useful for people who have JMP on their machine. It really can be useful to anybody in your organization. We think that the easier it is to share knowledge, find knowledge, and collaborate, the more effective you'll be in driving your projects forward. JMP Live can help you be more effective. I want to thank you for joining me today for this talk, and I hope that you'll also check out some of the other JMP Discovery talks that we have this week. Thank you and have a great day. Bye-bye.
Thursday, May 30, 2024
Conference Room 1,2, or 3
Labels (1)
Thursday, May 30, 2024
Conference Room 1, 2, or 3
Speakers : 沈佳苹, 工艺支持工程师,应用材料 The speech topic : JMP DOE 分析及建模优化在预测外延硅生长速率中的应用 Speech abstract : 在半导体制造中,外延硅被广泛应用于晶圆衬底、pMOS SiGe、nMOS SiP、沟槽填充等应用。外延硅层的生长速率会受到多个步骤、多个工艺参数的影响。为了更高效地建立此种强交互的预测模型,我们需要彻底且全面的DOE评估,设计高度正交的DOE。此项目以外延硅生长速率的历史数据为起点,进行设计评估。对于建立预测模型而言,该历史数据结构功效弱,D 效率低,设计均匀性差,效应相关性和预测方差较高。在建模期间,由于缺乏模型自由度,RSM的逐步算法不稳定,导致模型重复性不佳,最优设计点的置信区间过宽。除此之外,RSM 模型中观察到了两对强相互作用:一对相互作用可能归因于各效应之间的高度相关;而另一对相互作用则与工艺的竞争机制相关。随后利用稳健设计和蒙特卡罗模拟进行公差设计,利用设计空间刻画器用于进行公差分配分析,以模拟未来的技术需求。为了以最小成本改善现有的DOE结构从而优化预测模型,我们未采用全新的DOE,而是利用增强设计方法,通过三种方法改善现有DOE结构:(1) 移除非正交的数据; (2) 默认增强算法; (3) 中心增强算法。通过非常全面的增强设计,JMP建议了最佳四个增强数据点,最终改进了DOE 结构,极大地提高了对于历史数据的利用效率,显著缩短了工艺开发的周期及成本。  
Thursday, May 30, 2024
Conference Room 1,2, or 3
Speakers : 屈颖奇, 高级研究员,诺和新元(中国)生物技术有限公司 The speech topic : JMP 脚本编辑在生化实验室的应用案例分享 Speech abstract : 在生化实验室中,使用 JMP 脚本语言可以为研究员个人、实验室、跨部门三个层次的工作助力。研究员如果有大量的同类型的数据需要处理,可以编辑简单的脚本工具处理重复性工作,包括数据整理,做图,计算。这样的脚本做起来非常简单,每次在脚本中改变几个参数就可以用在不同的数据上,可以节省大量个人工作时间。第二个层次是用脚本工具创建实验室工具箱Addin,方便有同样数据处理需求的同事使用。实现快速数据可视化和数据分析自动化,协助研究员处理数据,调查实验中遇到的问题,实验失败的原因等,节省工作时间和实验室资源,加快解决问题的速度。前两种应用的脚本都以数据为主。第三个层次是使用JMP脚本语言创建日志模版,实现自动化撰写实验方案、数据分析,一键生成实验报告。研究员需要撰写大量的实验方案,分析数据,并撰写实验报告。不同实验室的实验员需要阅读理解实验方案,做实验,将实验数据交给研究员进行分析报告。模板化的实验方案方便实验员理解实验设计。实验室人员不论是否熟悉数据分析,都可以轻松完成实验报告。大大提高实验成功率和跨部门合作效率。  
在半导体制造领域,各种工艺(如蚀刻)需要被集成在一起。在量产过程中,多台相同类型的机台需要用在同 一道工序。因此,消除机台间性能差异、提高工艺能力和稳定性至关重要。本项目的主要目标是为了验证新机 台(腔室)是否与标准机台(腔室)匹配,并评估当前工艺的能力和稳定性。 在机台匹配部分,我们首先确定合适的子组,并验证它们是否属于正态分布。之后,对于正态分布群或样本均 值和标准差可以信任的非正态群,采用单因素方差分析进行组均值方差检查。接着用JMP工具(如多重比较和 等效测试)找出哪个机台与标准机台有显著差异,以及它们之间的差异有多大。 此外,回归模型还可用于分析响应与潜在因素之间的相关性。通过线性或多项式拟合,我们可以找出机台之间 存在差异的原因。另外,我们还可以使用配对 t 检验(不需要正态性)来分析配对差异并将结果与方差分析模 型进行比较。 在过程能力和稳定性分析中,我们首先需要找到不属于正态分布的子群的样本均值和标准差的替代值。例如, 我们通常可以使用鲁棒均值和鲁棒标准差来替代单侧或双侧异常值问题。最后,我们通过Ppk、Cpk和稳定性 指数来分析了工艺能力的稳定性。我们还用了目标图和过程稳定性性能图来帮助结果更好可视化。
在半导体芯片生产中,快速热退火的腔体内壁会由于长时间加工产品而受到覆盖物(Coating)的影响,从而影响内部 控温,因此需要定期通过快速热处理后晶圆的二氧化硅厚度或者阻值来检测腔体的健康程度,决定是否进行预防性维修 (PM)。我们发现现有机台二氧化硅厚度的稳定性与Golden tool存在差距,但却无法被直接量化,且归因分析较为复 杂,于是利用JMP量化腔体的工艺能力并辅助归因分析,最终获得了比Golden Tool更好的表现。我们首先利用IMR控制 图、过程表现图以及目标图可视化了腔体的工艺能力,随后通过计算过程能力指数以及稳定指数清晰地量化了腔体的工 艺能力。随后,利用多因子模型分析探究了现有机台与Golden tool之间WtW以及WiW均一性的差别。利用XBar-S控制 图、过程能力图对比了现有机台与Golden tool二氧化硅厚度和退火后阻值的表现,显示退火后阻值均一性远优于 Golden tool,更稳定更有能力,因此可以排除机台硬件的因素。再经过进一步的分析后,发现此种膜厚的变化在 Golden tool也潜在存在。在经过工艺调试后,二氧化硅厚度的稳定性得到了极大的改善,并且调试过后的阻值均一性、 稳定性与工艺调试前匹配一致。过程表现图、目标图以及过程能力指数、稳定指数的对比,也同样显示出此种工艺调试 的效果切实可行。
Thursday, May 30, 2024
NA
表面粗糙度是半导体和显示器行业中衡量缺陷程度的关键指标,这是因为表面粗糙度会降低器件的电学性能且 影响器件使用寿命。在加工过程中,造成表面粗糙度工艺失效的原因可能各不相同,但由于缺乏能全面评估与 分析表面粗糙度指标的有效模型,使我们在改进工艺方面面临巨大挑战。 本项目旨在建立 JMP 分析包,将表面粗糙度测量指标与非正态分布模型建立联系,以便进行高效的根本原因 分析和工艺调整。 本项目使用 JMP Random Simulation平台生成粗糙度 Z-profile 数据并分为六种非正态分布模型:(1) normal; (2) uniform; (3) heavy tail; (4) right skewed; (5) bimodal; (6) outliers (3%). 计算了五 个表面粗糙度测量指标(Ra, Rz, Rp, Rv, Rk)和八个描述分布性的统计参数。比较了不同的clustering聚类方 法,包括Hierarchical Cluster, K-means Cluster, Normal Mixtures, Cluster Variables, Multivariate Correlation, Principle Components Analysis和 Model Driven Control Charts,看它们是否能有效地将 六个非正态分布模型分为轻尾聚类和离散点,并将 13 个变量分为峰值聚类、非对称聚类和轻尾聚类。有效区 分并预测表面粗糙度测量指标与非正态分布模型之间的关系。 JMP 表面粗糙度Data Mining项目能有效地检测工艺失效原因,进而缩短了工艺调试时间。此外,我们还在公 司内部搭建了一个强大的跨部门 JMP 表面粗糙度分析团队,为整个应用材料公司建立数据库(粗糙度、原始 Z-轮廓、粗糙度衡量、工艺调整)和开发预测模型。
表面粗糙度是半导体和显示器行业中衡量缺陷程度的关键指标,这是因为表面粗糙度会降低器件的电学性能且 影响器件使用寿命。在加工过程中,造成表面粗糙度工艺失效的原因可能各不相同,但由于缺乏能全面评估与 分析表面粗糙度指标的有效模型,使我们在改进工艺方面面临巨大挑战。 本项目旨在建立 JMP 分析包,将表面粗糙度测量指标与非正态分布模型建立联系,以便进行高效的根本原因 分析和工艺调整。 本项目使用 JMP Random Simulation平台生成粗糙度 Z-profile 数据并分为六种非正态分布模型:(1) normal; (2) uniform; (3) heavy tail; (4) right skewed; (5) bimodal; (6) outliers (3%). 计算了五 个表面粗糙度测量指标(Ra, Rz, Rp, Rv, Rk)和八个描述分布性的统计参数。比较了不同的clustering聚类方 法,包括Hierarchical Cluster, K-means Cluster, Normal Mixtures, Cluster Variables, Multivariate Correlation, Principle Components Analysis和 Model Driven Control Charts,看它们是否能有效地将 六个非正态分布模型分为轻尾聚类和离散点,并将 13 个变量分为峰值聚类、非对称聚类和轻尾聚类。有效区 分并预测表面粗糙度测量指标与非正态分布模型之间的关系。 JMP 表面粗糙度Data Mining项目能有效地检测工艺失效原因,进而缩短了工艺调试时间。此外,我们还在公 司内部搭建了一个强大的跨部门 JMP 表面粗糙度分析团队,为整个应用材料公司建立数据库(粗糙度、原始 Z-轮廓、粗糙度衡量、工艺调整)和开发预测模型。
量具重复性和再现性(GRR)广泛用于评估测量仪器的精度。然而,GRR分析在工程工作中往往被忽视。因此, 为了提高工程质量和效率,必须实施系统的GRR研究。本文重点介绍了GRR在应用材料量测机台和工艺机优化 中的创新应用,并成功解决了客户的HVP。 1: EPI电阻率测量工具的GRR分析:电阻率(RS)是EPI薄膜的关键参数,当前测量系统的稳定性严重影响 EPI工艺的鉴定和开发。经过GRR分析,P/T ratio为 172%(>30%)。后续分析表明,GRR 性能不佳的原 因是工具测量重复性差。接下来对不同时间测试的parts进行Pair-T 测试并创造性使用IMR图对晶圆内外圈的 电阻进行分组分析后,发现重复性差的原因是晶圆在测试过程退化以及晶圆内外氧化层厚度和电荷均匀性不 同,而这总差异是由当前RS测量系统造成的。基于以上实验分析,优化测量工具的改进方案提出,后续的优化 正在进行中。 2: GRR在晶片光学检测设备捕获率(CR)监控方面的应用:目前晶片光学检测设备捕获率监控方法没有被 qualify。因此,采用 GRR 分析来qualify当前监测方法有效性和工具在月保期间的漂移十分必要。结果表 明:当前的监控方法是有效的(P/T=17%),机台在月保期间没有漂移问题。项目同时对P/T ratio较大(> 10%)的根本原因进行了分析。结果表明:由于机台自身的能力限制,机台对特定的100nm 突起和侵入缺陷 检测上存在检测重复性问题。通过这项研究发现:仅对缺陷数量进行GRR分析不足以监测当前机台性能,需要 对最具挑战性的缺陷类型进行Attribute GRR分析,这将是学检测设备性能监测的新方向。 3:测量时间对二氧化硅厚度影响的GRR分析:热氧化产生的二氧化硅厚度会随着时间的推移而增加,如果测 量时间选择不当,会严重影响测量的结果。经过GRR 分析发现,目前的测量时间间隔和方式满足要求(P/T ratio=9%)。然后进一步对提高工艺规格的可能行进行了研究,结果表明:在当前的测量GRR能力下,工艺规 格可以进一步提高,缩小到原来的40%,而 此时P/T ratio可以保持在15%。最后,通过 ICC、P/T 和 Cp 图表平台,开发了一种持续改进流程和GRR能力的系统方法,为持续优化GRR和工艺提供了指导。 GRR项目的成功实施,使整个团队认识到GRR在测量工具监测和工艺优化中的重要性,并且根据以上项目的研 究,团队制定了GRR BKM实施的改进计划,为提高项目的质量和效率奠定了坚实的基础
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Executive Briefing Center 150
The semiconductor manufacturing industry stands on the brink of a transformative era, powered by advanced analytical techniques. This presentation delves into the application of predictive modeling and diagnostic analysis within JMP software to significantly enhance manufacturing outcomes, particularly during the crucial early sort and class test phases. By leveraging comprehensive parametric data collected across various stages of the semiconductor production process, we embark on a journey to refine the prediction of unit-level pass/fail outcomes and unearth the underlying causes of potential defects. Our study highlights the strategic use of JMP’s predictive modeling capabilities to accurately forecast the final system-level test status of semiconductor products. This approach not only allows for early detection of issues but also facilitates the implementation of corrective measures in a timely manner, thus ensuring higher yield rates and superior product quality. In parallel, diagnostic analysis within JMP offers a deep dive into the data, enabling manufacturers to identify and address root causes of failures across the intricate web of production processes. This presentation showcases real-world applications of these JMP features, demonstrating their pivotal role in streamlining semiconductor manufacturing workflows. See how predictive modeling and diagnostic analysis can be effectively employed to optimize production outcomes, reduce costs, and enhance product reliability. Join us in exploring the cutting-edge analytical strategies that promise to redefine the future of semiconductor manufacturing.
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Executive Briefing Center 8
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Executive Briefing Center 8
Once you’ve learned how easy it is to design an experiment in JMP, you never look at the world around you the same. Everything becomes an opportunity for an experiment! This presentation uses a practical example to demonstrate the process of design of experiments (DOE), including designing the experiment, modeling the results, and optimizing the inputs to provide the most desirable output. Attendees at last year’s Discovery conference were treated to an evening of unique fun: hitting glow-in-the-dark golf balls on the driving range at Indian Wells Golf Resort. The driving range has Toptracer technology that monitors each shot. Total distance, carry, ball speed, launch angle, and curve are some of the variables reported with each shot. A driving range that provides so much data provided a perfect opportunity to design an experiment using JMP! After an evening with fellow JMP users and friends, an experiment was designed using the Custom Designer in JMP. The design took only minutes to create. Input variables based on the golf stance setup were used in the design. These included variables such as grip, club head alignment, stance width, and ball location. The designed experiment was executed on the driving range, a model was created, and optimum settings to create the longest and straightest shot were discovered. The modeling and optimization were completed in minutes, while still on the driving range! This allowed for confirmation runs to immediately be performed. The benefits were later transferred the golf course as well.