CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS This Application is related to the following Applications/Patents, all assigned to the assignee of the subject Application:
SEALED STANDARD INTERFACE APPARATUS, Inventors: George Allen Maney, Andrew William O'Sullivan, W. George Faraco, Ser. No. 635,384, Filed: July 30, 1984, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,674,939;
INTELLIGENT WAFER CARRIER, Inventors: George Allen Maney, Anthony Charles Bonora, Mihir Parikh, Ser. No. 686,444, Filed: Dec. 24, 1984, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,674,939;
DOOR ACTIVATED RETAINER, Inventors: George Allen Maney, W. George Faraco, Mihir Parikh, Ser. No. 686,443, Filed: Dec. 24, 1984, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,815,912;
LONG ARM MANIPULATOR FOR STANDARD MECHANICAL INTERFACE APPARATUS, Inventors: Anthony Charles Bonora, Andrew William O'Sullivan, Ser. No. 769,709, Filed: Aug. 26, 1985, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,676,709;
SHORT ARM MANIPULATOR FOR STANDARD MECHANICAL INTERFACE APPARATUS, Inventors: Anthony Charles Bonora, Ser. No. 769,850, Filed: Aug. 26, 1985, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,674,936;
CONTAINER HAVING DISPOSABLE LINERS, Inventors: Mihir Parikh, Anthony Charles Bonora, W. George Faraco, Barney H. Huang, Ser. No. 829,447, Filed: Feb. 13, 1986, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,739,882; and
SEALABLE TRANSPORTABLE CONTAINER HAVING A PARTICLE FILTERING SYSTEM, Inventors: Mihir Parikh, Anthony C. U.S. Pat. No. 4,724,874.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to standardized mechanical interface (SMIF) systems for reducing particle contamination, and more particularly to transportable containers which are sealable to prevent influence of external factors on the contentsof the containers.
2. Description of the Related Art
A standardized mechanical interface (SMIF) system has been proposed by the Hewlett-Packard Company as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,532,970 and 4,534,389. The purpose of the SMIF system is to reduce particle fluxes onto wafers. This end isaccomplished, in part, by mechanically ensuring that during transportation and storage the gaseous media (such as air or nitrogen) surrounding the wafers is essentially stationary relative to the wafers and by ensuring that particles from the ambientenvironment do not enter the immediate wafer environment. The SMIF concept is based on the realization that a small volume of controlled (with respect to motion, air flow direction and external contaminants), particle-free air provides a cleanenvironment for wafers. Further details of one proposed system are described in the article entitled "SMIF: A TECHNOLOGY FOR WAFER CASSETTE TRANSFER IN VLSI MANUFACTURING," by Mihir Parikh and Ulrich Kaempf, Solid State Technology, July 1984, pp. 111-115.
Systems of the above type are concerned with particle sizes which range from below 0.1 micrometers to above 200 micrometers. Particles with these sizes can be very damaging in semiconductor processing because of the small geometries employed infabricating semiconductor devices. Typical advanced semiconductor processes today employ geometries which are 1 micrometer and under. Unwanted contamination particles which have geometries measuring greater than 0.05 micrometers substantially interferewith 1 micrometer geometry semiconductor devices. The trend, of course, is to have smaller and smaller semiconductor processing geometries which today in research and development labs approach 0.5 micrometers and below. In the future, geometries willbecome smaller and smaller and hence smaller and smaller contamination particles become of interest.
A SMIF system has three main components: (1) minimum volume, sealed pods used for storing and transporting wafer cassettes; (2) canopies placed over cassette ports and wafer processing areas of processing equipment so that the environments insidethe pods and canopies (after having clean air sources) become miniature clean spaces; and (3) a transfer mechanism to load/unload wafer cassettes from a sealed pod without contamination of the wafers in the wafer cassette from external environments.
Wafers are stored and transported in pods, and are transferred from a pod to a piece of processing equipment in the following manner. First, a pod is placed at the interface port on top of the canopy. Each pod includes a box and a box doordesigned to mate with doors on the interface ports of the processing equipment canopies. Then, latches release the box door and the canopy port door simultaneously; the box door and the interface port door are opened simultaneously so that particleswhich may have been on the external door surfaces are trapped ("sandwiched") between the box and interface port doors. A mechanical elevator lowers the two doors, with the cassette riding on top, into the canopy covered space. A manipulator picks upthe cassette and places it onto the cassette port/elevator of the equipment. After processing, the reverse operation takes place.
The SMIF system has been proved effective by experiments using prototype SMIF components both inside and outside a clean room. The SMIF system provides at least a ten-fold improvement over the conventional handling of open cassettes inside theclean room.
Conventional SMIF pods have the potential to create particles due to physical scraping of latch mechanisms against latch surfaces. Although few particles are released during each latching operation, over the course of hundreds of processingsteps for a wafer, the number of particles created each time the SMIF pod is latched and/or unlatched may build to a significant number.
In SMIF pods utilizing conventional latching systems, scraping occurs when a latch member and a latch surface, one or both of which have a sloped surface, move from a disengaged to a fully engaged orientation. The sealing surfaces on the box andthe box door are designed to seal upon application of pressure which forces these sealing surfaces together, and thus the latch system must (a) prevent movement of the box door with respect to the box and (b) create a clamping force which forces thesealing surfaces together. The clamping force is generated by sliding the latch surface along a sloped latch member or vice versa.
Latch mechanisms on conventional SMIF pods are usually provided on the box so that the latch mechanism may alternately be used to clamp the box door to the box or to clamp the box to the port plate of a processing station. To provide this dualfunction, it is necessary to have notches or openings in the perimeter of the bottom of the box so that the latch mechanisms could move to engage either the box door or the port plate. These openings provide access points through which contaminants mayenter the "clean" environment.
In conventional SMIF pods, the latch mechanism supports the edges of the box door creating the possibility that the box door will deflect (bow or bend) under the weight of the wafers resting on the box door in addition to the sealing forces,potentially creating leaks in the seal between the box and the box door. Further, conventional latch mechanisms for SMIF pods may be subject to tampering which allows unauthorized access to the contents of the container.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide a sealable, transportable container having a latch mechanism which operates without any scraping or rubbing contact of the latch mechanism and portions of the container contacted bythe latch mechanism.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a latch mechanism which supports the box door at positions which minimize deflection (or bowing) of the box door.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a transportable container in which the latch mechanism is tamper resistant to prevent unauthorized access to the contents of the container.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a SMIF pod having a latch mechanism which is centrally operated.
These and other objects of the present invention are provided by a latch mechanism which has motion in two directions and which moves in both directions without making scraping or rubbing contact with the box or box door in the clean, interiorregion of the box. The first direction of motion moves the latch mechanism from a first retracted or bypass position, where the box and box door are free to move with respect to each other so that the pod may be opened or closed, to a second or extendedposition, Where the latch mechanism prevents the box door from moving with respect to the box. The sealing surfaces of the box and the box door make sealable contact when the box door is moved in a sealing direction so that the sealing surface of thebox door moves towards and contacts the sealing surface of the box. The second direction of motion of the latch mechanism is such that the latch mechanism moves the box door in the sealing direction with respect to the box. Further, the latch mechanismsupports the box door at points spaced from the periphery of the box door.
A sealable, transportable container in accordance with the present invention comprises a box having a first sealing surface, a box door having a second sealing surface adapted to form a seal with said first sealing surface when said box door ismoved in a sealing direction with respect to said box, and latch means for motion in a first direction between a first position which allows motion of said box door with respect to said box, and a second position, which allows motion of said box doorwith respect to said box, and a second position, which limits the motion of said box door with respect to said box, without scraping contact between said latch means and said box or said box door in said interior region, and for motion in a seconddirection between said second position and a third position to move said box door in the sealing direction to bring said first and second sealing surfaces into contact without scraping contact between said latch means and said box or said box door insaid interior region.
A standardized mechanical interface (SMIF) pod in accordance with the present invention comprises a box having an interior region, a first sealing surface, and at least two latch engaging surfaces; a box door having a second sealing surface whichsealably mates with said first sealing surface when said box door is moved in a sealing direction with respect to said box to isolate said interior region from ambient pressure conditions; a latch member provided in said box door, having at least two boxengagement portions, and being movable between a disengaged position, an engaging position and an engaged position, whereby the latch member is adapted to move from the disengaged position to the engaging position without contacting said box and wherebymovement of said latch member from the engaging position to the engaged position causes said box engagement portions of said latch member to contact said latch engaging surfaces without scraping said latch member against said latch engaging surfaces andto move said box door in the sealing direction; and two-stage cam means for moving said latch member from the disengaged position to the engaging position in a first independent stage of operation and for moving said latch plate from the engagingposition to the engaged position in a second independent stage of operation.
These and other objects and advantages of the invention will appear more clearly from the following description in which the preferred embodiments of the invention have been set forth in detail in conjunction with the drawings.
BRIEFDESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1A is an isometric view of a processing station having a canopy for receiving a SMIF pod;
FIG. 1B is a cutaway side view of the processing station of FIG. 1;
FIG. 2A is an isometric view of a SMIF pod and portions of a port assembly for receiving the SMIF pod;
FIG. 2B is a sectional view along line B--B of FIG. 2A;
FIG. 3 is an isometric, exploded view of a SMIF pod in accordance with the present invention;
FIGS. 4 and 5 are plan views of a latch mechanism in accordance with the present invention in first and second positions, respectively;
FIGS. 6 and 7 are plan views of a two-stage rotary cam of the latch mechanism in first and second positions, respectively;
FIG. 8A is a plan view of an interface portion of a SMIF pod box which interacts with the latch mechanism of the present invention;
FIG. 8B is a sectional view along line 8B--8B in FIG. 8A;
FIG. 8C is a sectional view along line 8C--8C in FIG. 8A;
FIG. 9 is a partial cutaway side view of the interface portion shown in FIG. 8;
FIGS. 10 and 11 are side views showing the latch mechanism of the present invention in the second position and a third position, respectively;
FIG. 12 is a plan view of the two-stage rotary cam;
FIG. 13 is a side view of the two-stage rotary cam;
FIGS. 14A and 14B are schematic, isometric views of box doors showing different deflection patterns; and
FIGS. 15A and 15B are side, isometric views of box doors showing different deflection patterns.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The present invention will be described in the context of a SMIF system for storing and transporting wafers and/or reticles. However, it is to be understood that a sealable, transportable container in accordance with the present invention may beused to store and transport many other inanimate objects as well as living objects such as laboratory animals.
The general structure of a SMIF pod and the mating of a SMIF pod with processing equipment are described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,724,874 which is hereby incorporated by reference. However, for completeness, a brief description of the disclosure isprovided herein.
FIGS. 1 and 2 illustrate a processing station 8 having a canopy 10 which is an easily removable shield that covers the wafer handing mechanism of processing equipment 12. Equipment 12 may be, for example, a photo resist applicator, mask aligner,inspection station or any similar processing equipment. The canopy 10, which is constructed of transparent plastic such as acrylic or Lexan to facilitate visual inspection and/or maintenance within the canopy 10, encloses the handling mechanisms of theprocessing equipment 12 and a holder 14, such as a wafer cassette holding wafers 6. The environment within the processing equipment is separately maintained and separately cleaned and therefore the equipment 12 need not be installed in a clean room.
A sealable, transportable container (or pod) 18 having a box (or box top) 20 having an interior region 21 and a box door 32 is mounted on the horizontal surface 22 of canopy 10 by a port assembly 24. The port assembly 24 includes a port plate26, port door 28, and an elevator assembly 30. Elevator assembly 30 transports a cassette holder 14, containing the integrated circuit wafers 16 from the interior region 21 of box 20 into the region beneath the canopy 10. In FIG. 1B, port door 28 andbox door 32 are shown in the closed position by the dotted lines. A mover assembly 34 includes a platform 36, a shaft engagement device 38 and a drive motor 40. The platform 36, extending from the elevator assembly 30, carries the port door 28, the boxdoor 32 and the holder 14 in a vertical direction. The platform 36 is attached by engagement device 38 to a vertical guide 42 of elevator assembly 30.
Typically, guide 42 includes a lead screw (not shown) and the drive motor 40 drives a gear (not shown) which engages the lead screw for driving the platform 36 up or down. When the platform 36 is driven to the closed position, the port door 2Bcloses the port opening in the canopy 10.
In a similar manner, a manipulator assembly shown generally by the numeral 44 is fastened to a platform 46 which has an engagement means 48 for engaging the vertical guide 42. Manipulator assembly 44 includes a manipulator arm 50 and anengagement head 52 adapted to engage holder 14. By vertical operation of the platforms 36 and 46 and by operation of the manipulator assembly 44, the holder 14 is moved from its position on the box door 32 to a position on the equipment station 13 (asshown by the broken lines).
FIG. 2A is an exploded view of container 18 and port assembly 24. Container 18 can be alternately pressurized or evacuated when box 21 and box door 32 are sealed together to isolate the interior region of box 21 from ambient conditions. Portplate 26 is connectable to a coaxial injector/extractor 50 at gas transfer valve 52 (FIG. 2B).
FIG. 2B shows container 18 mated to port assembly 24 of processing equipment 12. Container 18 is designed for sealably mating with the port assembly 24, and thus box 20 has first and second box top sealing surfaces 54, 56, respectively. Boxdoor 32 has a first box door sealing surface 58 for sealably mating with the first box top sealing surface 54, and gasket 55 between surfaces 54 and 58 provides a seal. Port plate 26 has first and second port plate sealing surfaces 60, 62, respectively. The first port plate sealing surface 60 sealably mates with the second box top sealing surface 56, making a second seal as gasket 57 is compressed.
Port door 28 has a first port door sealing surface 64 which sealably mates with the second port plate sealing surface 62; a third seal is provided by gasket 59. The box top 20 may include a conduit 63 defining a channel between valve 52 and theinterior space 21 of box 20. At one end of channel 66 is a filter 69 for filtering fluids (e.g., gasses) passing therethrough.
When the first, second and third seals are made, the interior space 21 of box 20 may cleaned by alternately evacuating/pressurizing the interior space 21. In order to evacuate interior space 21, injection/extractor 50 is activated to withdrawfluid from interior space 21. As the fluids are withdrawn, they pass through filter 69, through channel 66 and through a coaxial valve (not shown) of injection/extractor 50.
The port door 28 includes a latch actuating mechanism 66 having pins 70 for actuating the box door latch mechanism 80 and thereby releasing box door 32 from box 20. Wafers 16 can be moved by elevator mechanism 30 and mover assembly 34 into theproper position in the processing equipment 12 for processing without human intervention.
A latch mechanism for a SMIF pod in accordance with the present invention will be described with reference to FIGS. 3-13. In the preferred embodiment, the latch mechanism is provided in box door 32 and centrally actuated, allowing a single latchactuating mechanism to r.RTM.lease the box door 32 from the box 20. Alternatively, a latch mechanism in accordance with the present invention could be provided in box 20.
With reference to FIG. 3, box 20 includes a domed housing 90 and a ring-like engaging portion 92. Housing 90 and engaging portion 92 may be formed integrally, for example, by injection molding, or as separate components assembled to form box 20. A gasket 120, which provides the seal between box 20 and box door 32 resides in a gasket-retaining slot 122 in box door 32. In the preferred embodiment, a liner (not shown) is provided on door 32 and gasket 120 contacts the liner. The liner is aremovable element which may be formed of, for example, plastic materials which do not outgas or introduce particles, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,739,882, which is hereby incorporated by reference. The liner may also be formed of a material whichprovides the capability of dissipating or preventing the formation of static charges. Latch mechanism 80 is housed in base and latch mechanism 80 protrudes from box door 32 through windows 94 to engage latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8 (FIGS. 8-9) ofbox 20.
The two-stage rotary cam latch mechanism 80 of the present invention includes first and second latch plates 101.sub.1-2, a cam mechanism 103 pivotally mounted on box door 32, and latch plate supports 105.sub.1-6. The operation of latch mechanism80 is a two-stage operation which is illustrated in FIGS. 4-7 and 10-11. In the first stage of operation, cam mechanism 103 slides latch plates 101.sub.1-2 linearly, and in the second stage, cam mechanism 103 causes latch plates 101.sub.1-2 to pivot onlatch plate supports 105.sub.1-6.
Each latch plate 101.sub.1-2 has at least one box-engaging portion; in the preferred embodiment of the present invention, designed for use in a pod for storing and transporting 200mm wafers, each latch plate 101.sub.1-2 has two latch arms108.sub.1-2 and 108.sub.3-4, respectively. Latch arms 108.sub.1-4 each have two latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 which engage respective ones of latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8 of box 20.
The first stage of the latching operation involves moving latch plates 101.sub.1-2 from retracted (or disengaged) positions (FIG. 4) where the latch plates 101.sub.1-2 are entirely contained within box door 32 to extended (or engaging) positions(FIG. 5) where latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 extend out of box door 32 and are adjacent to latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8 of box 20. In the first stage when the latch plates 101.sub.1-2 move from the retracted position to the extended position in aplane parallel to the plane of box door 32, latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 do not contact latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8. Accordingly, there are no particles created by scraping or rubbing of the latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 against the latch engagingsurfaces 112.sub.1-8.
The second stage of the latching operation involves substantially vertical motion of latch fingers 110.sub.1-8. "Vertical motion" refers to motion in a direction perpendicular to the plane of box door 32, and to the plane of motion of latchplates 101.sub.1-2 during the first stage of the latching operation. The motion of latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 during the second stage engages latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 with respective ones of latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8, and creates a latchingand/or clamping force which sealably mates a first sealing surface of box 20 with second sealing surface of box door 32. The first sealing surface comprises knife edge 118 on box 20, and the second sealing surface comprises gasket-retaining slot 122 inbox door 32. A gasket 120 sits in gasket-retaining slot 122 and forms the seal between box 20 and box door 32. Gasket 120 is preferably fabricated from a resilient, compressible material which does not release particles when contacted and compressed byknife edge 118 or outgas. FIG. 8A illustrates engaging portion 92 of box 20 in a plan view and FIGS. 8B and 8C illustrate knife edge 118 in cross section. As discussed above, a liner may be provided between box door 32 and gasket 120.
Latch mechanism 80 resides in a cavity 124 in box door 32. Accordingly, any particles generated by the interaction of cam mechanism 103 and latch plates 101.sub.1-2 and/or latch plates 101.sub.1-2 and latch plate supports 105.sub.1-6 arecontained in cavity 124. Additionally, it is possible to add a port in box door 32 so that cavity 124 may be evacuated in order to remove any particles which are created in cavity 124.
The details of the construction and operation of cam mechanism 103 will be described with reference to FIGS. 6, 7, 10, 11, 12 and 13. Cam mechanism 103 is a two-stage cam mounted on a pivot post 130 (FIGS. 10-11); pivot post 130 is attached tothe top surface 32a of box door 32. First and second holes 132.sub.1-2 in cam mechanism 103 engage pins 70 of latch actuating mechanism 66. First and second slots 134.sub.1-2 are provided in bottom wall 32b of box door 32 to enable pins 70 to engagecam holes 132.sub.1-2.
The two stages of operation of cam mechanism 103 and latch plates 101.sub.1-2 occur as follows. In the first phase of the latching operation, cam lobes 136.sub.1-2 engage camming surfaces 138.sub.1-2 (FIGS. 6-7), respectively of latch plates101.sub.1-2. As cam mechanism 103 rotates through an angle of approximately 40.degree. from an unlatched to an intermediate position, cam lobes 136.sub.1-2 cause latch plates 101.sub.1-2 to move from the retracted to the extended position. In order tomaintain latch plates 101.sub.1-2 in a plane parallel to the plane of box door 32 during the sliding operation of the first stage of the latching operation, latch plate springs 140.sub.1-2 (FIGS. 10-11) are attached to respective ones of latch plates101.sub.1-2 and force the cam arms 109.sub.1-2 of respective ones of latch plates 101.sub.1-2 towards cam mechanism 103. The biasing force provided by springs 140 (FIGS. 10-11) causes rollers 142.sub.1-2 of respective ones of latch plates 101.sub.1-2 tocontact roller surface 144 of cam mechanism 103.
Risers 146.sub.1-2 (FIGS. 10-13) are provided on roller surface 144 of cam mechanism 103. As cam mechanism 103 rotates beyond the first 40.degree. of motion from the intermediate position to a latched position, linear motion of latch plates101.sub.1-2 ceases and rollers 142.sub.1-2 begin riding up respective ones of risers 146.sub.1-2. As rollers 142.sub.1-2 ride up risers 146.sub.1-2, latch plates 101.sub.1-2 pivot about an axis defined by the contact points of latch plate 101.sub.1 anda first group of latch plate supports 105.sub.1-3 and of latch plate 101.sub.2 and a second group of latch plate supports 105.sub.4-6. The pivoting motion of latch plates 101.sub.1-2 causes latch fingers 110.sub.1-8 to move substantially verticallywithout scraping motion of latch fingers 110 and latch surfaces 112.sub.1-8. For the latch mechanism of the present invention, where latch plate supports 105.sub.1-6 are approximately 21/4" from fingers 110 when the latch plates 101.sub.1-2 are in theintermediate position and move vertically approximately 0.054" from the intermediate to the latched position, experimental results have shown that latch fingers 110 undergo horizontal motion of only approximately 0.001". This minimal amount ofhorizontal motion prevents generation of particles by scraping.
In the unlatching operation rollers 142.sub.1-2 ride back down risers 146.sub.1-2 as cam mechanism 103 is rotated in the opposite direction. Springs 140.sub.1-2 provide the biasing force to keep rollers 142.sub.1-2 in contact with risers146.sub.1-2. After rollers 140 come in contact with roller surface 144, cam lobes 136.sub.1-2 engage cam surfaces 138.sub.1-2 of latch plates 101.sub.1-2 and move latch plates 101.sub.1-2 from the extended to the retracted position.
When latch plates 101 and cam mechanism 103 are in the latched position, cam lobes 136.sub.1-2 are aligned With the axis of rotation of cam mechanism 103. Accordingly, any force tending to move the latch plates 101.sub.1-2 from the extended tothe retracted position is transmitted along cam lobes 136.sub.1-2 through the rotational axis of cam mechanism 103 without creating any torque which would rotate cam mechanism 103 from the latched position. Thus, cam lobes 136.sub.1-2 physicallymaintain latch plates 101.sub.1-2 in the extended position both during the second stage of the latching operation and when the latch mechanism is in the latched orientation, preventing the latch from releasing under the application of linear impacts.
The second stage of the latching operation provides a strong clamping force to engage knife edge 118 with gasket 120 in order to effect a seal which prevents external conditions from affecting the interior region 21 of pod 18. For example, thisseal prevents particulate matter and moisture from entering interior region 21. Further, this seal allows the interior region 21 to be evacuated and back-filled with an insert gas. The clamping force is approximately one (1) pound per linear inch. This clamping force is regulated by a slight bowing or spring action of latch plates 101.sub.1-2. This bowing is designed into latch plates 101.sub.1-2. Which are formed of 0.125-inch thick aluminum alloy, for example, 7075-T6.
In order to prevent localized bending or deflection of the box door 32, due to the application of the clamping force, the clamping loads are distributed. One aspect to the distribution of the clamping force is the use of multiple latch arms108.sub.1-4 for each latch plate 101.sub.1-2. Latch arms 108.sub.1-4 are positioned at points which are half the distance from the center to the end of the edge of the box door. As shown in FIG. 5, for a box door having a width W, latch arms are adistance approximately W/2 from each other and a distance approximately W/4 from the edge of the box door.
To strengthen the latch engaging areas of the box 20, which is usually formed of plastic, a post 113 is provided between each pair of latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8. To accommodate post 113, each latch arm 108.sub.1-4 has latch fingers110.sub.1-8 separated by a notch. Post 113 serves to decrease the unsupported length of the latch engaging surfaces 112.sub.1-8 by a factor of approximately one third and to increase the shear area by a factor of 2.
FIGS. 14A and 15A diagrammatically illustrate the deflection D.sub.A of a box door supported only at its edges, i.e., at support points 200.sub.1-4 and having a load (FW.sub.1-n) created by the wafers stored in the pod uniformly distributed overthe area of the box door. In addition, a sealing force FS is applied at the periphery of the box door. Any section of the box door along length L can be treated as a beam and the maximum deflection D.sub.A at the center varies with L.sup.3. Thedeflections and stresses in loaded beams are known phenomena discussed in, for example, MACHINERY'S HANDBOOK, Obery and Jones, Industrial Press, 1963. If the amount of deflection D.sub.A is too large, the seal between the box door and the box may bebroken.
FIGS. 14B and 15B diagrammatically illustrate that the maximum deflection D.sub.B of a box door in accordance with the present invention is greatly reduced with respect to the deflection D.sub.A of a box door supported only at its edges. In thebox door of the present invention, the load of the wafers (FW) and the sealing force (FS) on the box door is supported at the positions of latch plate supports 105.sub.1-6. Latch plate supports 105.sub.1-6 are located a distance A from the edge (orperiphery) of the box door. Treating each section of the box door along length L as a beam, the maximum deflection D.sub.B at the center varies with B.sup.2 (B.sup.2 -A.sup.2)/L. The application of the sealing forces FS to a cantilevered portion of thebox door counters the deflection of the box door caused by the weight of the wafers. It has been determined that D.sub.B for the box door of the present invention is approximately one tenth (1/10) of D.sub.A. The distribution of latch plate supports105 along the width of box door 32 prevents deflections along the width.
The latch mechanism 80 of the present invention does not require any interruptions of the perimeter of the base of box 20, thereby removing areas of access to the "clean" environment within box 20. Further, the entire latch mechanism iscontained in box door 32 which facilitates cleaning of box 20. Tampering with latch mechanism 80 is virtually eliminated, due to the fact that forces intended to move the latch plates 101 from the extended to the retracted position do not rotate cammechanism 103 and due to the fact that cam mechanism 103 is contained within cavity 124 of box door 32 so that unauthorized access would require rotating cam mechanism 103 by inserting an implement into cam holes 132. Accordingly, access can be limitedby the use of an interlock system which must be activated and/or mechanical keys Which must be inserted before rotation of cam mechanism 103 is possible.
The many features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the Description of the Preferred Embodiments and the Drawings. Accordingly, the following claims are intended to cover all modificationsand equivalents falling within the scope of the invention.
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