The oxidized organo silane film can also be used as an etch stop or an intermetal dielectric layer for fabricating dual damascene structures. |
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The team used a conventional damascene process to deposit the copper metal in the grooves of a dielectric material carried on 250 mm wafers. |
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He also has the finest collection of Meiji art outside Japan, as well as Spanish damascene metalwork and Swedish textiles. |
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A process for creating a dual damascene opening, in a composite insulator layer, to be used to accommodate a dual damascene copper structure, has been developed. |
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Small oblique damascene lines in gold make up the background of the whole piece. |
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The barrel is decorated with three relief ribs and silver damascene flowers and vines and two gold punches. |
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Thus, in the first half of the nineteenth century, Eusebio Zuloaga travelled through much of Europe to learn techniques of chiselling and enamel, which over time became the school of damascene Eibarrés. |
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In line with the style of damascene khan in general, it has two floors. |
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Therefore damaskeen, damascene and similar words are also to be rejected as Arabic borrowings. |
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Any of these contains far more information about Indian and damascene steels than appears in the entire surviving literature of classical Greece and Rome. |
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Throughout Damascene society, broken promises brought shame, dishonor, and various forms of ostracism and censure. |
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No matter how many conversions you may encounter on your Damascene road, I have no intention of being part of your journey ever again. |
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Far from representing a Damascene conversion, his statements reveal the underlying continuity of his plans. |
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Off a tiny lane lined with tailors' shops, this traditional Damascene mansion overlooks an atmospheric courtyard. |
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Amalric immediately rode to Banyas where he met with Damascene representatives. |
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But at least the battle, coupled with ugly weather, forced the Damascene army to return home as well. |
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The Damascene conversion we have witnessed in recent days has not convinced everybody. |
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He describes the Damascene moment when he decided to build the village like a celestial visitation. |
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Our more recent encounter was over all too quickly, but even that Damascene moment has had a wider impact. |
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The credit goes to Michael Craig Martin and his Damascene vision that the British aversion to modernism was based on its lack of subject. |
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Companies, of course, say that they really have undergone a Damascene conversion to global virtue, profit impact or not. |
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But shortly after his retirement he underwent a Damascene moment when he suddenly realised that all he wanted to do was paint. |
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It was a Damascene experience from which she never looked back, and her return to the States could only yield a drab comparison. |
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Over recent years, Mr Bates has experienced something of a Damascene conversion, swapping his right-wing posture for that of a social liberal. |
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So, anyway, seeing that notice was a kind of Damascene event for me. |
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I doubt if this will effect a Damascene conversion of Mr Williams. |
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His Damascene moment came in 1987, during a ten-day trip to California. |
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The following Monday they will meet on one of the better streets in a Damascene shopping district. |
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The fate of Aleppo rested heavy on Damascene minds and the citizens drove Al-Nasir out of the city, then sent their unconditional surrender to the advancing Mongols. |
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It was a Damascene scene with a unique Andalusian ornamentation. |
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The lecture hall was furnished as a 19th-century Damascene reception hall, a masterpiece of late decoration and ornamentation in its own right. |
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Damascene gossip has it that Maher intimidates even his older brother, the president of Syria. |
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The next day, there are more girls than usual on a specific Damascene shopping street. |
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It was in Mali where the Damascene slave Arab girl was encountered by Ibn Battuta. |
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Sitting in Santa Fe's remarkably informal Roundhouse, as the state capitol is nicknamed in homage to old Navajo hogans, she describes her conversion to Republicanism as a Damascene moment. |
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An Arab Damascene girl was a slave to a king in Mali who was encountered by Ibn Battuta. |
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