Title: Vapor Deposition VD
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10- Vapor Deposition (VD)
- Vapor deposition refers to any process in which
materials in a vapor state are condensed through
condensation, chemical reaction, or conversion to
form a solid material. These processes are used
to form coatings to alter the mechanical,
electrical, thermal, optical, corrosion
resistance, and wear properties of the
substrates. They are also used to form
free-standing bodies, films, and fibers and to
infiltrate fabric to form composite materials.
Vapor deposition processes usually take place
within a vacuum chamber. There are two categories
of vapor deposition processes -
- Physical vapor deposition (PVD)
- Chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
- In PVD processes, the workpiece is subjected to
plasma bombardment. In CVD processes, thermal
energy heats the gases in the coating chamber and
drives the deposition reaction.
11- Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD)
- Physical vapor deposition methods are clean, dry
vacuum deposition methods in which the coating is
deposited over the entire object simultaneously,
rather than in localized areas. All reactive PVD
hard coating processes combine -
- A method for depositing the metal
- Combination with an active gas, such as nitrogen,
oxygen, or methane - Plasma bombardment of the substrate to ensure a
dense, hard coating. - PVD methods differ in the means for producing the
metal vapor and the details of plasma creation.
The primary PVD methods are ion plating, ion
implantation, sputtering, and laser surface
alloying.
12- Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)
- CVD is a widely used method for depositing thin
films of a large variety of materials.
Applications of CVD range from the fabrication of
microelectronic devices to the deposition of
protective coatings. In a typical CVD process,
reactant gases (often diluted in a carrier gas)
at room temperature enter the reaction chamber.
The gas mixture is heated as it approaches the
deposition surface, heated radiatively or placed
upon a heated substrate. Depending on the process
and operating conditions, the reactant gases may
undergo homogeneous chemical reactions in the
vapor phase before striking the surface. There is
a great variety of chemical vapor deposition
processes such as - atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition
(APCVD) low pressure chemical vapor deposition
(LPCVD) plasma assisted (enhanced) chemical
vapor deposition (PACVD, PECVD) PECVD Process -
Institute for Semiconductor Electronics
photochemical vapor deposition (PCVD) laser
chemical vapor deposition (LCVD) metal-organic
chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) MOCVD
Definitions - MOCVD.com chemical beam epitaxy
(CBE) chemical vapor infiltration (CVI)
13- The PVD process advantages versus the CVD
process - The PVD process is conducted at lower
temperatures (180oC to 500oC). The low PVD
processing temperatures mean that nearly all tool
materials can be coated without concern for
softening or distortion. - The PVD process does not use any hazardous
materials which makes the process environmentally
friendly. - The PVD process is highly energy efficient.
- The high degree of ion energy ensures excellent
adhesion.
14The Cathodic Arc Vapor Deposition
- Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD)
- The PVD process is defined as the creation of
vapors in a vacuum from solid material sources
and their subsequent condensation onto a
substrate. The Cathodic Arc Vapor Deposition
method, in this method the source metal is
simultaneously evaporated in microscopically
small areas and the vapor particles are ionized
and accelerated all in one single work stage.
15CVD
16Sputtering
17- Pulsed-laser deposition (PLD) has gained a great
deal of attention in the past few years for its
ease of use and success in depositing materials
of complex stoichiometry. PLD was the first
technique used to successfully deposit a
superconducting YBa2Cu3O7-d thin film. Since that
time, many materials that are normally difficult
to deposit by other methods, especially
multi-element oxides, have been successfully
deposited by PLD. -
- The main advantage of PLD derives from the laser
material removal mechanism PLD relies on a
photon interaction to create an ejected plume of
material from any target. The vapor (plume) is
collected on a substrate placed a short distance
from the target. Though the actual physical
processes of material removal are quite complex,
one can consider the ejection of material to
occur due to rapid explosion of the target
surface due to superheating. Unlike thermal
evaporation, which produces a vapor composition
dependent on the vapor pressures of elements in
the target material, the laser-induced expulsion
produces a plume of material with stoichiometry
similar to the target. It is generally easier to
obtain the desired film stoichiometry for
multi-element materials using PLD than with other
deposition technologies.
18- Main Advantages of PLDThe main advantages of
Pulsed Laser Deposition are - conceptually simple a laser beam vaporizes a
target surface, producing a film with the same
composition as the target. - versatile many materials can be deposited in a
wide variety of gases over a broad range of gas
pressures. - cost-effective one laser can serve many vacuum
systems. - fast high quality samples can be grown reliably
in 10 or 15 minutes. - scalable as complex oxides move toward volume
production.
19- Mechanisms of PLDThe principle of pulsed laser
deposition, in contrast to the simplicity of the
system set-up, is a very complex physical
phenomenon. It does not only involve the physical
process of the laser-material interaction of the
impact of high-power pulsed radiation on solid
target, but also the formation plasma plume with
high energetic species and even the transfer of
the ablated material through the plasma plume
onto the heated substrate surface. Thus the thin
film formation process in PLD generally can be
divided into the following four stages. 1. Laser
radiation interaction with the target 2. Dynamic
of the ablation materials 3. Deposition of the
ablation materials with the substrate 4.
Nucleation and growth of a thin film on the
substrate surface - Each stage in PLD is critical to the formation of
quality epitaxial crystalline, stoichiometric,
uniform and small surface roughness thin film.
20- In the first stage, the laser beam is focused
onto the surface of the target. At sufficiently
high flux densities and short pulse duration, all
elements in the target are rapidly heated up to
their evaporation temperature. Materials are
dissociated from the target surface and ablated
out with stoichiometry as in the target. The
instantaneous ablation rate is highly dependent
on the fluences of the laser shining on the
target. The ablation mechanisms involve many
complex physical phenomena such as collisional,
thermal, and electronic excitation, exfoliation
and hydrodynamics. - During the second stage the emitted materials
tend to move towards the substrate according to
the laws of gas-dynamic and show the forward
peaking phenomenon. R. K. Singh reported that the
spatial thickness varied as a function of cos q.
The spot size of the laser and the plasma
temperature have significant effects on the
deposited film uniformity. The target-to-substrate
distance is another parameter that governs the
angular spread of the ablated materials. Hanabusa
also found that a mask placed close to the
substrate could reduce the spreading. - The third stage is important to determine the
quality of thin film. The ejected high-energy
species impinge onto the substrate surface and
may induce various type of damage to the
substrate. The mechanism of the interaction is
illustrated in the following figure. These
energetic species sputter some of the surface
atoms and a collision region is formed between
the incident flow and the sputtered atoms. Film
grows after a thermalized region is formed. The
region serves as a source for condensation of
particles. When the condensation rate is higher
than the rate of particles supplied by the
sputtering, thermal equilibrium condition can be
reached quickly and film grows on the substrate
surface at the expenses of the direct flow of the
ablation particles and the thermal equilibrium
obtained.
21- Nucleation-and-growth of crystalline films
depends on many factors such as the density,
energy, ionization degree, and the type of the
condensing material, as well as the temperature
and the physico-chemical properties of the
substrate. The two main thermodynamic parameters
for the growth mechanism are the substrate
temperature T and the supersaturation Dm. They
can be related by the following equationDm kT
ln(R/Re)where k is the Boltzmann constant, R is
the actual deposition rate, and Re is the
equilibrium value at the temperature T.The
nucleation process depends on the interfacial
energies between the three phases present -
substrate, the condensing material and the vapor.
The minimum-energy shape of a nucleus is like a
cap. The critical size of the nucleus depending
on the driving force, i.e. the deposition rate
and the substrate temperature. For the large
nuclei, a characteristic of small
supersaturation, they create isolate patches
(islands) of the film on the substrate which
subsequently grow and coalesce together. As the
supersaturation increases, the critical nucleus
shrinks until its height reaches on atomic
diameter and its shape is that of a
two-dimensional layer. For large supersaturation,
the layer-by-layer nucleation will happen for
incompletely wetted foreign substrates.The
crystalline film growth depends on the surface
mobility of the adatom (vapour atoms). Normally,
the adatom will diffuse through several atomic
distances before sticking to a stable position
within the newly formed film. The surface
temperature of the substrate determines the
adatom's surface diffusion ability. High
temperature favours rapid and defect free crystal
growth, whereas low temperature or large
supersaturation crystal growth may be overwhelmed
by energetic particle impingement, resulting in
disordered or even amorphous structures.Metev and
Veiko suggested that the N99, the mean thickness
at which the growing, thin and discontinuous film
reaches continuity is given by the formulaN99
A(1/R)1/3 exp (-1/T),where R is the deposition
rate (supersaturation related) and T is the
temperature of the substrate and A is a constant
related to the materials.In the PLD process, due
to the short laser pulsed duration (10 ns) and
hence the small temporal spread (lt10 ms) of the
ablated materials, the deposition rate can be
enormous (10 mm/s). Consequently a
layer-by-layer nucleation is favoured and
ultra-thin and smooth film can be produced. In
addition the rapid deposition of the energetic
ablation species helps to raise the substrate
surface temperature. In this respect PLD tends to
demand a lower substrate temperature for
crystalline film growth.Last edited04/28/2001
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26Typical steps in making thin films emission of
particles from source ( heat, high voltage . .
.) transport of particles to substrate (free vs.
directed) condensation of particles on substrate
(how do they condense ?) Simple model
27- Kinetic Theory of Gasses
- Pressure and Vacuum
- Many thin film processes involve vacuum.
- "vacuum" lower molecular density than in our
atmosphere - results in a lower pressure of gas - so typically
measure this - MANY different units are commonly used.
- Ideal Gas Law
- much of vacuum technology can be understood from
the ideal gas law - more correctly the equation of state of an ideal
gas - PV NkT
- where
- P absolute pressure
- V volume
- N number of gas molecules
- k Boltzmann's constant
- T gas temperature (in K)
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29- Kinetic Theory of Gasses - Gas Flow
- Assumptions
- Gasses are composed of a very large number of
very small particles. - "very small" gt very small compared to the
distance between particles - Particles are always moving rapidly in a straight
line. - Particles exert no forces except during
collisions. - Freeze other molecules and examine motion of one
molecule
30What is the distribution of velocities
? determine most properties from this Maxwell
velocity distribution
higher T shifts curve to right broadens and
lowers it lighter mass shifts curve to right
broadens and lowers it
31- How fast are the molecules moving ?
-
- k Boltzmann's constant
- T temperature of the gas (K)
- m mass of the molecule
-
- Not surprising
- The hotter it is, the faster they move.
- The lighter they are, the faster they move.
32 33- How far does a molecule travel before it collides
with another molecule ? - l mean free path
- d diameter of a molecule
- n number per unit volume
- For air at room temperature, the mean free path
can be expressed as
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35- Gas Flow
- three regimes
- viscous flow
- mean free path ltlt size of the system (D)
- gas - gas collisions dominate
- molecules "drag" one another along in the flow
- when D(cm) P (Torr) gt 0.5
- for air at room temperature
- intermediate (transition) flow
- mean free path comparable to size of system (D)
- complicated flow
- molecular flow
- mean free path gtgt size of system
- gas - wall collisions dominate
- molecules move independently of one another
- when D(cm) P (Torr) lt 0.005
- for air at room temperature
36- Kinetic Theory of Gasses - Interactions with
surface - How many gas molecules collide with a surface
each second ? - F 0.25 n vrms
- F collision rate of gas molecules
- n number of molecules per unit volume
- vrms average velocity of a gas molecule
- In terms of things we can directly measure
- F will be in molecules/ cm2 - sec
- P is the pressure in torr
- M is the molecular weight of the gas molecule
- T is the temperature in K
- For example
- Nitrogen (N2) has a molecular weight M 28. If
we have a chamber with nitrogen at room
temperature (293 K) and a pressure of - 1 x 10-7 torr
- F 3.88 x 1013 molecules/cm2 - sec
37- How long does it take to form a single complete
layer of gas on a surface ? - tm time to form a monolayer (in seconds)
- n number of molecules per unit volume
- vrms average velocity of the molecules
- d diameter of a molecule
- For air at room temperature, we can express this
as - tm 1.86 x 10-6 / P
- where P is the pressure in torr.
38- Vapor Pressure
- in equilibrium, a certain pressure ot atoms
(vapor pressure) will exist above solid surfaces
Do not make high vacuum chambers out of Zinc. If
you heat it to 200 C (476 K) the vapor pressure
of Zn is 6 x 10-6 torr.
39- Physical Vapor Deposition
- Evaporation
- Ion Plating
- Sputter Deposition
- Process
- source material -gt gaseous state
- transport source atoms to substrate
- deposit atoms on substrate
40Evaporation Overview
1. Atoms to gas state heat source until Pvapor gt
10-4 torr some sources sublime from solid, others
evaporate from liquid compounds may break apart
produce films with different stoichiometry SiO2
--gt SiO2-x metal alloy sources do not give same
alloy in film components evaporate independently
based on each separate vapor pressure could try
to adjust source composition. BUT composition of
alloy source changes with time
41Describe evaporation rate (flux) from kinetic
theory
- where
- Pvap vapor pressure (Torr)
- M molecular weight
- cm2 gt area of source
- can convert this to mass flux
at Pvap 10-2 torr, mass flux 10-4 grams/cm2
sec
42- 2. Transport to surface
- line of sight deposition
- want to avoid collisions in gas
- long mean free path
- good vacuum
- let h source to substrate distance
- for h of 10 - 100 cm, want P lt 10-5 torr
- bigger h gt lower P
- Particles have energies comparable to evaporation
temperature - 1000 C is about 0.2 eV
- distribution of evaporant
- depends on geometry of source
- consider 2 geometries
- Point Source
q tilt of dAS from radial direction projection
of dAS onto sphere of radius r dAScosq dMS
mass hitting dAS Me total
43 distribution depends on r and q
44- Surface Source
- For many materials, this is equivalent to Knudsen
cell
45- if directions are random, only dAS cosq / 4¹r2
are headed in right direction - integrate over time and source
- now distribution depends on horizontal position
as well - Experimentally observe
463. Deposition onto substrate Consider film
thickness and purity THICKNESS since dM/dAs
depends on r, q, f, so does film thickness (d)
consider flat substrate, perpendicular to source
surface source
surface source has slightly poorer thickness
uniformity
47- better uniformity
- decrease sample size (l)
- increase distance to substrate (h)
- need bigger chamber
- need better vacuum
- wastes evaporant
- use multiple sources
- move substrate during deposition
- use rotating mask to reduce evaporant near center
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49- FILM PURITY
- PROBLEM contamination from source materials
- SOLUTION use pure materials (99.99999)
- PROBLEM contamination from source or substrate
heaters - SOLUTION use materials with low diffusion
- see tables of crucibles for each material
- online tables
- http//www.lesker.com/mfiles/m_tech_deposition_tec
hniques.html
50SOLUTION better vacuum higher deposition
rate note P and Tg are not independent