Title: Deposition of thin films by sputtering method
1Student Presentation of FYS-9310 Material Science
of Semiconductor
Deposition of thin films by sputtering method
Feri Adriyanto
PhD student Microsystems and Nanotechnology
Laboratory Department of Physics, University of
Oslo
2Outline
- Fundamental of sputtering
- Sputtering zinc oxide thin film
3Outline
- Fundamental of sputtering
- Sputtering zinc oxide thin film
4Mechanism of sputtering ?
Interactions of ions with surfaces
The ion impact may set up a series of collisions
between atoms of the target, possibly leading to
the ejection of some of these atoms. This
ejection process is known as sputtering.
The removal of surface atoms due to energetic
particle bombardment
http//www.postech.ac.kr/mse/tfxs/2003_2/chapter3.
pdf
5Sputter yield deposition
Sputtering Ions are accelerated into target Some
of the surface atoms are sputtered off of the
target. These sputtered atoms flow across the
chamber to where they are deposited
Measure of efficiency of sputtering
The sputter yield depends on (a) the energy of
the incident ions (b) the masses of the ions and
target atoms (c) the binding energy of atoms in
the solid and (d) the incident angle of ions.
6Sputtering Alloy Targets
- Slow diffusion mixing in solids (sputtering)
- target reaches steady state
- surface composition balances sputter yield
Suiqiong Li, student presentation of ELEC 7730
7Advantages Disadvantages of sputter deposition
Disadvantages
Advantages
- Sputtering rates are low compared to those that
can be attained in thermal evaporation. - Sputtering targets are often expensive and
material use may be poor. - Most of the energy incident on the target becomes
heat, which must be removed. - In reactive sputter deposition, the gas
composition must be carefully controlled to
prevent positioning the sputtering target.
- Elements, alloys and compounds can be sputtered
and deposited. - The sputtering target provides a stable,
long-lived vaporization source. - In some configurations, reactive deposition can
be easily accomplished using reactive gaseous
species that are activated in plasma. - The source and substrate can be spaced close
together. - The sputter deposition chamber can have a small
volume.
8Outline
- Fundamental of sputtering
- Sputtering zinc oxide thin film
9DC (diode) Sputtering
The simplest sputtering technology
Parameters for DC Sputtering
Sputter voltage typically -2 to -5 kV Substrate
Bias Voltage substrate is being bombarded by
electrons and ions from target and plasma
sputtering film while you deposit neutral atoms
deposit independently put negative bias on the
substrate to control this can significantly
change film properties Deposition rate changes
with Ar pressure increases with sputter yield
usually increases with high voltage
http//www.glue.umd.edu/ddev/me489f/slides/2b_dep
osition_x6.pdf
- E (e-) lt 2eV - no ionization, elastic collisions
only - E (e-) gt 2eV - inelastic collisions add energy to
Ar - ionization (highest energy process, 15eV)
- Note mass (e-)/mass( Ar) 10-5
- energy transfer small
- e- gain energy via elastic collisions until
Egt15eV for ionization
10Fundamentals of plasma sputtering DC sputtering
(diode sputtering)
Tomasz Suszko, International Student Summer
School Nanotechnologies in materials
engineering Warsaw - Koszalin 2006
11Fundamentals of plasma sputtering (magnetron
sputtering unbalanced magnetron sputtering)
G.J. Mankey, Lecture 9, Univ of Alabama
There is a possibility to control the substrate
ion current and the energy of the ions as well
DC or pulsed power supply
Substrate
Tomasz Suszko, International Student Summer
School Nanotechnologies in materials
engineering Warsaw - Koszalin 2006
12Advantages Disadvantages of Magnetron Sputtering
Advantages
High deposition rate Reducing electron
bombardment of substrate Extending the operating
vacuum range ability to operate at lower pressures
The most widely commercially practiced sputtering
method
Disadvantages
- An erosion track in the target
- his leads to poor efficiency of sputtering yield
versus target volume compared to non-magnetron
sputtering - Non-uniform removal of particles from target
result in non-uniform films on substrate
13Reactive Sputtering
- Sputtering metallic target in the presence of a
reactive gas mixed with inert gas (Ar)
A mixture of inert reactive gases used for
sputtering
oxides Al2O3, SiO2, Ta2O5 (O2) nitrides TaN,
TiN, Si3N4 (N2, NH3) carbides TiC, WC, SiC
(CH4, C2H4, C3H8)
chemical reaction takes place on substrate and
target can poison target if chemical reactions
are faster than sputter rate adjust reactive gas
flow to get good stoichiometry without
incorporating excess gas into film
14Fundamentals of plasma sputtering reactive
sputtering
Compounds of the target and gas elements
Inert gas (e.g. Ar) Reactive gas (N2, O2, CH4
etc.)
For poorly conducting or insulator deposits
pulsed power supply is very usefull
Pumping system
15RF Sputtering
- DC sputtering - what about dielectrics?
- in DC systems, positive charge builds up on the
cathode (target) need 1012 volts to sputter
insulators !! - avoid charge build up by alternating potential
RF sputtering
frequencies less than about 50 kHz electrons and
ions in plasma are mobile both follow the
switching of the anode and cathode basically DC
sputtering of both surfaces frequencies above
about 50 kHz ions (heavy) can no longer follow
the switching enough electrons to ionize
gases(530MHz) Typically 13.56 MHz is
used
16Advantages of RF Sputtering
It works well with insulating targets High
efficiency easier to keep plasma going ? can
operate at lower Ar pressures (1-15 mTorr) ?
fewer gas collisions ? more line of sight
deposition
http//aultimut.com/aultimut/details.asp?itemid11
17Outline
- Fundamental of sputtering
- Sputtering zinc oxide thin film
18Al-doped ZnO thin films for TCO applications
Sample Prepared The ZnO thin films were
deposited onto glass and n-Si (100) substrate
with Tri-Axis Semicore r.f. sputtering machine
using 5 Al-doped ZnO target. Experimental
conditions Substrate temperature 4000 C. Ar
flow-rate 30 sccm, 50 sccm, 60 sccm, 70 sccm and
80 sccm. r.f. power 50 W and 200
W. Characterizations of sputtered
sample Thickness of the sputtered films
spectroscopic ellipsometry and dektak
profilometry. Transmittance UV-VIS-NIR
spectroscopy. Crystal orientation X-rays
diffractometer. Surface morphology
AFM Resistivity Hall measurement. Mobility
Hall measurement.
chamber
monitor
target
substrate
Tri-Axis Semicore r.f. sputtering
19X-rays diffraction spectra of sputtered Al-doped
ZnO thin films
AFM Dimension 3100 at SMN UiO
- A strong X-ray peak from (002) and (004) planes
is dominant, suggesting that most grains have
c-axis perpendicular to the substrate surface. - The (002)-ZnO and (004)-ZnO peaks were measured
at 2? 34.120, and 71.850
Bruker AXS D8 Discover
20Effect of sputtering power on the growth rate and
transmittance at 480 nm
- Growth rate of the Al-doped ZnO thin films
increases nearly linearly from 1.0 to 5.4 nm/min
when the sputtering power increases from 50 to
200 W - As the sputtering power increases from 50 to 150
W, the transmittance at 480 nm increases firstly
from 83 to 92 and then decreases to 80. The
maximum transmittance of 92 was obtained at the
sputtering power of 150 W.
Rudolf Research / AutoEL
Shimadzu SolidSpe-3700 DUV
21Ar flow rate effect on the electrical properties
of Al doped ZnO film
Lakeshore 7704A Hall measurement
http//www.caeonline.com/listing/product/183090/la
keshore-7704a
- The resistivity of the films is decreases as the
Ar flow rate is increased. The lowest resistivity
of 9.74 x 10-4 ?.cm was obtained at the films
with Ar flow rate of 80 sccm. - The mobility increases with the Ar flow rate
increases. - The carrier concentration also indicates the same
pattern as the mobility
22Outline
- Fundamental of sputtering
- Sputtering zinc oxide thin film
23Summary
- Sputter deposition, also known as physical vapor
deposition is a widely used technique for
depositing thin films on semiconductor wafers. - The range of applications of sputtering and the
variations of the basic process, is extremely
wide. - ZnO thin films have been successfully deposited
by rf sputtering and a promising transparent
conductive oxide for application in thin film
solar cells.
24Thank you for your attention!!!