Electrical and optical properties of thin films

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS ( MEMS )
Advertisements

Sputtering Eyal Ginsburg WW49/00.
Sputtering Eyal Ginsburg WW46/02.
Thermo-compression Bonding
CHAPTER 8: THERMAL PROCESS (continued). Diffusion Process The process of materials move from high concentration regions to low concentration regions,
Derek Wright Monday, March 7th, 2005
Process Flow Steps Steps –Choose a substrate  Add epitaxial layers if needed –Form n and p regions –Deposit contacts and local interconnects –Deposit.
Chun-Chieh Lu Carbon-based devices on flexible substrate 1.
Chapter 2 Modern CMOS technology
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS Dr. Esam Yosry Lec. #6.
School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Queen’s University Belfast, N.Ireland Course Tutor Dr R E Hurley Northern Ireland Semiconductor Research.
Silicon Carbide Department of Electronics Prof. Dr. Toomas Rang Ehitajate tee Tallinn ESTONIA.
Chapter 7b Fabrication of Solar Cell. Different kind of methods for growth of silicon crystal.
EE143 – Ali Javey Section 8: Metallization Jaeger Chapter 7.
Lecture 15 OUTLINE MOSFET structure & operation (qualitative)
Hydrothermal Processing of Ba X Sr (1-X) TiO 3 Presented By: Adam Chamberlain Advisors: Elliot Slamovich Mark McCormick.
Lecture 7: IC Resistors and Capacitors
Thorium Based Thin Films as EUV Reflectors
The Deposition Process
ECE/ChE 4752: Microelectronics Processing Laboratory
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS Dr. Esam Yosry Lec. #5.
Thin Film Deposition Prof. Dr. Ir. Djoko Hartanto MSc
MEMs Fabrication Alek Mintz 22 April 2015 Abstract
Surface micromachining
Film Deposition in IC Fabrication
1 ME 381R Fall 2003 Micro-Nano Scale Thermal-Fluid Science and Technology Lecture 18: Introduction to MEMS Dr. Li Shi Department of Mechanical Engineering.
Lecture 24: Electrical Conductivity
ES 176/276 – Section # 2 – 09/19/2011 Brief Overview from Section #1 MEMS = MicroElectroMechanical Systems Micron-scale devices which transduce an environmental.
McGill Nanotools Microfabrication Processes
CS/EE 6710 CMOS Processing. N-type Transistor + - i electrons Vds +Vgs S G D.
Thin Film Deposition Quality – composition, defect density, mechanical and electrical properties Uniformity – affect performance (mechanical , electrical)
Electrical Conduction in Solids
Nano/Micro Electro-Mechanical Systems (N/MEMS) Osama O. Awadelkarim Jefferson Science Fellow and Science Advisor U. S. Department of State & Professor.
Electric fields in Material Space Sandra Cruz-Pol, Ph. D. INEL 4151 ch 5 Electromagnetics I ECE UPRM Mayagüez, PR.
Metallization: Contact to devices, interconnections between devices and to external Signal (V or I) intensity and speed (frequency response, delay)
Optical Constants of Uranium Nitride Thin Films in the EUV (7-15 nm) Marie K. Urry EUV Thin Film Group Brigham Young University.
Daniel Wamwangi School of Physics
Dielectrics • Dielectrics electrically and
Fabrication of oxide nanostructure using Sidewall Growth 田中研 M1 尾野篤志.
© 2001 by Prentice HallSemiconductor Manufacturing Technology by Michael Quirk and Julian Serda Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology Michael Quirk &
5 장 Dielectrics and Insulators. Preface ‘ Ceramic dielectrics and insulators ’ is a wide-ranging and complex topic embracing many types of ceramic, physical.
LIGO-G R What can we learn from the X-ray mirror coating community report from the PXRMS conference Big Sky - Montana Riccardo Desalvo.
ISAT 436 Micro-/Nanofabrication and Applications Thermal Oxidation David J. Lawrence Spring 2004.
From microelectronics down to nanotechnology
Application of Silicon-Germanium in the Fabrication of Ultra-shallow Extension Junctions of Sub-100 nm PMOSFETs P. Ranade, H. Takeuchi, W.-H. Lee, V. Subramanian,
Light trapping with particle plasmons Kylie Catchpole 1,2, Fiona Beck 2 and Albert Polman 1 1 Center for Nanophotonics, FOM Institute AMOLF Amsterdam,
High Temperature Oxidation of TiAlN Thin Films for Memory Devices
ALD Thin Film Materials LDRD review 2009NuFact09.
Metallization materials should: physically it must:
Atomic Layer Deposition - ALD
Thin Film Deposition. Types of Thin Films Used in Semiconductor Processing Thermal Oxides Dielectric Layers Epitaxial Layers Polycrystalline Silicon Metal.
Io School of Microelectronic Engineering Lecture III Single Crystal Silicon Wafer Manufacturing.
Process integration Wafer selection active role for the wafer ? passive role ? –thermal conductivity –optical transparency –flat,
Thin films
EE412 Project: Corrosion resistant ALD coatings Alex Haemmerli and Joey Doll Mentor: J Provine.
Introduction to microfabrication, chapter 1 Figures from: Franssila: Introduction to Microfabrication unless indicated otherwise.
Microfabrication for fluidics, basics and silicon
Process integration 2: double sided processing, design rules, measurements
Process integration 1: cleaning, sheet resistance and resistors, thermal budget, front end
Prof. Jang-Ung Park (박장웅)
Thin film technology, intro lecture
Lecture 6 Metallization.
ASPERA Technology Forum 20/10/2011
Electric fields in Material Space
Thermal oxidation Growth Rate
IC AND NEMS/MEMS PROCESSES
BONDING The construction of any complicated mechanical device requires not only the machining of individual components but also the assembly of components.
Surface Engineering By Israa Faisal University of Al-Qadisiyah
METALLIZATION.
Presentation transcript:

Electrical and optical properties of thin films sami.franssila@tkk.fi

Outline Metallic films Thickness dependent resistivity Limit of Ohm’s law Metallization for flexible electronics Semiconducting films (Silicon microtechnology 2009 slides !) Dielectric films, electrical properties Dielectric films, optical properties

Resistivity ρ = ρresidual + ρtemp Linear TCR above Debye temperature (typically 200-400K) Murarka: Metallization

Resistivity: impurity effects Murarka

Resistivity: alloying effects Murarka

Alloying (1)

Alloying (2) Zirconium at grain boundaries acts as an extra barrier, preventing formation of high resistivity Cu3Si

Annealing defects away Annealing defects at elevated temperature lowers resistance (no reaction with underlying film/substrate) Murarka: Metallization

Thin film reaction: Co+Si Murarka

Resistivity: substrate & thickness

Thickness dependent resistivity

Thickness dependent resistivity

Resistivity as a function of film thickness γ = film thickness/mean free path Mean free paths typically tens of nanometers at RT Murarka

Resistivity in polycrystalline films R = reflectivity at grain boundaries (0.17 for Al, 0.24 for copper) lo = mean free path inside grain d = spacing between reflecting planes Grain boundaries trap impurities, and above solubility limit, this leads to segregation Murarka

Resistivity depends on patterns! You cannot calculate thickness from resistance R = ρL/Wt because thin film resistivity ρ is linewidth and thickness dependent (use e.g. X-rays to get an independent thickness value) G.B. Alers, J. Sukamto, S. Park, G. Harm and J. Reid, Novellus Systems, San Jose -- Semiconductor International, 5/1/2006

Grain size affected by: -underlying film (chemistry and texture) -deposition process (sputtering vs. plating; & plating A vs. plating B) -material purity -thermal treatments -geometry of structures on wafer                                                                                            G.B. Alers, J. Sukamto, S. Park, G. Harm and J. Reid, Novellus Systems, San Jose -- Semiconductor International, 5/1/2006

Flexible metallization: Pt on PI

Stretchable metallization: Au/PDMS

Strain-resistivity

Stretchable metallization (2)

Brute force metallization of an elastic polymer membrane: PDMS casting Seed metal, lithography and electroplating Resist removal, PDMS casting Resist removal and DRIE DRIE Brute force metallization of an elastic polymer membrane: Sputtering+ electroplating on polymer Anchored metallization by metallization of silicon followed by polymer casting Yin, H-L et. al.: A novel electromagnetic elastomer membrane actuator with a semi-embedded coil, Sensors and Actuators A 139 (2007), pp. 194–202.

Electromigration Electromigration is metal movement due to electron momentum transfer. Electrons dislodge metal atoms from the lattice, and these atoms will consequently move and accumulate at the positive end of the conductor and leave voids at the negative end.

Stability of metallization Ti and Ti/TiN barriers To prevent reaction between Si and Cu

Specific contact resistance, rc Ti reduces any SiO2 at the interface to TiO  rc down TiN is high resistivity material  higher rc CuTi starts to form above 300oC TiN is a better barrier and rc is reduced the higher the anneal temperature

Semiconductor films LPCVD polysilicon In-situ vs. Ex-situ α-Si vs. true poly α-Si (annealing, crystallization)

LPCVD Poly-Si

LPCVD-poly (2)

Dielectric films: electrical Dielectric constant Breakdown field Structure vs. Stability vs. Leakage

Low-k dielectrics

SiOC

SiOC

Pores

Subtractive porosity

High-k dielectrics Amorphous initially, polycrystalline as thickness increases

Leakage current

Optical thin films The technique must allow good control and reproducibility of the complex refractive index k (λ) < 10-4 for transparent films Two materials with

Optical Amorphous Isotropic No birefrongence Losses below 10-4 required Waveguide losses < 1 dB/cm

Refractive index

General requirements Mechanical scratch resistance Reflection Environmental stability Waveguiding requires large nhigh-nlow Transmission, absorption

General requirements (2) Depositon rate Uniformity, thickness <3%, even <1% Uniformity, refractive index <0.001 Stresses Defect density

Smart windows Layers correspond to (1) polyester-based laminated double foil, (2) ITO transparent electrodes, (3) nanoporous tungsten oxide, (4) polymer serving as a conductor of ions, (5) nanoporous nickel oxide. The application of a voltage (denoted as V) changes the transparency

Diamond as optical material pc-D (polycrystalline diamond) High transparency 200 nm ... 20 µm High refractive index, n = 2.35 Crystal size, ~ µm, leads to scattering at visible wavelengths >600oC deposition rules out many optical substrates DLC-films not transparent in visible but in IR yes nf ~ 1.6-2.2 k ~ up to 0.8 (heavy absorption)

SiOxNy:H Truely oxynitride, Si-O-N bonds, not SiO and SiN domains Amorphous and homogenous till 900oC Open pores lead to H2O adsorption and lower n Closed pores lead to density and nf reduction Excellent material for graded index filters: n=1.48-2.0 Reproducibility of n is ~1%

Optical filters (1) Multilayer (step index) design Inhomogenous graded index design Quasi-inhomogenous design (λ/4 layers)

Optical filters (2)

Optical filters (3) Refractive index profile On glass substrate On polycarbonate substrate Nitrous oxide flow rate