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Electrical and optical properties of thin films

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Presentation on theme: "Electrical and optical properties of thin films"— Presentation transcript:

1 Electrical and optical properties of thin films

2 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

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

4 Resistivity: impurity effects
Murarka

5 Resistivity: alloying effects
Murarka

6 Alloying (1)

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

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

9 Thin film reaction: Co+Si
Murarka

10 Resistivity: substrate & thickness

11 Thickness dependent resistivity

12 Thickness dependent resistivity

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

14 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

15 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

16 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

17 Flexible metallization: Pt on PI

18 Stretchable metallization: Au/PDMS

19 Strain-resistivity

20 Stretchable metallization (2)

21

22 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.

23 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.

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

25 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

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

27 LPCVD Poly-Si

28 LPCVD-poly (2)

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

30 Low-k dielectrics

31 SiOC

32 SiOC

33 Pores

34 Subtractive porosity

35 High-k dielectrics Amorphous initially,
polycrystalline as thickness increases

36

37 Leakage current

38 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

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

40 Refractive index

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

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

43 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

44 Diamond as optical material
pc-D (polycrystalline diamond) High transparency 200 nm 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 ~ k ~ up to 0.8 (heavy absorption)

45 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= Reproducibility of n is ~1%

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

47 Optical filters (2)

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


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