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Types of RF plasma sources

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Presentation on theme: "Types of RF plasma sources"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Types of RF plasma sources
Old RIE parallel plate etcher (GEC reference cell) Inductively coupled plasmas (ICPs) New dual frequency capacitively coupled plasmas (CCPs) Helicon wave sources (HWS) UCLA

3 Schematic of a capacitive discharge
UCLA

4 The GEC Reference Cell In the early days of plasma processing, the Gaseous Electronics Conference standardized a capacitive discharge for 4-inch wafers, so that measurements by different groups could be compared. Brake et al., Phys. Plasmas 6, 2307 (1999) UCLA

5 Problems with the original RIE discharge
The electrodes have to be inside the vacuum Changing the power changes both the density and the sheath drop Particulates tend to form and be trapped Densities are low relative to the power used In general, too few knobs to turn to control the ion and electron distributions and the plasma uniformity UCLA

6 Dual-frequency CCPs are better
W. Tsai et al., JVSTB 14, 3276 (1996) UCLA

7 One advantage of a capacitive discharge
Fast and uniform gas feed for depositing amorphous silicon on very large glass substrates for displays (Applied Komatsu) UCLA

8 Types of RF plasma sources
Old RIE parallel plate etcher (GEC reference cell) New dual frequency capacitively coupled plasmas (CCPs) Helicon wave sources (HWS) Inductively coupled plasmas (ICPs) UCLA

9 Inductive coupling: The original TCP patent
US Patent 4,948,458, Ogle, Lam Research, 1990 UCLA

10 The Lam TCP (Transformer Coupled Plasma)
Simulation by Mark Kushner UCLA

11 Top and side antenna types
US Patent 4,948,458, Fairbairn, AMAT, 1993 UCLA

12 Applied Materials' DPS (Decoupled Plasma Source)
US Patent 4,948,458, Fairbairn, AMAT, 1993 UCLA

13 Outside What the DPS looks like Inside UCLA

14 Other antennas in AMAT patent
US Patent 4,948,458, Fairbairn, AMAT, 1993 UCLA

15 B-field pattern comparison (1)
Horizontal strips Vertical strips UCLA

16 B-field pattern comparison (2)
3 close coils 2 separate coils UCLA

17 B-field pattern comparison (3)
Lam type AMAT type UCLA

18 How do ICPs really work? In MEMs etcher by Plasma-Therm (now Unaxis), density is uniform well outside skin depth

19 UCLA In the plane of the antenna, the density peaks well outside the classical skin layer Data by John Evans

20 Anomalous skin effect (thermal motions)
E.g., Kolobov and Economou, Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 6, R1 (1997). Most references neglect collisions and curvature. UCLA

21 Nonlinear effects have been observed
Collisionless power absorption (Godyak et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 3264 (1998) Second harmonic currents Smolyakov et al., Phys. Plasmas 10, 2108 (2003) Ponderomotive force Godyak et al., Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 10, 459 (2001) UCLA

22 Electron trajectories are greatly affected by the nonlinear Lorentz force
UCLA

23 Without FL, electrons are fast only in skin
Reason: The radial FL causes electrons to bounce off the sheath at more than a glancing angle. UCLA

24 Electrons spend more time near center
UCLA

25 Density profile in four sectors of equal area
UCLA Density profile in four sectors of equal area Points are data from Slide 5

26 Disadvantages of stove-top antennas
Skin depth limits RF field penetration. Density falls rapidly away from antenna If wafer is close to antenna, its coil structure is seen Large coils have transmission line effects Capacitive coupling at high-voltage ends of antenna Less than optimal use of RF energy UCLA

27 B-field pattern comparison (2)
3 close coils 2 separate coils UCLA

28 Coupling can be improved with magnetic cover
  H = J B = m H UCLA

29 Four configurations tested
Meziani, Colpo, and Rossi, Plasma Sources Science and Technology 10, 276 (2001)

30 The dielectric is inside the vacuum
Meziani, Colpo, and Rossi, Plasma Sources Science and Technology 10, 276 (2001)

31 Iron improves both RF field and uniformity
(Meziani et al.)

32 Magnets are used in Korea (G.Y. Yeom)
SungKyunKwan Univ. Korea

33 Both RF field and density are increased
SungKyunKwan Univ. Korea

34 (suggested by Lieberman)
Serpentine antennas (suggested by Lieberman) Magnets

35 Density uniformity in two directions
G.Y. Yeom, SKK Univ., Korea

36 Effect of wire spacing on density
Park, Cho, Lee, Lee, and Yeom, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 31, 628 (2003)

37 Godyak: All RF lamps use iron cores
Philips QL Lamp: MHz, 85W (equiv. to 350W lamp) UCLA

38 Types of RF plasma sources
Old RIE parallel plate etcher (GEC reference cell) Inductively coupled plasmas (ICPs) New dual frequency capacitively coupled plasmas (CCPs) Helicon wave sources (HWS) UCLA

39 A LAM Exelan oxide etcher

40 Thin gap. Unequal areas to increase sheath drop on wafer
A dual-frequency CCP Thin gap. Unequal areas to increase sheath drop on wafer High frequency controls plasma density Low frequency controls ion motions and sheath drop UCLA

41 Most of volume is sheath
Electrons are emitted by secondary emission Ionization mean free path is shorter than sheath thickness Ionization occurs in sheath, and electrons are accelerated into the plasma Why there is less oxide damage is not yet known UCLA

42 The density increases with frequency squared
(b) Density Debye length (c) (d) Reason: The rf power is  I2R, where I is the electron current escaping through the sheath. Since one bunch of electrons is let through in each rf cycle, <Irf> is proportional to .

43 Effect of frequency on plasma density profiles
13.56 MHz 27 MHz 40 MHz 60 MHz

44 Effect of frequency on IEDF at the smaller electrode
27 MHz (a) (b) 13.56 MHz (c) (d) 60 MHz 40 MHz

45 IEDF at Wall – Pressure Variation
10 mTorr 20 mTorr 30 mTorr 50 mTorr Plasma Application Modeling Group POSTECH

46 Types of RF plasma sources
Old RIE parallel plate etcher (GEC reference cell) Inductively coupled plasmas (ICPs) New dual frequency capacitively coupled plasmas (CCPs) Helicon wave sources (HWS) UCLA

47 A helicon source requires a DC magnetic field..
U. Wisconsin

48 ...and is based on launching a circularly polarized wave in the plasma
Much higher density at given power than ICPs Density peak occurs downstream from the antenna Magnetic field provides adjustment for uniform density UCLA

49 Axial density and temperature profiles
Density increases greatly as B-field is added. The density peak is detached from the source. UCLA

50 Two commercial helicon reactors
The PMT (Trikon) MØRI source The Boswell source UCLA

51 The Coil Current Ratio shapes the plasma
The MØRI source UCLA

52 How do helicon source really work?
A cyclotron (TG) wave at the surface rapidly damps the RF energy Typical radial deposition profile Direct detection of the TG peak in the RF current UCLA

53 There are actually 2 types of helicon discharges
The Big Blue Mode The Low Field Peak Low density, low B-field Ideal for plasma processing B > 800G, n > 1013 cm-3 Due to an neutral depletion instability No important application yet UCLA

54 Reflection from end causes the L.F. peak
UCLA

55 A 7-tube array of stubby helicon sources
UCLA

56 Gives good uniformity and high density
UCLA

57 2-D density scans show no m = 6 asymmetry
UCLA

58 Helicon tools have been modeled
MØRI tool: Kinder and Kushner, JVSTA 19, 76 (2001)

59 Bose, Govindan, and Meyyappan, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 31, 464 (2003)
TG mode is seen Power deposition Bose, Govindan, and Meyyappan, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 31, 464 (2003) Plasma density

60 What next for RF sources?
Control of KTe, species production, ion velocities Electron filtering, pulsed plasmas, gas feed and pumping, additive gases to absorb electron groups, shaped bias voltage, electronegative optimization. etc. Understanding and eliminating oxide damage Large area sources for FPDs, not wafers Eventual widespread adoption of helicon sources UCLA

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