Chapter 9 Thin Film Deposition - II
Chapter 9 Thin Film Deposition - II
Chapter 9 Thin Film Deposition - II
Evaporation:
• Material source is heated to high temperature in vacuum either by thermal or e-
beam methods.
• Material is vapor transported to target in vacuum.
• Film quality is often not as good as sputtered film (that involves energetic
bombardment of ions to the as-deposited film, which makes the film denser).
• The film thickness can be monitored precisely using a quartz balance – this is
necessary as the deposition is not reproducible (tiny change in T leads to large
change of deposition rate. T is not monitored, power is).
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Evaporation (also called vacuum deposition)
• In evaporation, source material is heated in high
vacuum chamber (P < 10-5 Torr), hence the name
vacuum deposition.
• High vacuum is required to minimize collisions of Wafer holder
source atoms with background species (light of site
Wafers
deposition)
• Heating is done by resistive or e-beam sources.
• Surface interactions are physical, can be very fast Atomic
flux
(>1m/min possible, but film quality may suffer.
For R&D typical 0.1-1nm/sec).
Vacuum Source material
• High sticking coefficient (at low T, adatom stays Heater (resistance
or E-beam)
wherever it hits with limited surface migration),
leading to poor conformal coverage/significant
shadow. But this also makes evaporation the most
Vacuum system Exhaust
popular thin film deposition for nanofabrication
using liftoff process.
• Deposition rate is determined by emitted flux and by geometry of the source and wafer.
• Evaporation is not widely used by industry – sputter deposition is.
• For microfabrication R&D, evaporation is as important as sputter deposition.
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Evaporation: vacuum pressure and mean free path
5
Influence of background vacuum pressure
Time to form a single complete layer
of gas on a surface, assume sticking
coefficient = 1.
10-4 0.02 s
10-5 0.2 s
10-6 2s
10-7 20 s
1bar=100000Pa (1atm=1.013bar)
1mbar=100Pa 10-8 3 min
1Torr=100000/760=132Pa=1.32mbar
10-9 35 min
10-10 6 hr
10-11 3 days
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Arrival ratio
Arrival ratio:
Ratio of molecular vapor arrival at
1nm/sec deposition rate to
molecular impact of residual gas.
Arrival ratio = 1 means the number of film molecules hitting the surface per second is the
same as the number of gas molecules.
For materials that is very reactive with the gas (such as Ti to O2), the film can be very
impure when arrival ration 1.
In fact, Ti is used as a pump for ultrahigh vacuum (called Ti pump, where Ti vapor is
produced to trap gas in vacuum chamber). 7
Point source and surface source model
(a) Point Source (b) Small Surface Area Source
R evap
FkP R evap
r2 FkP cos n i
r2
R evap
v cos k R evap
Nr 2
v cos n i cos k
Nr 2
F: flux that strikes area A (atoms or grams per cm-2sec).
v: deposition rate (nm/sec).
N: density of the material (atoms or grams per cm3).
Revp: evaporation rate from the source, in atoms or grams per second.
: solid angle, =4 if source emits in all directions; =2 if emits only upward.
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Deposition rate across a wafer
a. Uniform (isotropic emission b. Ideal cosine emission from a c. Non-ideal, more anisotropic
from a point source). small planar surface source. (n=1 emission from a small surface
in cosn distribution) source. (n>1 in cosn distribution)
Figure 9-19 9
Uniformity on a flat surface
Consider deposition rate difference
between wafer center and edge: coscos
Define uniformity s:
1
m 2
2
Revp 5.83 10 As Pe
T
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Thermodynamics of equilibrium vapor pressure
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Vapor pressure of common materials
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Evaporation characteristics of materials
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. From “Materials science of thin films” by Ohring, 2002.
Chapter 9 Thin film deposition
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Types of evaporation according to heating method
Three types:
Thermal evaporator – resistive heating, the only choice for
evaporation of organic material.
Electron beam evaporator – heated by electron beam, most popular,
more expensive than thermal evaporator.
Inductive heating (must be unpopular – I have never seen one).
Inductive heating:
Metal element is wound around crucible and RF power is run
through coil.
RF induces eddy currents in the charge causing it to heat.
Eddy current is caused when a conductor is exposed to a
changing magnetic field due to relative motion of the field
source and conductor; or due to variations of the field with
time.
These circulating current create induced magnetic fields that
oppose the change of the original magnetic field due to
Lenz's law, causing repulsive or drag forces between the
conductor and the magnet.
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Thermal evaporation
Widespread use for materials whose
vapor pressure can be reasonable at
1600oC or below.
Common evaporant materials:
Au, Ag, Al, Sn, Cr, Sb, Ge, In, Mg, Ga;
CdS, PbS, CdSe, NaCl, KCl, AgCl, MgF2,
CaF2, PbCl2.
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Photos of Sharon thermal evaporator
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Electron beam evaporation
• Using a focused electron beam to heat and evaporate metals, electron temperature can
be as high as 10,000 K. Electrons are accelerated by DC 10kV, and current 10s-100s of mA.
• Suitable for high Tmelt metals like W, Ta, …
• Evaporation occurs at a highly localized point near the beam bombardment spot on the
source surface , so little contamination from the crucible (not hot, water cooled). 22
Can one do e-beam evaporation of insulating materials like SiO2?
Photos of e-beam evaporator
Mechanical shutter:
Evaporation rate is set by temperature of
source, but this cannot be turned on and
off rapidly.
Thermal evaporation:
• Simple, robust, and in widespread use.
• Use W, Ta, or Mo filaments to heat evaporation source.
• Typical filament currents are 200-300 Amperes.
• Exposes substrates to visible and IR radiation.
• Contamination from heated boat/crucible.
Electron beam evaporation:
• More complex, but extremely versatile, virtually any material.
• Less contamination, less heating to wafer (as only small source area heated to very high T).
• Exposes substrates to secondary electron radiation.
• X-rays can also be generated by high voltage electron beam.
• Since x-rays will damage substrate and dielectrics (leads to trapped charge), e-beam evaporators24
cannot be used in MOSFET.
Popular heating “containers” for evaporation source
Resistors (put source rod inside coil) Heating boat (open top)
Quartz
Electrode
Deposited
film Vapor
Sticking coefficient:
Freacted
Sc
Fincident
SC = 1 SC < 1
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Evaporation issues: alloy evaporation
Stoichiometrical problem of evaporation:
• Compound material breaks down at high temperature.
• Each component has different vapor pressure, therefore different deposition rate,
resulting in a film with different stoichiometry compared to the source.
One solution is co-evaporation (use two e-beam guns).
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Shadow evaporation
Poor step coverage could be useful.
Shadow/angle evaporation is routinely used for nano-electronics fabrication.
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GLAD (glancing angle deposition): self assembly of film
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Evaporation: a quick summary
Evaporation advantages:
• Films can be deposited at high rates (e.g., 1μm/min, though for research
typically < 0.1μm/min).
• Low energy atoms (~0.1 eV) leave little surface damage.
• Little residual gas and impurity incorporation due to high vacuum conditions.
• No or very little substrate heating.
Limitations:
• Accurately controlled alloy compounds are difficult to achieve.
• No in-situ substrate cleaning.
• Poor step coverage (but this is good for liftoff).
• Variation of deposit thickness for large/multiple substrates – has to rely on
quartz crystal micro-balance for thickness monitoring.
• X-ray damage.
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