US3904505A - Apparatus for film deposition - Google Patents

Apparatus for film deposition Download PDF

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US3904505A
US3904505A US271014A US27101472A US3904505A US 3904505 A US3904505 A US 3904505A US 271014 A US271014 A US 271014A US 27101472 A US27101472 A US 27101472A US 3904505 A US3904505 A US 3904505A
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chamber
ions
deposition
deposition chamber
substrate
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Sol Aisenberg
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A S LABORATORIES Inc A CORP OF
Space Sciences Inc
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Space Sciences Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J37/00Discharge tubes with provision for introducing objects or material to be exposed to the discharge, e.g. for the purpose of examination or processing thereof
    • H01J37/30Electron-beam or ion-beam tubes for localised treatment of objects
    • H01J37/317Electron-beam or ion-beam tubes for localised treatment of objects for changing properties of the objects or for applying thin layers thereon, e.g. for ion implantation
    • H01J37/3178Electron-beam or ion-beam tubes for localised treatment of objects for changing properties of the objects or for applying thin layers thereon, e.g. for ion implantation for applying thin layers on objects
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C14/00Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material
    • C23C14/22Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material characterised by the process of coating
    • C23C14/221Ion beam deposition

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Continuation Of Ser. N0. 21,282, March 20, 1970, A method and apparatus for depositing a thin film Of abandoned. material upon a base substrate including a glow discharge ion source for generating the particular ions [52] US. Cl 204/298; 1 17/93.1 GD; 1 17/933; that will be subsequently deposited upon the base sub- 219/121 EB strate, a vacuum deposition chamber wherein the sub- [51] Int. Cl...
  • C23c 15/00; C23c 11/00; 823k 15/00 strate material is located, and, intermediate between [58] Field of Search 204/298; 118/491, 49.5; the glow discharge ion source and the vacuum deposi- 1 17/933, 93.1 GD; 219/121 EB tion chamber, a constrictor electrode for isolating the deposition chamber from the ion chamber and an [56] References Cited I anode electrode for extracting ions from the plasma UNITED STATES PATENTS ion source and directing them toward the target sub- 3 I 17 022 H1964 Bronson ct a1 2O4/l92 strate.
  • a magnetic field is also provided in the appara- 204N192 tus of the present invention by the use of an externally 219/12] EB wound magnetic coil to permit the glow discharge ion 3,294,583 12/1966 Fedows ct a1... 3,303,319 2/1967 Steigcrwaldmn 3,371,649 5/1968 Gowen 204/298 Source to Operate at a lower Pressure and I9 constrict 3,409,529 11/1968 Chopra et a1. 204/298 the flow of ions toward the substrate.
  • the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for providing improved thin film deposition.
  • the apparatus of the present invention takes this fact into account and permits less heating of the substrate by isolating the substrate within a separate chamber adjacent to the plasma ion source chamber. Further, the apparatus is designed to control the energy of impinging ions by appropriate biasing means coupled to the substrate material.
  • a further object of this invention is to provide a method for fabricating a thin film-substrate structure wherein the film can be deposited at a high rate and in a controllable manner.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a thin film upon a base substrate wherein there has been little or no impurity diffusion from the substrate affecting the thin film deposited thereon.
  • Still another object of the present invention is to provide a thin film-substrate structure wherein the junction between the two substances is well defined.
  • One embodiment of the apparatus of the present invention provides a means by which the thin film is formed on a substrate by ionizing and electrostatically accelerating a beam of atomic particles of a material which is to be deposited on the substrate as a thin film.
  • a plasma ion source acts as a such source of atoms of the material to be deposited.
  • An electrical discharge occurs within this source of ions, and the desired material is converted into a plasma form with the ions to be deposited in a mixture with high energy electrons.
  • axial magnetic field may be used to constrain the orbits of the electrons and increase their likelihood of ionizing atoms of the material under consideration.
  • This magnetic field permits the electrical discharge to operate at a lower gas pressure than could be used without the magnetic field.
  • the source discharge chamber there is a plasma which contains a large concentration of ions of the species that are to be subsequently deposited.
  • a plasma discharge from this plasma ion source is generated into a vacuum deposition chamber where the substrate material is located.
  • This can be accomplished by locating an extraction electrode in the vacuum deposition chamber and by the use of a constrictor means separating the higher pressure plasma ion chamber from the lower pressure vacuum deposition chamber.
  • the ions are extracted through an aperture in the constrictor by means of the applied electric field which maintains a discharge between the plasma source, which functions as a cathode, and the extraction electrode, which is situated in the vacuum deposition chamber.
  • the purpose of the constrictor means is to isolate the vacuum deposition chamber from the higher pressures present in the plasma ion chamber while the extractor electrode pulls the positive ions within the plasma source toward the target substrate. It is often desirable to surround the constrictor aperture with the same material as that to be deposited on the substrate.
  • the accelerated beam may be of an inert gas and the ions to be deposited may be supplied by an auxilliary source within the deposition chamber.
  • the beam provides the energy necessary to deposit the ions from the source which coimpinge with the ion beam.
  • FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional diagram of one embodiment of the deposition system according to the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of part of another embodiment of the deposition system similar to that shown in FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 1 shows an embodiment for practicing the present invention.
  • a silicon film 21 is deposited on a single crystal silicon substrate 22.
  • the film 21 is shown in an exaggerated thickness in FIG. 1.
  • Plasma ion source 10 generally includes chamber structure 11 having vacuum line 13 and gas input line 12 connected thereto. Vacuum line 13 connects to a vacuum pump (not shown) which controls the pressure in source 10. Also included in ion source 10 are silicon electrodes 14 and 15, which connect externally to power supply 34 and resistor 38. With an electrical discharge taking place within plasma ion source 10, the material which is silicon in this particular case, is introduced into a plasma formed by the high energy electrons. A magnetic field set up by magnetic coil 30 influences the formation of the ions within plasma ion source by constraining the orbits of the electrons and increasaing the likelihood of ionizing atoms of silicon. This external magnetic field permits the electrical discharge to operate at lower gas pressure than could be used without the magnetic field.
  • the generation of an ionized plasma usually can occur through a neutral gas such as argon, hydrogen, or helium, or through a more active gas, such as nitrogen or oxygen or a mixture thereof, introduced via line 12.
  • a neutral gas such as argon, hydrogen, or helium
  • a more active gas such as nitrogen or oxygen or a mixture thereof.
  • the ions produced in this source deposition chamber in turn bombard the cathode (electrodes 14 and 15) and sputter or vaporize atoms of material into a discharge space where they can be ionized.
  • the plasma ion source 10 there is produced a plasma which contains large concentrations of ions of the species that one wishes to deposit upon substrate 22.
  • the next occurence in the operation of the apparatus is the extraction of the plasma discharge from the plasma ion source 10 into vacuum deposition chamber where the substrate 22 is located.
  • an anode extraction electrode 24 is located in deposition chamber 20 along with a constrictor electrode 26.
  • the purpose of constrictor electrode 26 is basically to separate the higher pressure sputtering source chamber 10 from the lower pressure film deposition chamber 20.
  • the ions are extracted through the constrictor electrode 26 by means of the externally applied electric field, which maintains a discharge between the plasma source 10, operated as a cathode, and the extractor anode 24, located in deposition chamber 20.
  • Anode supply 36 facilitates the foregoing by biasing the anode positively with reference to the source 10.
  • the external electric field generated by power supply 36 is oriented along the external magnetic field caused by magnetic coil 30 so that the plasma is extracted along magnetic field lines. This serves to maintain the plasma in a constricted mode so that it is able to pass through the aperture 26A in constrictor electrode 26 more efficiently.
  • Anode electrode 24 acts to extract electrons from the plasma source, and the electric field generated by the extracted electron pulls the positive ions from plasma source 10 along with them.
  • the anode 24 has an aperture 24A in it located along the axis determined by the magnetic field produced by magnetic coil 30, and this in turn serves to maintain the plasma constriction and permits a large fraction of the extracted positive ions to pass through the anode aperture, subsequently impinging on substrate 22.
  • the apertures in the electrodes 24 and 26 permits differential pumping to occur, thereby maintaining a good vacuum (about 10 Torr) in deposition chamber 20 (provided via vacuum line 29), while somewhat higher pressure is maintained in plasma ion source 10. It is often desirable to surround the apertures in electrodes 24 and 26 with the same material as that to be deposited on the substrate.
  • the magnetic field serves three purposes: In the plasma ion source it permits the source to operate at lower pressures; it aids in constricting the plasma through the constrictor electrode; and it helps to maintain the plasma in a constricted path on itsway to the substrate.
  • the constrictor electrode 26 may be left essentially electrically floating through a high impedance resistor 46 to an appropriate potential such as the one determined by the resistors 40 and 42. For the embodiment of FIG. 1, this potential is intermediate between the potential of the cathode in source 10 and the anode in chamber 20.
  • the insulating shield 17, positioned between electrodes 14 and 26, may be left floating. Shield 17 minimizes the tendency of the discharge to attach other than where desired.
  • a focusing electrode 19 can also be used between anode 24 and substrate 22. Electrode 19 is shown connected to anode 24, but can be connected to a separate biasing supply if desired thereby controlling the final path of the ion beam.
  • substrate 22 The potential on substrate 22 relative to that of plasma ion source 10 and extractor anode 24 determines in large part of the kinetic energy with which the positive ions impinge on substrate 22.
  • substrate supply 50 which connects via the secondary winding of transformer 52 to substrate 22.
  • the combination of the DC power supply 50 with the by-pass capacitor 51 permits a DC bias to be applied to the substrate while maintaining the power supply at a low impedance relative to ground.
  • An AC or RF voltage is superimposed on the DC bias voltage by means of oscillator 54 and transformer 52.
  • the use of the transformer permits the application of an additional AC voltage without modifying the DC bias voltage provided by the DC supply 50.
  • the axial magnetic field helps maintain the ion beam in a columnated mode after it is extracted through the aperture in anode 24 and minimizes space charge spreading. In this way, onev can achieve a higher deposition rate than would otherwise be expected in the absence of a magnetic columnating field.
  • the AC or if supply which connects via transformer 52 to substrate 22, operates at a high frequency (at about 15Kc or 13 megacycles, for example) and is used to alternately bias the substrate surface positive and negative by using the displacement current that flow through the insulating film or substrate.
  • the alternating positive and negative potential applied to the substrate is used to extract positive ions and electrons from the plasma so that the net current to the surface is zero; but at the same time, during portions of the cycles, positive ions can be attracted to the surface.
  • the rf amplitude applied to the substrate determines the energy of the positive ions attracted to the surface and can be used to control the deposition energy.
  • FIG. 2 shows a partial view of the system of FIG. 1 which has been adapted for practising another embodiment of the invention.
  • a vaporizing source 62 and associated power source 60 are added to the configuration of FIG. 1.
  • Source 62 is located in chamber near to substrate 22.
  • the introduction of energy into the surface atoms of the vaporizing source is primarily to effect vaporization, with the energy to effect deposition on the substrate being primarily supplied by an energetic beam of gaseous ions. This can be accomplished by using an argon beam, for example, generated from the plasma source in conjunction with a source of atoms to be deposited and located in chamber 20.
  • an energetic beam of gaseous ions such as argon or another inert gas, coimpinge on the substrate surface with atoms from source 62.
  • gaseous ions such as argon or another inert gas
  • the high kinetic energy of the argon ion beam is transferred to the lower energy neutral film atoms to be deposited on the substrate surface and gives them the necessary mobility so that they can nucleate and form an improved film.
  • FIG. 2 one could deposit silicon films on a substrate by means of thermal vaporization of silicon from source 62, concurrently with impingement on the surface of a high energy argon beam, for example.
  • This beam should provide the necessary kinetic energy to transfer to the silicon atoms by means of argon-silicon collisions on the surface.
  • Source 62 is shown schematically but can be any one of various types of sources of atoms.
  • source 62 may be a sputtering source, a crucible-type vaporization source or even a resistively heated ribbon.
  • a deposition material can be introduced into the source plasma.
  • One is by sputtering of material from the electrodes 14 and 15 of FIG. 1.
  • a silicon electrode would be used for the deposition of silicon films
  • a carbon electrode would be used for the deposition of carbon films.
  • Metallic electrodes can be used for the deposition of metallic films.
  • An alternatively way of introducing the deposition material into the plasma at a much faster rate is by the introduction of the deposition material in the vapor or gaseous form or as a component of a gaseous additive material and the subsequent decomposition of the gaseous additive material into the appropriate ions by means of the energy of the plasma. This is a form of plasma pyrolysis.
  • a hydrocarbon gas for example, in chamber 10 can permit the deposition of carbon films on the substrate since the ions exiting from the ion source will consist of carbon ions and of hydrogen ions.
  • the hydrogen ions incident on the substrate will help to remove residual oxygen ions that may be on the substrate and thus, enhance the subsequent deposition of the carbon ions.
  • insulating films of carbon can be deposited with material properties very similar to that of carbon in the diamond form.
  • the observed points of similarity between the ion beam deposited carbon form and a diamond-like material consists of the following: 1 high index of refraction, 2) high electrical resistivity, 3) transparency in the visible range, 4) high di-electric constant, 5) ability to scratch glass.
  • These insulating carbon films also show a high resistance to hydrofluoric acid etching.
  • One advantage of insulating carbon films is that such films are quite resistant to sodium ion diffusion through these films which occurs at elevated temperatures.
  • tungsten and carbon mixtures or compounds thereof can be deposited in the tungsten carbide form by using either tungsten and carbon electrodes or, for more rapid deposition by introducing a tungsten compound in the gaseous form and a hydrocarbon compound in the gaseous form into the plasma ion source region.
  • Apparatus similar to that shown in Flg. 1 can be used to deposit a carbon-diamond film.
  • the electrodes 14 and 15 may be made of carbon, and the mixture gas may be methane for example (a hydro-carbon gas).
  • the carbon ions are introduced into a plasma from ion source 10 by sputtering from the electrodes themselves or from the gas.
  • the ions By means of the acceleration potential applied to the substrate, it is possible to have the ions come in with a moderately high kinetic energy (about electron volts for example). As a result of this large kinetic energy of the incident ions, these ions when they strike the deposition surface retain a very high surface mobility and can move about to nucleate into a single crystal structure. At the same time, the carbon atoms already on the deposition surface, in the process of scattering the incident ions themselves, will pick up kinetic energy and become mobile. Thus, the incident ion and the first few surface monolayers of the deposition surface are at a relatively high energy compared to that of the basic substrate. These surface atoms retain enough energy so that they can nucleate into a diamond-like single crystal structure.
  • the apparatus of the present invention can be used to deposit various types of films or different substrates and does so by an ion beam technique, wherein the degree and uniformity of deposition are controlled.
  • the apparatus can be also be implemented for use with a vapor source, which is uaually located in the deposition chamber. Such an arrangement has also been used to supplement the deposition from the ion beam. In other words a beam containing silicon ions could be used with a silicon vapor source. Another film so deposited was molybdenum.
  • Another feature of the invention is that relatively small layers of diamond-like carbon can be deposited.
  • carbon to form into a diamond-like crystallographic structure it is necessary that the carbon atoms be in a high temperature, high pressure, environment for a sufficiently long time so that the crystallization into a diamond form can occur.
  • the technique used herein employs an energetic ion beam that does not require high pressures since only a small portion of the carbon is heated to a high temperature at one time.
  • a film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing the substrate
  • a source of deposition atoms to be deposited on the substrate said source of atoms being located within said deposition chamber;
  • glow discharge ion source means for producing an energetic beam of gaseous ions, which may be of the same material to be deposited;
  • Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate
  • At least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited; means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof;
  • extraction electrode means positioned within said deposition chamber for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber and through an aperture in the extraction electrode means;
  • accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate;
  • the apparatus of claim 5 further characterized by means for applying an electrical potential between at least one of said electrodes and the base substrate contained within said base substrate containing means.
  • said means for producing a pressure differential includes means for maintaining said second chamber at a higher pressure than said deposition chamber.
  • said ions are carbon ions and said film is a carbon film having a high index of refraction, high electrical resistivity, transparency in the visual range, a high dielectric constant and the ability to scratch glass.
  • said means for producing a pressure differential comprises constrictor electrode means directly separating said second chamher from said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber.
  • An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising:
  • a source of energetic ions at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate
  • constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber;
  • extraction electrode means positioned between said constrictor electrode means and said means for containing the base substrate and having an aperture therein through which said ions flow; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture;
  • An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film 0 upon a base substrate material comprising:
  • a source of energetic ions at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate
  • constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber wherein said constrictor electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the deposition material;
  • extraction electrode means positioned between c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited;
  • said constrictor electrode means and said means 5 means for establishingasufficient electrical potenfor containing the base substrate and having an aptial between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow erture therein through which said ions flow; and, discharge therebetween which releases atoms of means for establishing an axial magnetic field bethe material which is to be deposited from said tween said source of energetic ions and said deposielectrode at least partly formed of said material tion chamber with the axis of the magnetic field l0 and ionizes said released deposition material atoms being substantially parallel to the axis of said exto form ions thereof; traction electrode means aperture. means disposed between said second chamber and 13.
  • An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film said deposition chamber for producing a pressure upon a base substrate material comprising: differential between said second chamber and said a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions deposition chamber;
  • extraction electrode means for extracting the ions b. a deposition chamber having means for containing from said second chamber into said deposition a base substrate; chamber through an aperture in the extraction c. constrictor electrode means positioned between electrode means wherein said extraction electrode said source of ions and said deposition chamber means aperture is lined witha material which is the and having an aperture disposed therein through same as the material which is to be deposited; which said ions flow from said source of ions into g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said deposition chamber; and, said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate d. extraction electrode means positioned between thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and,
  • said constrictor electrode means and said means h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field befor containing the base substrate and having an aptween said second chamber and said deposition erture therein through which. said ions flow chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being wherein said extraction electrode means aperture substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction is lined with a material which is the same as the deelectrode means aperture.
  • Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at lel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
  • An apparatus for .depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising:
  • a source of energetic ions at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material
  • constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber wherein said constrictor electrode means aperture is lined with a material which, is the same as the deposition material;
  • Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate
  • At least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited,
  • means for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber comprising constrictor electrode means positioned between said second chamber and said deposition-chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber, said constrictor means aperture being lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited;
  • extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means
  • accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate;
  • Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate
  • means for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber comprising constrictor electrode means positioned between said second chamber and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber, said constrictor means aperture being lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited;
  • extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means wherein said extraction electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited;
  • accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate;
  • Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
  • a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate
  • extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means
  • accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate;

Abstract

A method and apparatus for depositing a thin film of material upon a base substrate including a glow discharge ion source for generating the particular ions that will be subsequently deposited upon the base substrate, a vacuum deposition chamber wherein the substrate material is located, and, intermediate between the glow discharge ion source and the vacuum deposition chamber, a constrictor electrode for isolating the deposition chamber from the ion chamber and an anode electrode for extracting ions from the plasma ion source and directing them toward the target substrate. A magnetic field is also provided in the apparatus of the present invention by the use of an externally wound magnetic coil to permit the glow discharge ion source to operate at a lower pressure and to constrict the flow of ions toward the substrate.

Description

219- 121 s a M1204 XR 3 904,505
unltea DIaIES Patent 11 1 1111 3,904,505 Aisenberg 1 Sept. 9, 1975 [54] APPARATUS FOR FILM DEPOSITION 3,494,852 2/1970 Doctoroff 204/298 3,534,385 lO/l970 Castaing et a1. 204/298 [75] inventor- A'senberg Namk Mass- 3,562,141 2/1971 Morley et a1. 204/298 [73] Assignee: Space Sciences, Inc., Waltham,
Mass. Primary Examiner-John H. Mack Assistant Examiner-D. R. Valentine [22] Flled' July 1972 Attorney, Agent, or FirmRichard J. Birch [21] Appl. No.: 271,014
Related US. Application Data [57] ABSTRACT [63] Continuation Of Ser. N0. 21,282, March 20, 1970, A method and apparatus for depositing a thin film Of abandoned. material upon a base substrate including a glow discharge ion source for generating the particular ions [52] US. Cl 204/298; 1 17/93.1 GD; 1 17/933; that will be subsequently deposited upon the base sub- 219/121 EB strate, a vacuum deposition chamber wherein the sub- [51] Int. Cl... C23c 15/00; C23c 11/00; 823k 15/00 strate material is located, and, intermediate between [58] Field of Search 204/298; 118/491, 49.5; the glow discharge ion source and the vacuum deposi- 1 17/933, 93.1 GD; 219/121 EB tion chamber, a constrictor electrode for isolating the deposition chamber from the ion chamber and an [56] References Cited I anode electrode for extracting ions from the plasma UNITED STATES PATENTS ion source and directing them toward the target sub- 3 I 17 022 H1964 Bronson ct a1 2O4/l92 strate. A magnetic field is also provided in the appara- 204N192 tus of the present invention by the use of an externally 219/12] EB wound magnetic coil to permit the glow discharge ion 3,294,583 12/1966 Fedows ct a1... 3,303,319 2/1967 Steigcrwaldmn 3,371,649 5/1968 Gowen 204/298 Source to Operate at a lower Pressure and I9 constrict 3,409,529 11/1968 Chopra et a1. 204/298 the flow of ions toward the substrate.
3,437,864 4/1969 Kofoid et al.... 204/192 3,472,751 10/1969 King 204 192 18 Clam, 2 D'awmg Flgul'es MAGNET CORE PLASMA ION SOURCE TO VACUUM SYSTEM SYSTEM PDMPme l AND CONSTRICTOR ELECTRODE EXTRACTOR ANODE POWER SUPPLY DC SUBSTRATE SUPPLY POWER SUPPLY RF OSCILLATOR AND MATCHING 54 NETWORK APPARATUS FOR FILM DEPOSITION CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION This application is a continuation application of my previously filed application, Ser. No. 21 ,282 filed Mar. 20, 1970 now abandoned for FILM DEPOSITION.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for providing improved thin film deposition.
There have been numerous techniques employed for depositing thin film, most of which involve the use of a substrate, which is elevated to or maintained at a relatively high temperature. This high substrate temperature has been considered necessary during the deposition of the thin film for the purpose of increasing the mobility of the atoms being deposited. However, this high temperature substrate has certain problems associated with it. For example, one disadvantage of vapor deposition upon a hot substrate is that the impurities are caused to diffuse out from the substrate and thereby affect the composition of the thin film that is being deposited. Further, the excess temperatures cause a poor definition at the junction between the film and the base substrate material.
It is known that the necessary substrate atom mobility is obtained by heating the incident ions that are to be deposited on the substrate surface rather than the substrate itself. The apparatus of the present invention takes this fact into account and permits less heating of the substrate by isolating the substrate within a separate chamber adjacent to the plasma ion source chamber. Further, the apparatus is designed to control the energy of impinging ions by appropriate biasing means coupled to the substrate material.
It is an object of the present invention, therefore, to provide an improved method and means for the deposition of thin films.
It is another object of the present invention to provide film deposition apparatus wherein the substrate can be maintained at a relatively low temperature.
A further object of this invention is to provide a method for fabricating a thin film-substrate structure wherein the film can be deposited at a high rate and in a controllable manner.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a thin film upon a base substrate wherein there has been little or no impurity diffusion from the substrate affecting the thin film deposited thereon.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a thin film-substrate structure wherein the junction between the two substances is well defined.
Other objects of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the detailed description in conjunction with the drawings and appended claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION One embodiment of the apparatus of the present invention provides a means by which the thin film is formed on a substrate by ionizing and electrostatically accelerating a beam of atomic particles of a material which is to be deposited on the substrate as a thin film. A plasma ion source acts as a such source of atoms of the material to be deposited. An electrical discharge occurs within this source of ions, and the desired material is converted into a plasma form with the ions to be deposited in a mixture with high energy electrons. An
axial magnetic field may be used to constrain the orbits of the electrons and increase their likelihood of ionizing atoms of the material under consideration. This magnetic field permits the electrical discharge to operate at a lower gas pressure than could be used without the magnetic field. Thus, in the source discharge chamber, there is a plasma which contains a large concentration of ions of the species that are to be subsequently deposited.
A plasma discharge from this plasma ion source is generated into a vacuum deposition chamber where the substrate material is located. This can be accomplished by locating an extraction electrode in the vacuum deposition chamber and by the use of a constrictor means separating the higher pressure plasma ion chamber from the lower pressure vacuum deposition chamber. The ions are extracted through an aperture in the constrictor by means of the applied electric field which maintains a discharge between the plasma source, which functions as a cathode, and the extraction electrode, which is situated in the vacuum deposition chamber. The purpose of the constrictor means is to isolate the vacuum deposition chamber from the higher pressures present in the plasma ion chamber while the extractor electrode pulls the positive ions within the plasma source toward the target substrate. It is often desirable to surround the constrictor aperture with the same material as that to be deposited on the substrate.
In another embodiment of the invention the accelerated beam may be of an inert gas and the ions to be deposited may be supplied by an auxilliary source within the deposition chamber. The beam provides the energy necessary to deposit the ions from the source which coimpinge with the ion beam.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be more clearly understood when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional diagram of one embodiment of the deposition system according to the invention.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of part of another embodiment of the deposition system similar to that shown in FIG. 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION As hereinbefore mentioned, the present invention permits the deposition of improved thin films by means of an ion beam source used in conjunction with a vacuum deposition chamber. FIG. 1 shows an embodiment for practicing the present invention. In one particular system, a silicon film 21 is deposited on a single crystal silicon substrate 22. The film 21 is shown in an exaggerated thickness in FIG. 1.
Plasma ion source 10 generally includes chamber structure 11 having vacuum line 13 and gas input line 12 connected thereto. Vacuum line 13 connects to a vacuum pump (not shown) which controls the pressure in source 10. Also included in ion source 10 are silicon electrodes 14 and 15, which connect externally to power supply 34 and resistor 38. With an electrical discharge taking place within plasma ion source 10, the material which is silicon in this particular case, is introduced into a plasma formed by the high energy electrons. A magnetic field set up by magnetic coil 30 influences the formation of the ions within plasma ion source by constraining the orbits of the electrons and increasaing the likelihood of ionizing atoms of silicon. This external magnetic field permits the electrical discharge to operate at lower gas pressure than could be used without the magnetic field.
The generation of an ionized plasma usually can occur through a neutral gas such as argon, hydrogen, or helium, or through a more active gas, such as nitrogen or oxygen or a mixture thereof, introduced via line 12. The ions produced in this source deposition chamber in turn bombard the cathode (electrodes 14 and 15) and sputter or vaporize atoms of material into a discharge space where they can be ionized. Thus, in the plasma ion source 10, there is produced a plasma which contains large concentrations of ions of the species that one wishes to deposit upon substrate 22.
Many times it is desirous to obtain mixtures of ions, such as aluminum and oxygen, silicon and oxygen, or silicon and nitrogen, for the deposition of insulating layers, such as aluminum oxide, silicon dioxide, or silicon nitride. There are generally two different approaches. One approach is to use electrode material fabricated of silicon or aluminum and to introduce the necessary oxygen or nitrogen gas into the plasma by means of the appropriate gas feed line 12 for the maintenance of this ion plasma. There may be difficulty, however, with this approach since adjusting the partial pressures of the oxygen or nitrogen in order to obtain the correct film stochiometry appears to be difficult. An alternative way, which appears to be advantageous is to fabricate the electrode material of the necessary materials, such as silicon oxide or nitride. One then introduces the correct mixture into the plasma source by operating a glow discharge between the two electrodes in the ion source chamber 10. Consideration of other types of films is taken up later after a discussion of the operation of the deposition chamber.
The next occurence in the operation of the apparatus is the extraction of the plasma discharge from the plasma ion source 10 into vacuum deposition chamber where the substrate 22 is located. To facilitate this, an anode extraction electrode 24 is located in deposition chamber 20 along with a constrictor electrode 26. The purpose of constrictor electrode 26 is basically to separate the higher pressure sputtering source chamber 10 from the lower pressure film deposition chamber 20. The ions are extracted through the constrictor electrode 26 by means of the externally applied electric field, which maintains a discharge between the plasma source 10, operated as a cathode, and the extractor anode 24, located in deposition chamber 20. Anode supply 36 facilitates the foregoing by biasing the anode positively with reference to the source 10. The external electric field generated by power supply 36 is oriented along the external magnetic field caused by magnetic coil 30 so that the plasma is extracted along magnetic field lines. This serves to maintain the plasma in a constricted mode so that it is able to pass through the aperture 26A in constrictor electrode 26 more efficiently. Anode electrode 24 acts to extract electrons from the plasma source, and the electric field generated by the extracted electron pulls the positive ions from plasma source 10 along with them. The anode 24 has an aperture 24A in it located along the axis determined by the magnetic field produced by magnetic coil 30, and this in turn serves to maintain the plasma constriction and permits a large fraction of the extracted positive ions to pass through the anode aperture, subsequently impinging on substrate 22. The apertures in the electrodes 24 and 26 permits differential pumping to occur, thereby maintaining a good vacuum (about 10 Torr) in deposition chamber 20 (provided via vacuum line 29), while somewhat higher pressure is maintained in plasma ion source 10. It is often desirable to surround the apertures in electrodes 24 and 26 with the same material as that to be deposited on the substrate. Note that the magnetic field serves three purposes: In the plasma ion source it permits the source to operate at lower pressures; it aids in constricting the plasma through the constrictor electrode; and it helps to maintain the plasma in a constricted path on itsway to the substrate.
The constrictor electrode 26 may be left essentially electrically floating through a high impedance resistor 46 to an appropriate potential such as the one determined by the resistors 40 and 42. For the embodiment of FIG. 1, this potential is intermediate between the potential of the cathode in source 10 and the anode in chamber 20. Similarly, the insulating shield 17, positioned between electrodes 14 and 26, may be left floating. Shield 17 minimizes the tendency of the discharge to attach other than where desired. A focusing electrode 19 can also be used between anode 24 and substrate 22. Electrode 19 is shown connected to anode 24, but can be connected to a separate biasing supply if desired thereby controlling the final path of the ion beam.
The potential on substrate 22 relative to that of plasma ion source 10 and extractor anode 24 determines in large part of the kinetic energy with which the positive ions impinge on substrate 22. Reference is directed to substrate supply 50 which connects via the secondary winding of transformer 52 to substrate 22.
The combination of the DC power supply 50 with the by-pass capacitor 51 permits a DC bias to be applied to the substrate while maintaining the power supply at a low impedance relative to ground. An AC or RF voltage is superimposed on the DC bias voltage by means of oscillator 54 and transformer 52. The use of the transformer permits the application of an additional AC voltage without modifying the DC bias voltage provided by the DC supply 50.
As previously mentioned, the axial magnetic field helps maintain the ion beam in a columnated mode after it is extracted through the aperture in anode 24 and minimizes space charge spreading. In this way, onev can achieve a higher deposition rate than would otherwise be expected in the absence of a magnetic columnating field.
There are some modifications of the deposition system of the present invention that will enable the deposition of either conducting films on insulating substrates or dlepositing insulating films on conducting or insulating substrates. The necessity for these modifications relates to the fact that when depositing an insulating substrate of film it is more difficult to control the energy of the ions impinging on the substrate 22, and therefore is necessary to prevent the surface from building up to a positively charged repelling condition. In the present invention, as shown in FIG. 1, this has been remedied by using an rf power supply 54.
The AC or if supply, which connects via transformer 52 to substrate 22, operates at a high frequency (at about 15Kc or 13 megacycles, for example) and is used to alternately bias the substrate surface positive and negative by using the displacement current that flow through the insulating film or substrate. The alternating positive and negative potential applied to the substrate is used to extract positive ions and electrons from the plasma so that the net current to the surface is zero; but at the same time, during portions of the cycles, positive ions can be attracted to the surface. The rf amplitude applied to the substrate determines the energy of the positive ions attracted to the surface and can be used to control the deposition energy.
FIG. 2 shows a partial view of the system of FIG. 1 which has been adapted for practising another embodiment of the invention. A vaporizing source 62 and associated power source 60 are added to the configuration of FIG. 1. Source 62 is located in chamber near to substrate 22. In practising this embodiment of the invention, the introduction of energy into the surface atoms of the vaporizing source is primarily to effect vaporization, with the energy to effect deposition on the substrate being primarily supplied by an energetic beam of gaseous ions. This can be accomplished by using an argon beam, for example, generated from the plasma source in conjunction with a source of atoms to be deposited and located in chamber 20. Thus, an energetic beam of gaseous ions, such as argon or another inert gas, coimpinge on the substrate surface with atoms from source 62. Within one or two collisions the high kinetic energy of the argon ion beam is transferred to the lower energy neutral film atoms to be deposited on the substrate surface and gives them the necessary mobility so that they can nucleate and form an improved film. For example, with the embodiment of FIG. 2 one could deposit silicon films on a substrate by means of thermal vaporization of silicon from source 62, concurrently with impingement on the surface of a high energy argon beam, for example. This beam should provide the necessary kinetic energy to transfer to the silicon atoms by means of argon-silicon collisions on the surface.
Source 62 is shown schematically but can be any one of various types of sources of atoms. For example, source 62 may be a sputtering source, a crucible-type vaporization source or even a resistively heated ribbon.
There are other ways that a deposition material can be introduced into the source plasma. One is by sputtering of material from the electrodes 14 and 15 of FIG. 1. Thus, a silicon electrode would be used for the deposition of silicon films, while a carbon electrode would be used for the deposition of carbon films. Metallic electrodes, of course, can be used for the deposition of metallic films. An alternatively way of introducing the deposition material into the plasma at a much faster rate is by the introduction of the deposition material in the vapor or gaseous form or as a component of a gaseous additive material and the subsequent decomposition of the gaseous additive material into the appropriate ions by means of the energy of the plasma. This is a form of plasma pyrolysis. The use of a hydrocarbon gas, for example, in chamber 10 can permit the deposition of carbon films on the substrate since the ions exiting from the ion source will consist of carbon ions and of hydrogen ions. The hydrogen ions incident on the substrate will help to remove residual oxygen ions that may be on the substrate and thus, enhance the subsequent deposition of the carbon ions.
The use of this ion beam deposition technique has shown, for example, that insulating films of carbon can be deposited with material properties very similar to that of carbon in the diamond form. The observed points of similarity between the ion beam deposited carbon form and a diamond-like material consists of the following: 1 high index of refraction, 2) high electrical resistivity, 3) transparency in the visible range, 4) high di-electric constant, 5) ability to scratch glass. These insulating carbon films also show a high resistance to hydrofluoric acid etching. One advantage of insulating carbon films is that such films are quite resistant to sodium ion diffusion through these films which occurs at elevated temperatures. This is in agreement with what would be expected for a densely packed diamond-like carbon structure which has densely packed grain boundaries and resists the motion of relatively large alkali ions. Stable insulating and semiconductor carbon films can therefore be produced by this technique and it is expected that the techniques of the invention will find widespread use in the semi-conductor field.
Mixtures of gases or vapors can also be used to de posit various film compounds. For example, tungsten and carbon mixtures or compounds thereof can be deposited in the tungsten carbide form by using either tungsten and carbon electrodes or, for more rapid deposition by introducing a tungsten compound in the gaseous form and a hydrocarbon compound in the gaseous form into the plasma ion source region.
Apparatus similar to that shown in Flg. 1 can be used to deposit a carbon-diamond film. The electrodes 14 and 15 may be made of carbon, and the mixture gas may be methane for example (a hydro-carbon gas). The carbon ions are introduced into a plasma from ion source 10 by sputtering from the electrodes themselves or from the gas.
By means of the acceleration potential applied to the substrate, it is possible to have the ions come in with a moderately high kinetic energy (about electron volts for example). As a result of this large kinetic energy of the incident ions, these ions when they strike the deposition surface retain a very high surface mobility and can move about to nucleate into a single crystal structure. At the same time, the carbon atoms already on the deposition surface, in the process of scattering the incident ions themselves, will pick up kinetic energy and become mobile. Thus, the incident ion and the first few surface monolayers of the deposition surface are at a relatively high energy compared to that of the basic substrate. These surface atoms retain enough energy so that they can nucleate into a diamond-like single crystal structure.
Therefore, the apparatus of the present invention can be used to deposit various types of films or different substrates and does so by an ion beam technique, wherein the degree and uniformity of deposition are controlled. The apparatus can be also be implemented for use with a vapor source, which is uaually located in the deposition chamber. Such an arrangement has also been used to supplement the deposition from the ion beam. In other words a beam containing silicon ions could be used with a silicon vapor source. Another film so deposited was molybdenum.
Another feature of the invention is that relatively small layers of diamond-like carbon can be deposited. Usually for carbon to form into a diamond-like crystallographic structure it is necessary that the carbon atoms be in a high temperature, high pressure, environment for a sufficiently long time so that the crystallization into a diamond form can occur. The technique used herein employs an energetic ion beam that does not require high pressures since only a small portion of the carbon is heated to a high temperature at one time.
Having described some of the features, objects and advantages of the invention, other modifications of and departures from the embodiments disclosed herein will become apparent to those skilled in the art of which are contemplated as falling within the spirit and scope of the invention and are to be limited solely by the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. A film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
a. a deposition chamber having means for containing the substrate;
b. a source of deposition atoms to be deposited on the substrate, said source of atoms being located within said deposition chamber;
c. glow discharge ion source means for producing an energetic beam of gaseous ions, which may be of the same material to be deposited;
d. means disposed between said ion source and said deposition chamber for producing a pressure differential between the ion source and the deposition chamber; and,
e. means for directing said energetic beam of ions from the ion source to impinge upon the substrate, further wherein said energetic beam of ions and said source of deposition atoms are positioned with respect to each other and with respect to the substrate to provide for concurrent impingement of said ions and said atoms upon the substrate.
2. A film deposition apparatus as set forth in claim 1 wherein said source of ions includes ions of an inert gas.
3. A film deposition apparatus as set forth in claim 2 wherein said inert gas includes argon.
4. A film deposition apparatus as set forth in claim 1 wherein said source of deposition atoms includes silicon atoms.
5. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate;
b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber;
c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited; means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof;
e. means disposed between said second chamber and said deposition chamber for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber;
f. extraction electrode means positioned within said deposition chamber for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber and through an aperture in the extraction electrode means;
g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and,
h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 further characterized by means for applying an electrical potential between at least one of said electrodes and the base substrate contained within said base substrate containing means.
7. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said means for producing a pressure differential includes means for maintaining said second chamber at a higher pressure than said deposition chamber.
8. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said ions are carbon ions and said film is a film of carbon having diamond-like characteristics.
9. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said ions are carbon ions and said film is a carbon film having a high index of refraction, high electrical resistivity, transparency in the visual range, a high dielectric constant and the ability to scratch glass.
10. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said means for producing a pressure differential comprises constrictor electrode means directly separating said second chamher from said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber.
1 1. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising:
a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material;
b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate;
c. constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber;
(1. extraction electrode means positioned between said constrictor electrode means and said means for containing the base substrate and having an aperture therein through which said ions flow; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture; and
e. means for applying an electrical potential between said source of energetic ions and the base substrate as contained within the deposition chamber wherein said electrical potential is an AC voltage.
12. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film 0 upon a base substrate material comprising:
a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material;
b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate;
c. constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber wherein said constrictor electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the deposition material; and
d. extraction electrode means positioned between c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited;
said constrictor electrode means and said means 5 .means for establishingasufficient electrical potenfor containing the base substrate and having an aptial between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow erture therein through which said ions flow; and, discharge therebetween which releases atoms of means for establishing an axial magnetic field bethe material which is to be deposited from said tween said source of energetic ions and said deposielectrode at least partly formed of said material tion chamber with the axis of the magnetic field l0 and ionizes said released deposition material atoms being substantially parallel to the axis of said exto form ions thereof; traction electrode means aperture. means disposed between said second chamber and 13. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film said deposition chamber for producing a pressure upon a base substrate material comprising: differential between said second chamber and said a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions deposition chamber;
being of a normally solid deposition material; extraction electrode means for extracting the ions b. a deposition chamber having means for containing from said second chamber into said deposition a base substrate; chamber through an aperture in the extraction c. constrictor electrode means positioned between electrode means wherein said extraction electrode said source of ions and said deposition chamber means aperture is lined witha material which is the and having an aperture disposed therein through same as the material which is to be deposited; which said ions flow from said source of ions into g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said deposition chamber; and, said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate d. extraction electrode means positioned between thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and,
said constrictor electrode means and said means h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field befor containing the base substrate and having an aptween said second chamber and said deposition erture therein through which. said ions flow chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being wherein said extraction electrode means aperture substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction is lined with a material which is the same as the deelectrode means aperture.
position material; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially paral- 16. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at lel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
14. An apparatus for .depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising:
a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material;
b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; I
constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber wherein said constrictor electrode means aperture is lined with a material which, is the same as the deposition material; and,
d. an extraction electrode means positioned between 15. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate;
b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber;
least one gas within said second chamber;
0. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited,
. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and which ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof;
. means for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber comprising constrictor electrode means positioned between said second chamber and said deposition-chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber, said constrictor means aperture being lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited;
. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means;
g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and,
h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
17. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate;
b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber;
c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited;
d. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and which ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof;
e. means for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber comprising constrictor electrode means positioned between said second chamber and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber, said constrictor means aperture being lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited;
' f. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means wherein said extraction electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited;
g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and,
b. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
118. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising:
a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate;
b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber;
c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited;
. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof;
e. means disposed between said second chamber and said deposition chamber for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber;
f. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means;
g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate;
h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture; and,
. means for applying an electrical potential between at least one of said electrodes and the base substrate contained within said base substrate containing means, wherein said electrical potential is an AC voltage.

Claims (18)

1. A FILM DEPOSITION APPARATUS FOR DEPOSITING A FILM ON A SUBSTRATE COMPRISING: A. A DEPOSITION CHAMBER HAVING MEANS FOR CONTAINING TE SUBSTRATE, B. A SOURCE OF DEPOSITION ATOMS TO BE DEPOSITED ON THE SUBSTRATE, SAID SOURCE OF ATOMS BEING LOCATED WITHIN SAID DEPOSITION CHAMBER, C. GLOW DISCHARGE ION SOURCE MEANS FOR PRODUCING AN ENERGETIC BEAM OF GASEOUS IONS, WHICH MAY BE OF THE SAME MATERIAL TO BE DEPOSITED, D. MEANS DISPOSED BETWEEN SAID ION SOURCE AND SAID DEPOSITION CHAMBER FOR PRODUCING A PRESSURE DIFFERENTIAL BETWEEN THE ION SOURCE AND THE DEPOSITION CHAMBER, AND, E. MEANS FOR DIRECTING SAID ENERGETIC BEAM OF IONS FROM THE ION SOURCE TO IMPINGE UPON THE SUBSTRATE FURTHER WHEREIN SAID ENERGETIC BEAM OF IONS AND SAID SOURCE OF DEPOSITION ATOMS ARE POSITIONED WITH RESPECT TO EACH OTHER AND WITH RESPECT TO THE SUBSTRATE TO PROVIDE FOR CONCURRENT IMPINGEMENT OF SAID IONS AND SAID ATOMS UPON THE SUBSTRATE.
2. A film deposition apparAtus as set forth in claim 1 wherein said source of ions includes ions of an inert gas.
3. A film deposition apparatus as set forth in claim 2 wherein said inert gas includes argon.
4. A film deposition apparatus as set forth in claim 1 wherein said source of deposition atoms includes silicon atoms.
5. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising: a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber; c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited; d. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof; e. means disposed between said second chamber and said deposition chamber for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber; f. extraction electrode means positioned within said deposition chamber for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber and through an aperture in the extraction electrode means; g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and, h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 further characterized by means for applying an electrical potential between at least one of said electrodes and the base substrate contained within said base substrate containing means.
7. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said means for producing a pressure differential includes means for maintaining said second chamber at a higher pressure than said deposition chamber.
8. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said ions are carbon ions and said film is a film of carbon having diamond-like characteristics.
9. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said ions are carbon ions and said film is a carbon film having a high index of refraction, high electrical resistivity, transparency in the visual range, a high dielectric constant and the ability to scratch glass.
10. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said means for producing a pressure differential comprises constrictor electrode means directly separating said second chamber from said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber.
11. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising: a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material; b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; c. constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber; d. extraction electrode means positioned between said constrictor electrode means and said means for containing the base substrate and having an aperture therein through which said ions flow; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture; and e. means for applying an electrical potential between said source of energetic ions and the base substrate as contained within the deposition chamber wherein said electrical potential is an AC voltage.
12. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising: a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material; b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; c. constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber wherein said constrictor electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the deposition material; and, d. extraction electrode means positioned between said constrictor electrode means and said means for containing the base substrate and having an aperture therein through which said ions flow; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
13. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising: a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material; b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; c. constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber; and, d. extraction electrode means positioned between said constrictor electrode means and said means for containing the base substrate and having an aperture therein through which said ions flow wherein said extraction electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the deposition material; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
14. An apparatus for depositing a relatively thin film upon a base substrate material comprising: a. a source of energetic ions, at least some of said ions being of a normally solid deposition material; b. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; c. constrictor electrode means positioned between said source of ions and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said source of ions into said deposition chamber wherein said constrictor electrode means aperture is lined with a material which, is the same as the deposition material; and, d. an extraction electrode means positioned between said constrictor electrode means and said means for containing the base substrate and having an aperture therein through which said ions flow wherein said extraction electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the deposition material; and, means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said source of energetic ions and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
15. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising: a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber; c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited; d. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atOms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof; e. means disposed between said second chamber and said deposition chamber for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber; f. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means wherein said extraction electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited; g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and, h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
16. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising: a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber; c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited, d. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and which ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof; e. means for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber comprising constrictor electrode means positioned between said second chamber and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber, said constrictor means aperture being lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited; f. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means; g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and, h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
17. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising: a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber; c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited; d. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and which ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof; e. means for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber comprising constrictor electrode means positioned between said second chamber and said deposition chamber and having an aperture disposed therein through which said ions flow from said second chamber into said deposition chamber, said constrictor means aperture being lined with a material which is the same as the material which is To be deposited; f. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means wherein said extraction electrode means aperture is lined with a material which is the same as the material which is to be deposited; g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; and, h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture.
18. Film deposition apparatus for depositing a film on a substrate comprising: a. a deposition chamber having means for containing a base substrate; b. a second chamber and means for maintaining at least one gas within said second chamber; c. at least two spaced electrodes positioned within said second chamber with at least one of said electrodes being at least partly formed of the material which is to be deposited; d. means for establishing a sufficient electrical potential between said spaced electrodes to cause a glow discharge therebetween which releases atoms of the material which is to be deposited from said electrode at least partly formed of said material and ionizes said released deposition material atoms to form ions thereof; e. means disposed between said second chamber and said deposition chamber for producing a pressure differential between said second chamber and said deposition chamber; f. extraction electrode means for extracting the ions from said second chamber into said deposition chamber through an aperture in the extraction electrode means; g. accelerating means for causing at least some of said extracted ions to impinge upon said substrate thereby depositing a film on the substrate; h. means for establishing an axial magnetic field between said second chamber and said deposition chamber with the axis of the magnetic field being substantially parallel to the axis of said extraction electrode means aperture; and, i. means for applying an electrical potential between at least one of said electrodes and the base substrate contained within said base substrate containing means, wherein said electrical potential is an AC voltage.
US271014A 1970-03-20 1972-07-12 Apparatus for film deposition Expired - Lifetime US3904505A (en)

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DE3016022A1 (en) * 1979-04-26 1981-03-26 Optical Coating Laboratory Inc., Santa Rosa, Calif. METHOD AND DEVICE FOR PRODUCING A THIN, FILM-LIKE COATING BY EVAPORATION USING A ENCLOSED PLASMA SOURCE
EP0054189A1 (en) * 1980-12-15 1982-06-23 Hughes Aircraft Company Improved photochemical vapor deposition method
EP0064288A1 (en) * 1981-05-04 1982-11-10 Optical Coating Laboratory, Inc. Method and apparatus for the production and utilization of activated molecular beams
US4402993A (en) * 1981-03-20 1983-09-06 Gulf & Western Manufacturing Company Process for coating optical fibers
US4452686A (en) * 1982-03-22 1984-06-05 Axenov Ivan I Arc plasma generator and a plasma arc apparatus for treating the surfaces of work-pieces, incorporating the same arc plasma generator
US4487162A (en) * 1980-11-25 1984-12-11 Cann Gordon L Magnetoplasmadynamic apparatus for the separation and deposition of materials
US4530750A (en) * 1981-03-20 1985-07-23 A. S. Laboratories, Inc. Apparatus for coating optical fibers
US4565618A (en) * 1983-05-17 1986-01-21 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Apparatus for producing diamondlike carbon flakes
GB2174509A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-11-05 Canon Kk Controlling velocity of particles
GB2175413A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-11-26 Canon Kk Controlling flow
GB2175414A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-11-26 Canon Kk Controlling density of particles
GB2175708A (en) * 1985-05-11 1986-12-03 Canon Kk Reaction apparatus
GB2175709A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-12-03 Canon Kk Controlling flow of particles
GB2185129A (en) * 1985-11-15 1987-07-08 Canon Kk Flow control device for fine particle stream
WO1987005831A1 (en) * 1986-03-31 1987-10-08 Spectran Corporation Hermetic coatings for optical fibers
US4822466A (en) * 1987-06-25 1989-04-18 University Of Houston - University Park Chemically bonded diamond films and method for producing same
US4874222A (en) * 1986-03-31 1989-10-17 Spectran Corporation Hermetic coatings for non-silica based optical fibers
US4913762A (en) * 1987-04-08 1990-04-03 Andus Corporation Surface treatment of polymers for bonding by applying a carbon layer with sputtering
US5103102A (en) * 1989-02-24 1992-04-07 Micrion Corporation Localized vacuum apparatus and method
US5196706A (en) * 1991-07-30 1993-03-23 International Business Machines Corporation Extractor and deceleration lens for ion beam deposition apparatus
WO1995017537A1 (en) * 1993-12-21 1995-06-29 Commonwealth Scientific Corporation Process for deposition of diamondlike, electrically conductive and electron-emissive carbon-based films
US5442199A (en) * 1993-05-14 1995-08-15 Kobe Steel Usa, Inc. Diamond hetero-junction rectifying element
US5458754A (en) 1991-04-22 1995-10-17 Multi-Arc Scientific Coatings Plasma enhancement apparatus and method for physical vapor deposition
US5512873A (en) * 1993-05-04 1996-04-30 Saito; Kimitsugu Highly-oriented diamond film thermistor
US6221782B1 (en) * 1994-12-15 2001-04-24 Applied Materials, Inc. Adjusting DC bias voltage in plasma chamber
US6274837B1 (en) * 1999-06-16 2001-08-14 Saint-Gobain Industrial Ceramics, Inc. Method and apparatus for in-situ solid state doping of CVD diamonds and diamonds so made
US20030127744A1 (en) * 1997-07-15 2003-07-10 Raina Kanwal K. Method of using hydrogen gas in sputter deposition of aluminum-containing films and aluminum-containing films derived therefrom
US6893905B2 (en) * 1997-07-15 2005-05-17 Micron Technology, Inc. Method of forming substantially hillock-free aluminum-containing components
US20070045570A1 (en) * 2005-08-31 2007-03-01 Chaney Craig R Technique for improving ion implanter productivity
US20070137063A1 (en) * 2005-12-21 2007-06-21 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands, B.V. Carbon beam deposition chamber for reduced defects
US20070184640A1 (en) * 2004-05-28 2007-08-09 Korea Basic Science Institute Method for producing solid element plasma and its plasma source
US20090197401A1 (en) * 2008-02-06 2009-08-06 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation method using a pure or nearly pure silicon seasoning layer on the chamber interior surfaces
US7695590B2 (en) 2004-03-26 2010-04-13 Applied Materials, Inc. Chemical vapor deposition plasma reactor having plural ion shower grids
US7767561B2 (en) * 2004-07-20 2010-08-03 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation reactor having an ion shower grid
US8058156B2 (en) 2004-07-20 2011-11-15 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation reactor having multiple ion shower grids
US20120044596A1 (en) * 2009-03-11 2012-02-23 Showa Denko K.K. Method of producing magnetic recording medium and magnetic recording and reproducing apparatus
US9232628B2 (en) 2013-02-20 2016-01-05 Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, Inc. Method and system for plasma-assisted ion beam processing
US20230036704A1 (en) * 2021-07-30 2023-02-02 Jiangsu Xcmg Construction Machinery Research Institute Ltd. Arc ion coating device and coating method

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Cited By (55)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4256780A (en) * 1978-11-02 1981-03-17 Ford Motor Company Metallization process
DE3016022A1 (en) * 1979-04-26 1981-03-26 Optical Coating Laboratory Inc., Santa Rosa, Calif. METHOD AND DEVICE FOR PRODUCING A THIN, FILM-LIKE COATING BY EVAPORATION USING A ENCLOSED PLASMA SOURCE
US4248909A (en) * 1979-11-19 1981-02-03 The Aerospace Corporation Chaoite coating process
US4487162A (en) * 1980-11-25 1984-12-11 Cann Gordon L Magnetoplasmadynamic apparatus for the separation and deposition of materials
EP0054189A1 (en) * 1980-12-15 1982-06-23 Hughes Aircraft Company Improved photochemical vapor deposition method
US4530750A (en) * 1981-03-20 1985-07-23 A. S. Laboratories, Inc. Apparatus for coating optical fibers
US4402993A (en) * 1981-03-20 1983-09-06 Gulf & Western Manufacturing Company Process for coating optical fibers
EP0064288A1 (en) * 1981-05-04 1982-11-10 Optical Coating Laboratory, Inc. Method and apparatus for the production and utilization of activated molecular beams
US4452686A (en) * 1982-03-22 1984-06-05 Axenov Ivan I Arc plasma generator and a plasma arc apparatus for treating the surfaces of work-pieces, incorporating the same arc plasma generator
US4565618A (en) * 1983-05-17 1986-01-21 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Apparatus for producing diamondlike carbon flakes
US4911805A (en) * 1985-03-26 1990-03-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Apparatus and process for producing a stable beam of fine particles
GB2174509A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-11-05 Canon Kk Controlling velocity of particles
GB2175413A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-11-26 Canon Kk Controlling flow
GB2175414A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-11-26 Canon Kk Controlling density of particles
GB2175709A (en) * 1985-03-26 1986-12-03 Canon Kk Controlling flow of particles
GB2175413B (en) * 1985-03-26 1989-06-28 Canon Kk Apparatus and process for controlling flow of fine particles
GB2175709B (en) * 1985-03-26 1989-06-28 Canon Kk Apparatus for controlling flow of fine particles
GB2175708B (en) * 1985-05-11 1989-07-05 Canon Kk Reaction apparatus
GB2175708A (en) * 1985-05-11 1986-12-03 Canon Kk Reaction apparatus
US4909914A (en) * 1985-05-11 1990-03-20 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Reaction apparatus which introduces one reacting substance within a convergent-divergent nozzle
GB2185129A (en) * 1985-11-15 1987-07-08 Canon Kk Flow control device for fine particle stream
GB2185129B (en) * 1985-11-15 1989-10-11 Canon Kk Flow control device for fine particle stream
US4735856A (en) * 1986-03-31 1988-04-05 Spectran Corporation Hermetic coatings for optical fiber and product
WO1987005831A1 (en) * 1986-03-31 1987-10-08 Spectran Corporation Hermetic coatings for optical fibers
US4874222A (en) * 1986-03-31 1989-10-17 Spectran Corporation Hermetic coatings for non-silica based optical fibers
US4913762A (en) * 1987-04-08 1990-04-03 Andus Corporation Surface treatment of polymers for bonding by applying a carbon layer with sputtering
US4822466A (en) * 1987-06-25 1989-04-18 University Of Houston - University Park Chemically bonded diamond films and method for producing same
US5103102A (en) * 1989-02-24 1992-04-07 Micrion Corporation Localized vacuum apparatus and method
US5458754A (en) 1991-04-22 1995-10-17 Multi-Arc Scientific Coatings Plasma enhancement apparatus and method for physical vapor deposition
US6139964A (en) 1991-04-22 2000-10-31 Multi-Arc Inc. Plasma enhancement apparatus and method for physical vapor deposition
US5196706A (en) * 1991-07-30 1993-03-23 International Business Machines Corporation Extractor and deceleration lens for ion beam deposition apparatus
US5512873A (en) * 1993-05-04 1996-04-30 Saito; Kimitsugu Highly-oriented diamond film thermistor
US5442199A (en) * 1993-05-14 1995-08-15 Kobe Steel Usa, Inc. Diamond hetero-junction rectifying element
WO1995017537A1 (en) * 1993-12-21 1995-06-29 Commonwealth Scientific Corporation Process for deposition of diamondlike, electrically conductive and electron-emissive carbon-based films
US5616179A (en) * 1993-12-21 1997-04-01 Commonwealth Scientific Corporation Process for deposition of diamondlike, electrically conductive and electron-emissive carbon-based films
US6513452B2 (en) 1994-12-15 2003-02-04 Applied Materials Inc. Adjusting DC bias voltage in plasma chamber
US6221782B1 (en) * 1994-12-15 2001-04-24 Applied Materials, Inc. Adjusting DC bias voltage in plasma chamber
US7161211B2 (en) 1997-07-15 2007-01-09 Micron Technology, Inc. Aluminum-containing film derived from using hydrogen and oxygen gas in sputter deposition
US6893905B2 (en) * 1997-07-15 2005-05-17 Micron Technology, Inc. Method of forming substantially hillock-free aluminum-containing components
US20030127744A1 (en) * 1997-07-15 2003-07-10 Raina Kanwal K. Method of using hydrogen gas in sputter deposition of aluminum-containing films and aluminum-containing films derived therefrom
US6274837B1 (en) * 1999-06-16 2001-08-14 Saint-Gobain Industrial Ceramics, Inc. Method and apparatus for in-situ solid state doping of CVD diamonds and diamonds so made
US7695590B2 (en) 2004-03-26 2010-04-13 Applied Materials, Inc. Chemical vapor deposition plasma reactor having plural ion shower grids
US20070184640A1 (en) * 2004-05-28 2007-08-09 Korea Basic Science Institute Method for producing solid element plasma and its plasma source
US8058156B2 (en) 2004-07-20 2011-11-15 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation reactor having multiple ion shower grids
US7767561B2 (en) * 2004-07-20 2010-08-03 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation reactor having an ion shower grid
US7446326B2 (en) * 2005-08-31 2008-11-04 Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, Inc. Technique for improving ion implanter productivity
US20070045570A1 (en) * 2005-08-31 2007-03-01 Chaney Craig R Technique for improving ion implanter productivity
US20070137063A1 (en) * 2005-12-21 2007-06-21 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands, B.V. Carbon beam deposition chamber for reduced defects
US20090197401A1 (en) * 2008-02-06 2009-08-06 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation method using a pure or nearly pure silicon seasoning layer on the chamber interior surfaces
US7968439B2 (en) * 2008-02-06 2011-06-28 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation method using a pure or nearly pure silicon seasoning layer on the chamber interior surfaces
US20110207307A1 (en) * 2008-02-06 2011-08-25 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation method using a pure or nearly pure silicon seasoning layer on the chamber interior surfaces
US8168519B2 (en) 2008-02-06 2012-05-01 Applied Materials, Inc. Plasma immersion ion implantation method using a pure or nearly pure silicon seasoning layer on the chamber interior surfaces
US20120044596A1 (en) * 2009-03-11 2012-02-23 Showa Denko K.K. Method of producing magnetic recording medium and magnetic recording and reproducing apparatus
US9232628B2 (en) 2013-02-20 2016-01-05 Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, Inc. Method and system for plasma-assisted ion beam processing
US20230036704A1 (en) * 2021-07-30 2023-02-02 Jiangsu Xcmg Construction Machinery Research Institute Ltd. Arc ion coating device and coating method

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