4.6 Article

Effects of a cathode fall region on deposition rate of copper atoms in Dc plasma sputtering source

Journal

PHYSICA SCRIPTA
Volume 96, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1402-4896/abd2e1

Keywords

Dc glow discharge; plasma sputtering; cathode fall region; deposition rate

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The theoretical investigation focused on the impact of the length of the cathode fall region on the deposition rate of copper atoms using a dc plasma sputtering source. The study found that the length of the cathode fall region increases under high discharge voltage and low gas pressure, leading to a correlation with the rate of deposition of copper atoms on the substrate, with a significant increase in deposition rate observed at specific voltage and pressure conditions.
A theoretical investigation was carried out to show the effect of the length of the cathode fall region on the deposition rate of copper atoms on a substrate using dc plasma sputtering source. The effects of the discharge voltage (-1 to -3 kV) and argon gas pressure (1 x 10(-2) to 5 x 10(-1) mbar) on the length of the cathode fall region of the proposed plasma source were investigated. The flux energies of gas ions, neutral's gas atoms and electrons in one dimension were calculated to determine the length of the cathode fall region, total current density and the rate of deposition of copper atoms. The results show that the length of the cathode fall region increases when low gas pressure is used at high values of the discharge voltage for the plasma source. There is also a relationship between the length of the cathode fall region and the rate of deposition of copper atoms on the substrate, where the deposition rate increased by 76% when the cathode fall length increased by 120% at the discharge voltage -3 kV and the pressure of gas 1 x 10(-2) mbar.

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