4.6 Article

Conformality of atomic layer deposition in microchannels: impact of process parameters on the simulated thickness profile

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 15, Pages 8645-8660

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp04758b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Academy of Finland (COOLCAT consortium) [329978]
  2. Academy of Finland (ALDI consortium) [331082]
  3. Aalto University
  4. Academy of Finland (AKA) [329978, 329978, 331082] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Unparalleled conformality is driving new applications for atomic layer deposition (ALD). In this study, a diffusion-reaction model was implemented to simulate film growth in wide microchannels. The model considered various process parameters and showed that factors such as molar mass and growth per cycle influenced the penetration depth into the microchannel. The study also compared the model to a slope method for extracting the sticking coefficient.
Unparalleled conformality is driving ever new applications for atomic layer deposition (ALD), a thin film growth method based on repeated self-terminating gas-solid reactions. In this work, we re-implemented a diffusion-reaction model from the literature to simulate the propagation of film growth in wide microchannels and used that model to explore trends in both the thickness profile as a function of process parameters and different diffusion regimes. In the model, partial pressure of the ALD reactant was analytically approximated. Simulations were made as a function of kinetic and process parameters such as the temperature, (lumped) sticking coefficient, molar mass of the ALD reactant, reactant's exposure time and pressure, total pressure, density of the grown material, and growth per cycle (GPC) of the ALD process. Increasing the molar mass and the GPC, for example, resulted in a decreasing penetration depth into the microchannel. The influence of the mass and size of the inert gas molecules on the thickness profile depended on the diffusion regime (free molecular flow vs. transition flow). The modelling was compared to a recent slope method to extract the sticking coefficient. The slope method gave systematically somewhat higher sticking coefficient values compared to the input sticking coefficient values; the potential reasons behind the observed differences are discussed.

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