4.6 Article

The impact of substrate bias on a remote plasma sputter coating process for conformal coverage of trenches and 3D structures

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 48, Issue 33, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0022-3727/48/33/335303

Keywords

substrate bias; conformal coverage; IPVD; remote plasma sputtering; HiTUS; thin film

Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/G037388/1]
  2. Plasma Quest Ltd (PQL)

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With the progression towards higher aspect ratios and finer topographical dimensions in many micro- and nano-systems, it is of technological importance to be able to conformally deposit thin films onto such structures. Sputtering techniques have been developed to provide such conformal coverage through a combination of coating re-sputtering and ionised physical vapour deposition (IPVD), the latter by use of a secondary plasma source or a pulsed high target power (HiPIMS). This paper reports on the use of an alternate remote plasma sputtering technique in which a high density (>10(13) cm(-3)) magnetised plasma is used for sputter deposition, and additionally is shown to provide IPVD and a re-sputtering capability. From the substrate I-V characteristics and optical emission spectroscopy (OES) data, it is shown that remote plasma sputtering is an inherently continuous IPVD process (without the need of a secondary discharge). Through the reactive deposition of Al2O3 onto complex structures, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX) results demonstrate that applying a negative substrate bias during film growth can result in re-sputtering of deposited material and film growth on surfaces obscured from the initial sputter flux. Using 5 : 1 (height : width) aspect ratio trenches, the substrate bias was set to 0,-245 and -334 V. At 0V substrate bias, the alumina coating is predominantly deposited on the horizontal surfaces; at -344 V, it is predominantly deposited onto the side walls and at -245 V a more uniform layer thickness is obtained over the trench. The process was optimised further by alternating the substrate bias between -222 and -267 V, with a 50% residence time at each voltage, yielding a more uniform conformal coverage of the 5 : 1 aspect ratio structures over large areas.

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