Title :
Consideration of target platen materials in plasma immersion ion implantation
Author :
Tian, X. ; Zeng, X. ; Fu, R.K.Y. ; Chu, P.K.
Author_Institution :
City Univ. of Hong Kong, Kowloon, China
Abstract :
Summary form only given. In plasma immersion ion implantation (PIII), ions are accelerated from the overlying plasma by applying a negative voltage to the sample stage. Hence, ions impinge into not only the sample but also all exposed area of the sample platen. In most cases, the exposed sample platen area is larger than that of the sample (e.g. a silicon wafer) and constitutes the main load of the power modulator. Our theoretical simulation reveals that in typical PIII conditions, over 70% of the ions bombard the side and bottom of the sample platen. The materials that make up the sample platen surface thus have a critical influence on the secondary electron emission, sample heating, and amount of sputtered contaminants. The secondary electrons affect the electrical efficiency, design of the modulator, as well as X-ray production and the subsequent protection. Sputtering of the target platen releases metallic and other ions into the plasma that can contaminate the samples. The choice of a compatible material is thus critical in processes such as SPIMOX (separation by plasma implantation of oxygen). The target platen heat capacity affects the sample temperature that is critical in elevated-temperature or room-temperature processes such as high-frequency, low-voltage PIII and hydrogen PIII /ion-cut. In this paper, we present results acquired from theoretical and experimental investigations on the target materials selection and the influence on the treatment results.
Keywords :
impurities; ion implantation; plasma materials processing; secondary electron emission; SPIMOX; X-ray production; electrical efficiency; elevated-temperature; exposed area; heat capacity; high-frequency low-voltage plasma immersion ion implantation; ion acceleration; ion bombardment; metallic ions; modulator; plasma immersion ion implantation; power modulator; room-temperature processes; sample contamination; sample heating; sample platen; secondary electron emission; silicon wafer; sputtered contaminants; sputtering; target platen materials; Acceleration; Electron emission; Plasma accelerators; Plasma immersion ion implantation; Plasma materials processing; Plasma temperature; Plasma x-ray sources; Silicon; Surface contamination; Voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Plasma Science, 2001. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7141-0
DOI :
10.1109/PPPS.2001.961394