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Published byHugh McGee Modified over 9 years ago
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Solar Cells need a top side conductor to collect the current generated They also need a conductive film on the backside
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Conductor Options
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Silver is the typical choice because it has the top conductivity However, Silver is an expensive conductor
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Silver is typically printed via a screen printer to keep manufacturing cost low
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Because of equipment and cost limitations, we will use vacuum deposition processes for our conductor
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Thin Film Deposition Materials are deposited using a vacuum chamber The vacuum chamber reduces the atmosphere to high vacuum levels (no atmosphere) This reduces contaminating the films, provides a non-contaminating environment free of oxygen, water vapor, etc. and allows materials to melt at lower temperatures.
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Thin Film Deposition Thin film deposition tools are very complex due to the need to create high vacuum levels. Vacuum levels of 5x10 -7 torr and better are typical. Sea level atmospheric pressure is about 740 torr or 7.4x10 2 Because of their complexity, vacuum chambers are very expensive.
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Thin Film Deposition To achieve high vacuum levels, several types of vacuum pumps are used. 1. 1.Mid level vacuum levels (2x10 -3 torr) are reached with rotary vane vacuum pumps. These pumps are also know as mechanical or roughing vacuum pumps 2. 2.High level vacuum levels are reached using Diffusion vacuum pumps – requires liquid nitrogen to prevent oil contamination Turbomolecular pumps – like a small jet engine, clean and fast, good for processes that require the introduction of a process gas. Because of the high speed vanes, subject to catastrophic failure Cryogenic vacuum pumps – uses low temperature (10 o K) – also clean and fast pumping but requires regeneration periodically which is time consuming
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Thin film deposition tools in the ECE Microelectronics Clean Room CVC 601-sputter deposition Varian 3125 e-beam depositionCHA Mark 50 e-beam deposition Cooke-thermal deposition
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Conductor Deposition The Cooke thermal evaporator is not currently used. The CVC sputter tool is used for aluminum depositions. A silver/antimony and copper targets are available. The Varian 3125 and CHA Mark 50 e-beam deposition tools are used for all other conductors, Cu, Au, Ag, Cr, Ni – –An e-beam evaporates material, it get the material so hot it becomes a gas and evaporates. It then travels in a straight line, because it is under vacuum, until it condenses when it strikes a colder surface
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With sputtering, an Argon plasma is formed, causing argon ions to strike a metal target and knock loose material. Because an electric field is created, material is deposited on the substrate Material target Argon plasma – ionized argon in an electric field Substrate to be coated
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E-beam Evaporation uses a high energy electron beam to vaporize (change from a solid to vapor) materials, especially metals
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Overall view of the Varian 3125 vacuum chamber. This tool deposits thin films using e-beam evaporation
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Portion of Varian 3125 control rack
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Varian 3125 quartz heater controller, shutter controller and planetary rotation controller Quartz heater controller E-beam shutter controller
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Electron beam power supply Typically 6-8KV are required to form the electron beam Electron beam can be steered by magnetic fields
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Cryopump temperature-must be below 15 o K
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Varian 3125 ion gauge controller and deposition controller Ion Gauge controller Deposition controller
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Varian 3125 view of open chamber Wafer planetary – can rotate or stay stationary. Can be removed for loading
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Varian 3125 4-pocket e-beam crucible
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With an e-beam (electron beam) evaporator the material is heated to a vapor (gas) and then condenses on cooler surfaces Molten material hot enough to vaporize (become a gas) Electron beam is formed and strikes the metal crucible Substrates (wafers) sit at the top of the chamber
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Varian 3125 wafer planetary Wafer planetary for Varian 3125
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Varian 3125 Wafers are held down by spring clips
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Varian 3126 Quartz Heaters
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Varian 3125 door showing glass slide holder Glass slide must be replaced before each run
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Overall view of the CHA Mark 50 vacuum chamber. This tool deposits thin films using e-beam evaporation
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Inside of CHA Mark 50 chamber showing wafer platen – can be removed from the chamber and replaced with a larger wafer platen
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CHA Mark 50 wafer adapter ring Adapter rings are available for 2”, 3” and 4” wafers Adapter ring for 4”/100mm wafer
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CHA Mark 50 4-pocket e-beam crucible Four different materials are available to do sequential evaporations
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CHA Mark 50 crucible materials and chamber temperature monitor Materials currently inside the 4 pocket crucible are shown with their pocket number Pocket is chosen using this indexer
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CHA Mark 50 crystal oscillators for evaporation material thickness measurement Crystal oscillators
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New glass slides must be used for each evaporation
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CHA Mark 50 cryo-pump control Cryogenic pump temperature – should be around 20 o K
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CHA Mark 50 vacuum gauge controller Vacuum chamber pressure. Gauge is showing a vacuum pressure of 7.6 x 10 -6 torr. E-beam power supply is interlocked to prevent high voltage if pressure is too high
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CHA Mark 50 E-beam power supply and controller Power supply is interlocked to prevent activation if vacuum pressure, cooling water, and zero current conditions are not met Power supply main on/off switch High voltage switch and current control
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E-beam evaporation Crucible being heated by an electron beam
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Overall view of the CVC vacuum chamber. This tool deposits thin films using “sputtering”
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Sputter down configurationshown – the CVC inverts this configuration and sputters up
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CVC sputter tool with chamber lid open Wafers are loaded into position
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Looking into the CVC sputter tool chamber, showing the 8” aluminum target 8 inch aluminum target Viewport – plasma can be seen here when sputtering
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CVC sputter tool control racks Chamber vacuum gauge
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Cryo pump temperature – must be below 15 o K Argon MFC – 30 sccm flow typical
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CVC sputter tool DC power supply for aluminum target DC Voltage about 4KV DC current 0.5 to 1.0 A
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CVC sputter tool view port
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View of argon sputter plasma in CVC sputter tool
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View of argon plasma in AJA sputter tool Sputter target Shutter Substrate (wafer) stage Wafer stage can rotate and heat
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Assignment – HW6 Thin film worksheet on web site Due next lecture
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