Vacuum Deposition Processes (2024)

Vacuum Deposition Processes (1)

3. Vacuum and low-pressure arc vapor deposition configurations.

Vacuum Deposition Processes (2)

4. Plasma-based and vacuum based ion plating techniques using thermal evaporation sources.

Vacuum Deposition Processes (3)

1. Resistively heated and electro-beam heated sources for vacuum evaporation.

Vacuum Deposition Processes (4)

5. RF-driven parallel plate CVD reactor

Vacuum Deposition Processes (5)

2. Sputtering source configurations for planar magnetron sputter deposition.

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In a vacuum, gas pressure is less than the ambient atmospheric pressure. A plasma is a gaseous environment where there are enough ions and electrons for there to be appreciable electrical conductivity. Vacuum deposition is the deposition of a film or coating in a vacuum (or low-pressure plasma) environment. Generally, the term is applied to processes that deposit atoms or molecules one at a time, such as in physical vapor deposition (PVD) or low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) processes. It can also be applied to other deposition processes such as low-pressure plasma spraying (LPPS).

The vacuum in deposition processing increases the "mean free path" for collisions of atoms and high-energy ions and helps reduce gaseous contamination to an acceptable level. When establishing a plasma in a vacuum, the gas pressure plays an important role in the enthalpy, the density of charged and uncharged particles and the energy distribution of particles in the plasma. A plasma in a "good vacuum" provides a source of ions and electrons that may be accelerated to high energies in an electric field.

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In PVD processing, these high-energy ions can be used to sputter a surface as a source of deposition material and/or bombard a growing film to modify the film properties. Ion bombardment effects can also be found in LPCVD. The plasma may also be used to "activate" reactive gases and vapors in reactive deposition processes and fragment the chemical vapor precursors in plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD).

PVD

Physical vapor deposition processes are atomistic where material vaporized from a solid or liquid source is transported as a vapor through a vacuum or low-pressure gaseous or plasma environment. When it contacts the part, it condenses.

The vaporized material may be an element, alloy or compound. Some PVD processes can be used to deposit films of compound materials (reactive deposition) by the reaction of depositing material with the gas in the deposition environment (e.g., TiN) or with a co-depositing material such as TiC or even a combination of the two.

Typically, PVD processes are used to deposit films with thicknesses in the range of a few nanometers to thousands of nanometers; however, they can be used to form multilayer coatings, thick deposits and free-standing structures.

Vacuum evaporation

Vacuum evaporation (including sublimation) is a PVD process where material from a thermal vaporization source reaches the substrate without collision with gas molecules in the space between the source and substrate. The trajectory of the vaporized material is "line-of-sight." Typically, vacuum evaporation takes place in a gas pressure range of 10-5 to 10-9 Torr, depending on the level of contamination that can be tolerated in the deposited film. For an appreciable deposition rate to be attained, the material vaporized must reach a temperature where its vapor pressure is 10 mTorr or higher. Typical vaporization sources are resistively heated stranded wires, boats or crucibles (for vaporization temperatures below 1,500C) or high-energy electron beams that are focused and rastered over the surface of the source material (any temperature). Figure 1 shows several vacuum evaporation source configurations.

Advantages of vacuum evaporation:

  • High-purity films can be deposited from high-purity source material.
  • Source of material to be vaporized may be a solid in any form and purity.
  • The line-of-sight trajectory and "limited-area sources" allow the use of masks to define areas of deposition on the substrate and shutters between the source and substrate to prevent deposition when not desired.
  • Deposition rate monitoring and control are relatively easy.
  • It is the least expensive of the PVD processes.

Disadvantages of vacuum evaporation:

  • Many compounds and alloy composi-tions can only be deposited with difficulty.
  • Line-of-sight and limited-area sources result in poor surface coverage on complex surfaces unless there is proper fixturing and movement.
  • Line-of-sight trajectories and limited-area sources result in poor film-thickness uniformity over large areas without proper fixturing and movement.
  • Few processing variables are available for film property control.
  • Source material use may be low.
  • High radiant heat loads can exist in the deposition system.
  • Large-volume vacuum chambers are generally required to keep an appreciable distance between the hot source and the substrate.

Vacuum evaporation is used to form optical interference coatings using high and low index of refraction materials, mirror coatings, decorative coatings, permeation barrier films on flexible packaging materials, electrically conducting films and corrosion protective coatings. When depositing metals, vacuum evaporation is sometimes called vacuum metallization.

Sputter deposition

Sputter deposition is the deposition of particles vaporized from a surface (sputter target) by the physical sputtering process. Physical sputtering is a non-thermal vaporization process where surface atoms are physically ejected by momentum transfer from an energetic bombarding particle that is usually a gaseous ion accelerated from a plasma or an "ion gun." This PVD process is often called sputtering.

Sputter deposition can be performed in a vacuum or low-pressure gas (<5 mTorr) where the sputtered particles do not suffer gas-phase collisions in the space between the target and the substrate. It can also be done in a higher gas pressure (5-15 mTorr) where energetic particles that are sputtered or reflected from the sputtering target are "thermalized" by gas-phase collisions before they reach the substrate.

The most common sputtering sources are the planar magnetrons where the plasma is magnetically confined close to the target surface and ions are accelerated from the plasma to the target surface. In the unbalanced magnetron configuration, the magnetic field is configured to allow electrons to escape and form a plasma away from the target. The high sputtering rates attainable in magnetron sputtering allow reactive deposition of compound films as long as the sputtering target is not allowed to react with the reactive gas to form a low-sputtering rate compound (target poisoning). Figure 2 (see above)shows several sputter deposition configurations using planar magnetron sputtering sources.

Advantages of sputter deposition:

  • Elements, alloys and compounds can be sputtered and deposited.
  • The sputtering target provides a stable, long-lived vaporization source.
  • In some configurations, the sputtering source can be a defined shape such as a line or the surface of a rod or cylinder.
  • In some configurations, reactive deposition can be easily accomplished using reactive gaseous species that are activated in plasma.
  • There is very little radiant heat in the deposition process.
  • The source and substrate can be spaced close together.
  • The sputter deposition chamber can have a small volume.

Disadvantages of sputter deposition:

  • Sputtering rates are low compared to those that can be attained in thermal evaporation.
  • In many configurations, the deposition flux distribution is non-uniform, requiring moving fixturing to obtain films of uniform thickness.
  • Sputtering targets are often expensive and material use may be poor.
  • Most of the energy incident on the target becomes heat, which must be removed.
  • In some cases, gaseous contaminants are "activated" in the plasma, making film contamination more of a problem than in vacuum evaporation.
  • In reactive sputter deposition, the gas composition must be carefully controlled to prevent poisoning the sputtering target.

Sputter deposition is widely used to deposit thin film metallization on semi-conductor material, coatings on architectural glass, reflective coating on polymers, magnetic films for storage media, transparent electrically conductive films on glass and flexible webs, dry-film lubricants, wear resistant coating on tools and decorative coatings.

Arc Vapor Deposition

In arc vapor deposition, the vapor source is the vaporization of the anode or cathode of a low-voltage, high-current electric arc in a good vacuum or low-pressure gas. The usual configuration is the cathodic arc where the evaporization is from an arc that is moving over a solid cathodic surface.

In the anodic arc configuration, the arc is used to melt the source material that is contained in a crucible. The vaporized material is ionized as it passes through the arc plasma to form charged ions of the film material. In the arc vaporization process, molten globules (macros) can be formed and deposited on the substrate. To avoid this problem, a plasma duct may be used to bend the charged particles out of the line-of-sight of the source, and the macros will deposit on the walls of the duct. Figure 3 shows some arc vapor deposition configurations.

Advantages of arc vapor deposition:

  • All electrically conductive materials can be vaporized.
  • The arc plasma is effective in ionizing the vaporized material as well as reactive gases used in reactive deposition.
  • Ions of the film material can be accelerated to a high energy before being deposited.
  • There is little radiant heating (cathodic arc deposition).
  • Reactive gases are activated in the plasma to aid in reactive deposition processes.
  • Poisoning the cathodic surface during the reactive arc vapor deposition is much less of a problem than with reactive sputter deposition.

Disadvantages of arc vapor deposition:

  • Only electrically conductive materials can be vaporized.
  • There is high radiant heating (anodic arc).
  • Molten globules (macros) ejected from the electrode can be deposited in the film, giving nodules on the surface.

Ion plating

Ion plating uses concurrent or periodic energetic particle bombardment of the depositing film to modify and control the composition and properties of the deposited film and to improve surface coverage and adhesion. The depositing material may be vaporized by evaporation, sputtering, arc erosion or other vaporization source. It can be obtained also from the decomposition of a chemical-vapor precursor species.

The energetic particles used for bombardment are usually ions of an inert or reactive gas or ions of the depositing material (film ions). Ion plating can be done in a plasma environment where ions for bombardment are extracted from the plasma, or it can be done in a vacuum environment where ions for bombardment are formed in a separate ion gun. The latter ion-plating configuration is often called ion beam assisted deposition (IBAD). Figure 4 shows two forms of ion plating, one in a plasma environment and one in a vacuum environment.

Advantages of ion plating:

  • Significant energy can be introduced into the surface of the depositing film by the energetic particle bombardment.
  • Atomic packing near the surface of the growing film can be densified by the concurrent ion bombardment (atomic peening).
  • Surface coverage can be improved over vacuum evaporation and sputter deposition due to gas scattering and sputtering/redeposition effects.
  • Controlled bombardment can be used to modify film properties such as adhesion, density, residual film stress, optical properties, etc.
  • Film properties depend less on the angle of incidence of the flux of material deposited than they do on sputter deposition and vacuum evaporation due to atomic peening and sputtering/redeposition effects.
  • Bombardment can be used to improve the chemical composition of the film material by bombardment enhanced chemical reactions and sputtering of unreacted species from the growing surface during reactive deposition.
  • In some applications, the plasma can be used to activate reactive species and create new chemical species that are more readily adsorbed to aid in the reactive deposition process.

Disadvantages of ion plating:

  • There are many processing variables to control.
  • It is often difficult to obtain uniform ion bombardment over the substrate surface leading to film property variations over the surface.
  • Substrate heating can be excessive.
  • Under some conditions, the bombarding gas may be incorporated into the growing film.
  • Under some conditions, excessive residual compressive film stress may be generated by the atomic peening.

Ion plating is used to deposit hard coatings of compound materials, adherent metal coatings, optical coatings with high densities and conformal coatings on complex surfaces. Depositing aluminum films on aerospace components using ion plating is called ion vapor deposition.

Plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD)

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) deposits atoms or molecules by reducing the decomposition of a chemical-vapor precursor species that contains the material to be deposited. The reduction is normally accomplished using hydrogen at an elevated temperature. Decomposition is accomplished by thermal activation. The use of a plasma allows the reduction or decomposition to be done at a lower temperature than using temperature alone.

The deposited material may react with gaseous reactive species in the system to produce compounds (oxides, nitrides) or used in conjunction with PVD processes to produce compounds, such as carbide and carbonitrides, or alloys. Using plasma enhances the chemical activity of the reactive species, allowing chemical reactions to proceed at low temperature. CVD processing is generally accompanied by volatile reaction by-products, and those, along with unused precursor vapors and other processing gases, must be removed from the deposition system.

CVD processes have numerous other names, such as vapor phase epitaxy, when it is used to deposit single-crystal films; metalorganic CVD when a plasma is used to induce or enhance decomposition and reaction; low-pressure CVD when the pressure is less than ambient; and low-pressure PECVD when the pressure is low enough that ions can be accelerated to appreciable energies from the plasma. In some cases, the precursor vapor is not completely decomposed in the plasma, and the deposited film is in the form of polymeric changes. This process is plasma polymerization.

Some examples of precursor vapors and the materials to be deposited are:

SiH4 => Si, CH4 => C, NiCO4 => Ni, B2H6 or BCl3 => B, WF6 => W, TiCl4 => Ti.

These can be combined with oxygen or nitrogen gases to form compounds and glasses. An example is the plasma-enhanced CVD deposition of phosphosilicate glass from silane, nitrous oxide and phosphine for encapsulation in the semi-conductor industry. Plasma-enhanced CVD can be used to deposit organic as well as inorganic materials. Examples are amorphous hydrogenated silicon for solar cells from silane, SiO2-x for permeation barriers from hexamethyldisiloxane and organic polymers form organic monomers. Figure 5 shows a RF-driven parallel plate plasma-enhanced CVD reactor such as used to deposit PSG glass.

Advantages of plasma-enhanced CVD:

  • Many elemental, alloy, glassy and compound materials can be deposited.
  • The microstructure of the material can be varied over a large range, sometimes from amorphous to polycrystalline to single crystal.
  • High deposition rates.
  • Complex surfaces can be coated uniformly.
  • Equipment is compatible with other vacuum processes.

Disadvantages of plasma-enhanced CVD:

  • High deposition temperatures are usually required for complete decomposition or reaction.
  • Some precursor material may be expensive, dangerous or unstable.
  • Processing gases and vapors and by-products must be disposed of by the pumping system.
  • There are many processing variables such as vapor concentration, gas composition, heating profile and gas flow pattern.
  • Incomplete decomposition of the precursors can leave undesirable impurities in the deposited material.

In semi-conductor processing, this process is used to deposit insulator and encapsulating films, amorphous and polycrystalline silicon films and conductor metallizations. Low-pressure plasma-enhanced CVD is used to deposit diamond-like carbon films for wear resistance and is used in hybrid deposition processes to provide the reacting species.

Hybrid vacuum deposition processes

In some cases, two deposition techniques can be used at the same time or sequentially. One example is the use of sputter deposition of a metal in conjunction with low-pressure, plasma-enhanced CVD of carbon from acetylene to deposit a metal carbide as a wear-resistant coating on tools. If nitrogen is present, a carbonitride can be deposited. Varying the ratios of nitrogen and carbon in titanium carbonitride deposition can give a range of colors from black to purple to gold. These coatings are used for decorative and wear-resistant applications. Metal organic polymer composite materials can be deposited by a combination of evaporation or sputtering combined with plasma polymerization of an organic material.

Vacuum-deposition processing equipment

The equipment used to generate the deposition environment is an integral part of the process. The principle parts of the deposition system are the deposition chamber, fixturing, which holds the parts to be coated, and the vacuum pumping system, which removes gases and vapors from the deposition camber.

Generating a vacuum has two purposes: 1) To reduce the gas pressure enough so that vaporized atoms have a long "mean-free path" and do not nucleate in the vapor to form soot; and 2) To reduce the contamination level to the point that the desired film can be deposited. The fixturing holds the substrates to be coated and provides the motion, relative to the vaporization source. This is often necessary to give a uniform deposition over a large area, a complex surface or over many substrates. The fixture and process cycle times determine throughput. The deposition chamber is sized to contain the fixturing and provide room for accessories such as shutters, deposition rate monitors, heaters, etc. Proper design, construction, operation and maintenance are necessary to obtain a reproducible product with high yield and desired product throughput.

Vacuum deposition of thin films and coatings is continually evolving. This is true of processes, equipment, applications and markets. Often, the decision to use vacuum deposition processes is influenced by environmental concerns, since they are "dry processes." Developing applications include clear permeation barrier layers for polymer webs and three-dimensional containers, decorative/wear-resistant coatings for many applications, coatings to replace electroplated chromium, corrosion-resistant coatings to replace cadmium and others.

REFERENCES

  1. One nanometer (nm) = 10- meters = 10 Angstroms (Å) = 10-3 microns = 0.04 microinches
  2. Standard atmospheric pressure = 760 mm mercury or 760 Torr or 1.01 x 105 Newtons per meter squared (or Pascals). One Torr = 103 milliTorr (mTorr), 1 mTorr = 7.5 Pascals = 1 micron of mercury.

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Vacuum Deposition Processes (2024)

FAQs

Vacuum Deposition Processes? ›

Vacuum deposition (or vacuum evaporation

vacuum evaporation
Vacuum pans are single-effect evaporators varying in size up to 14 ft diameter (4.270 m), and sometimes even larger. There are several types of vacuum pan, including the coil, regular calandria, and ribbon calandria. Recently, the Fives—Cail—Babco*ck Company has developed a horizontal vacuum pan with heating plates.
https://www.sciencedirect.com › science › article › pii › pdf
) is a PVD process
PVD process
Physical vapour deposition (PVD) is a process used to produce a metal vapour that can be deposited on electrically conductive materials as a thin, highly adhered pure metal or alloy coating. The process is carried out in a vacuum chamber at high vacuum (10–6 torr) using a cathodic arc source.
https://www.sciencedirect.com › physical-vapor-deposition
in which the atoms or molecules from a thermal vaporization source reach the substrate without collisions with residual gas molecules in the deposition chamber
. This type of PVD process requires a relatively good vacuum.

What are the steps of PVD process? ›

PVD is an environmentally benign vacuum testimony method comprising of three basic steps: (1) vaporization of the material from a strong source, (2) transportation of the disintegrated material, and (3) nucleation and development to create flimsy films and NPs [31].

What is vacuum best deposition? ›

Vacuum deposition is a group of processes used to deposit layers of material atom-by-atom or molecule-by-molecule on a solid surface. These processes operate at pressures well below atmospheric pressure (i.e., vacuum).

What metals can be deposited by vacuum deposition? ›

Available metals for vacuum deposition are silver, aluminum and gold to offer low solar absorptance, and Inconel and chromium to offer high solar absorptance. The infrared emissivities of silver, aluminum and gold are also lower than those of Inconel and chromium.

What is thermal deposition in a vacuum? ›

As the term implies, thermal deposition[1] requires heat. In a high vacuum chamber, a heat source acts on a solid material to produce vapour pressure. Most thermal evaporation systems provide an evaporation temperature ranging from 250 to 350 degrees Celsius to bring the source materials from a solid state to vapour.

What are the four 4 processes in PVD? ›

The PVD coating process occurs under vacuum conditions and consists of four main steps: ablation, transport, reaction, and deposition. This process deposits source atoms onto the surface of the substrate, leaving it coated with a strong, abrasion- and corrosion-resistant film.

What is the process of PVD deposition? ›

PVD is characterized by a process in which the material transitions from a condensed phase to a vapor phase and then back to a thin film condensed phase. The most common PVD processes are sputtering and evaporation.

What are the disadvantages of vacuum deposition? ›

Probably the greatest disadvantage with the usual arrangements for the vacuum deposition of active material is the fact that large amounts of activity are required in order to achieve small effect42.

What is the process of vacuum metal deposition? ›

VMD is the physical process of coating evidence with very a thin metal film under high vacuum. Gold, Zinc, Silver, Tin, Aluminum, and some alloys are used to coat the substrate. The result is a reversed developed latent print.

Why is vacuum needed in PVD? ›

Physical vapor deposition (PVD) and other types of thin film deposition require a vacuum chamber to create thin film coatings. A vacuum is created when the coating chamber is pumped down, and all of the air molecules and other gasses are evacuated from the system.

What is PVD finish? ›

PVD stands for Physical Vapor Deposition. PVD Coating refers to a variety of thin film deposition techniques where a solid material is vaporized in a vacuum environment and deposited on substrates as a pure material or alloy composition coating.

Can corrosion occur in a vacuum? ›

No corrosion will occur in a vacuum, even at very high temperatures.

Does corrosion take place in vacuum? ›

Corrosion, on the other hand, does not occur in a vacuum since it is a chemical reaction involving the interaction of oxygen molecules. Because the vacuum is an oxygen-free medium, it is a false statement of corrosion.

What is parylene vacuum deposition? ›

Parylene polymer deposition takes place at the molecular level, where films essentially 'grow' a molecule at a time: A solid, granular raw material, called dimer, is heated under under vacuum and vaporized into a dimeric gas. The gas is then pyrolized to cleave the dimer to its monomeric form.

What temperature causes deposition? ›

The deposition rate in- creases with temperature from 300 to 400 °C and then starts to decrease above 400 °C. The deposition rate increase with temperature which occurs at lower temperature is a common behavior for a thermally activated reaction process.

What is chemical vapor deposition in a vacuum? ›

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is a vacuum deposition method used to produce high-quality, and high-performance, solid materials. The process is often used in the semiconductor industry to produce thin films.

What is the process of physical vapor deposition? ›

Physical vapor deposition, otherwise known as PVD, is a coating process that takes solid materials and evaporates them to deposit thin coatings down to the atomic level onto a desired surface. Physical vapor deposition is used for several purposes.

What is PVD processing? ›

One of such processes is physical vapor deposition (PVD) processes that are atomistic deposition processes in which material is vaporized from a solid or liquid source in the form of atoms or molecules and transported in the form of a vapor through a vacuum or low pressure gaseous (or plasma) environment to the ...

How long is the PVD process? ›

As the process of a PVD can last some weeks to some months, your symptoms may be ongoing for this period.

What is the process of PVD evaporation? ›

Evaporation, or vacuum deposition, is a simple physical vapor deposition (PVD) process in which atoms or molecules are evaporated from the source thermally, travel without collisions with residual gas molecules in the deposition chamber, and condense on the substrate.

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