Patent classifications
C23C16/48
METHOD OF MANUFACTURING SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE
Described herein is a technique capable of uniformizing a quality of a film even when a processing environment changes. According to one aspect thereof, there is provided a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device, including: (a) loading a substrate into a process chamber; (b) supplying a gas to the substrate in the process chamber through a dispersion plate of a shower head while heating the dispersion plate by a shower head heater and exhausting the gas; (c) unloading the substrate; (d) measuring a temperature of the shower head before loading a subsequent substrate; and (e) comparing the temperature of the shower head after (d) with a pre-set temperature, and operating the shower head heater to control the temperature of the shower head to become close to the pre-set temperature when a difference between the temperature of the shower head and the pre-set temperature is greater than a predetermined value.
Graphene printing
Graphene printing is disclosed. A disclosed example graphene printing apparatus includes a gas source to cause a graphene precursor gas to flow across a surface of a substrate, and a localized heat source to locally heat portions of the surface to cause graphene to grow at the portions of the surface based on a printing pattern.
Method and Apparatus for Fabricating Fibers and Microstructures from Disparate Molar Mass Precursors
The disclosed methods and apparatus improve the fabrication of solid fibers and microstructures. In many embodiments, the fabrication is from gaseous, solid, semi-solid, liquid, critical, and supercritical mixtures using one or more low molar mass precursor(s), in combination with one or more high molar mass precursor(s). The methods and systems generally employ the thermal diffusion/Soret effect to concentrate the low molar mass precursor at a reaction zone, where the presence of the high molar mass precursor contributes to this concentration, and may also contribute to the reaction and insulate the reaction zone, thereby achieving higher fiber growth rates and/or reduced energy/heat expenditures together with reduced homogeneous nucleation. In some embodiments, the invention also relates to the permanent or semi-permanent recording and/or reading of information on or within fabricated fibers and microstructures. In some embodiments, the invention also relates to the fabrication of certain functionally-shaped fibers and microstructures. In some embodiments, the invention may also utilize laser beam profiling to enhance fiber and microstructure fabrication.
COMPOSITE TAPE WITH LCVD-FORMED ADDITIVE MATERIAL IN CONSTITUENT LAYER(S)
A composite tape and method of fabrication are provided which includes multiple layers and a laser-driven chemical vapor deposition (LCVD)-formed additive material in at least one layer of the multiple layers to enhance one or more properties of the composite tape. The LCVD-formed additive material is a single crystalline material and can include LCVD-formed granular material and/or LCVD-formed fiber material in the same or different layers of the composite tape to enhance, for instance, fracture strength and/or wear resistance of the composite tape.
MULTI-THERMAL CVD CHAMBERS WITH SHARED GAS DELIVERY AND EXHAUST SYSTEM
A method and apparatus for a process chamber for thermal processing is described herein. The process chamber is a dual process chamber and shares a chamber body. The chamber body includes a first and a second set of gas inject passages. The chamber body may also include a first and a second set of exhaust ports. The process chamber may have a shared gas panel and/or a shared exhaust conduit. The process chamber described herein enables for the processing of multiple substrates simultaneously with improved process gas flow and heat distribution.
Method and apparatus for depositing atomic layers on a substrate
Method of performing atomic layer deposition. The method comprises supplying a precursor gas towards a substrate, using a deposition head including one or more gas supplies, including a precursor gas supply. The precursor gas reacts near a surface of the substrate for forming an atomic layer. The deposition head has an output face comprising the gas supplies, which at least partly faces the substrate surface during depositing the atomic layer. The output face has a substantially rounded shape defining a movement path of the substrate. The precursor-gas supply is moved relative to the substrate by rotating the deposition head while supplying the precursor gas, for depositing a stack of atomic layers while continuously moving in one direction. The surface of the substrate is kept contactless with the output face by means of a gas bearing.
Post-production substrate modification with FIB deposition
A method for modifying a portion of a substrate after production is described herein. The method can include diagnosing a circuit operation error causing a malfunction, identifying a first contact on the substrate, and connecting, electrically, the first contact to a second contact with at least one trace. The trace is done with a focused ion beam. The method can include diagnosing an error on an operative area of a post-manufacture circuit board causing a malfunction; introducing a metal precursor into a focused ion beam chamber; ionizing the metal precursor by contacting it with a gallium ion beam into a conductive metal and a further ion; depositing a first portion of a conductive metal onto a substrate to form a first trace; and forming the first trace between the operative area and a non-operative area thereby connecting the operative area and the non-operative area.
METHOD FOR SYNTHESISING CORE-SHELL SILICON-GERMANIUM NANOPARTICLES BY LASER PYROLYSIS, METHOD FOR PRODUCING AN ELECTRODE FOR A LITHIUM BATTERY AND ASSOCIATED ELECTRODE
Provided is method for synthesising core-shell nanoparticles by laser pyrolysis. The method may include a) conveying together a gaseous mixture including a silicon precursor and a germanium precursor in a reaction zone of a first chamber of a reactor, and b) emitting a first laser beam at the level of the reaction zone for carrying out a laser pyrolysis of the mixture, the steps making it possible to obtain nanoparticles having a core made of a silicon- and germanium-based alloy and a silicon shell.
Microwave plasma and ultraviolet assisted deposition apparatus and method for material deposition using the same
A deposition apparatus for depositing a material on a substrate is provided. The deposition apparatus has a processing chamber defining a processing space in which the substrate is arranged, an ultraviolet radiation assembly configured to emit ultraviolet radiation and a microwave radiation assembly configured to emit microwave radiation into an excitation space that can be the same as the processing space, and a gas feed assembly configured to feed a precursor gas into the processing space and a reactive gas into the excitation space. The ultraviolet radiation assembly and the microwave radiation assembly are operated in combination to excite the reactive gas in the excitation space. The material is deposited on the substrate from the reaction of the excited reactive gas and the precursor gas. A method for using the deposition apparatus to deposit a material on a substrate is provided.
Methods for growing light emitting devices under ultra-violet illumination
Described herein are methods for growing light emitting devices under ultra-violet (UV) illumination. A method includes growing a III-nitride n-type layer over a III-nitride p-type layer under UV illumination. Another method includes growing a light emitting device structure on a growth substrate and growing a tunnel junction on the light emitting device structure, where certain layers are grown under UV illumination. Another method includes forming a III-nitride tunnel junction n-type layer over the III-nitride p-type layer to form a tunnel junction light emitting diode. A surface of the III-nitride tunnel junction n-type layer is done under illumination during an initial period and a remainder of the formation is completed absent illumination. The UV light has photon energy higher than the III-nitride p-type layer's band gap energy. The UV illumination inhibits formation of Mg—H complexes within the III-nitride p-type layer resulting from hydrogen present in a deposition chamber.