Method of controlling ion energy distribution using a pulse generator with a current-return output stage
10448494 ยท 2019-10-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Leonid Dorf (San Jose, CA, US)
- Olivier LUERE (Sunnyvale, CA, US)
- Rajinder Dhindsa (Pleasanton, CA, US)
- James Rogers (Los Gatos, CA, US)
- Sunil Srinivasan (San Jose, CA, US)
- Anurag Kumar Mishra (Fremont, CA, US)
Cpc classification
C23C14/54
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H05H1/46
ELECTRICITY
H01J37/32174
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H05H1/46
ELECTRICITY
C23C14/54
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Embodiments of this disclosure describe an electrode biasing scheme that enables maintaining a nearly constant sheath voltage and thus creating a mono-energetic IEDF at the surface of the substrate that consequently enables a precise control over the shape of IEDF and the profile of the features formed in the surface of the substrate.
Claims
1. A processing chamber, comprising: a substrate support assembly comprising a biasing electrode and a substrate supporting surface, wherein the biasing electrode is separated from the substrate supporting surface by a layer of a dielectric material, wherein the layer has a thickness of between about 0.1 mm and about 1 mm; and a bias generator that is electrically coupled to a generator end of an electrical conductor using a generator coupling assembly, and an electrode end of the electrical conductor is electrically coupled to the biasing electrode using an electrode coupling assembly, wherein the bias generator is configured to establish a pulsed voltage waveform at the biasing electrode, and comprises: a pulse generator that is electrically coupled to the generator end of the electrical conductor; and a current-return output stage, wherein a first end of the current-return output stage is electrically coupled to the electrical conductor, and a second end of the current-return output stage is electrically coupled to ground.
2. The processing chamber of claim 1, further comprising: a chucking power supply that is electrically coupled to the generator end of the electrical conductor using a supply coupling assembly.
3. The processing chamber of claim 2, wherein the supply coupling assembly comprises a blocking resistor that has a resistance of more than about 1 MOhm.
4. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein a parallel plate like structure comprising the biasing electrode and the layer of the dielectric material has an effective capacitance of between about 5 nF and about 50 nF.
5. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein the substrate support assembly further comprises a substrate support and a support base, wherein the substrate support comprises a dielectric material.
6. The processing chamber of claim 5, wherein the substrate support has a second surface that is positioned opposite to the substrate supporting surface, the support base is positioned adjacent to the second surface and comprises a plurality of cooling channels that are configured to receive a fluid from a coolant source, and the substrate support assembly further comprises an insulator plate that is disposed between a ground plate and the support base.
7. The processing chamber of claim 5, wherein the biasing electrode is disposed within the substrate support of the substrate support assembly.
8. The processing chamber of claim 5, wherein the substrate support has a second surface that is positioned below and opposite to the substrate supporting surface, and the biasing electrode is disposed below the second surface.
9. The processing chamber of claim 5, wherein the support base is configured to be used as a biasing electrode.
10. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein a first end of the pulse generator is electrically coupled to the generator end of the electrical conductor, and a second end of the pulse generator is electrically coupled to ground.
11. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein the generator coupling assembly comprises one of the components selected from the group consisting of a capacitor, a capacitor and an electrical conductor in series, an inductor, and an inductor and an electrical conductor in series.
12. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein the generator coupling assembly or the electrode coupling assembly comprise an electrical conductor.
13. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein the electrode coupling assembly comprises one of the components selected from the group consisting of a capacitor, a capacitor and an electrical conductor in series, an inductor, and an inductor and an electrical conductor in series.
14. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein the generator coupling assembly comprises a capacitor having a capacitance in a range of about 40 nF to about 80 nF.
15. The processing chamber of claim 1, wherein the electrical conductor comprises a first electrical conductor and a second electrical conductor that are electrically coupled in series, wherein one end of the first electrical conductor is electrically coupled to an output of the bias generator using the generator coupling assembly and one end of the second electrical conductor is electrically coupled to the biasing electrode using the electrode coupling assembly.
16. A method of processing of a substrate, comprising: generating a plasma over a surface of a substrate disposed on a substrate supporting surface of a substrate support assembly; and biasing a biasing electrode disposed within the substrate support assembly using a bias generator that is electrically coupled to a generator end of an electrical conductor using a generator coupling assembly, and a second end of the electrical conductor is electrically coupled to the biasing electrode using an electrode coupling assembly, wherein: the biasing electrode is separated from the substrate supporting surface by a layer of the dielectric material, wherein the layer has a thickness of between about 0.1 mm and about 1 mm; the bias generator is configured to establish a pulsed voltage waveform at the biasing electrode, and the pulsed voltage waveform comprises a series of repeating cycles, a waveform within each cycle of the series of repeating cycles has a first portion that occurs during a first time interval and a second portion that occurs during a second time interval, a positive voltage pulse is only present during the first time interval, and the bias generator comprises: a pulse generator that is electrically coupled to the generator end of the electrical conductor; and a current-return output stage, wherein a first end of the current-return output stage is electrically coupled to the electrical conductor, and a second end of the current-return output stage is electrically coupled to ground, and wherein a current flows from the biasing electrode to ground through the current-return output stage during at least a portion of the second time interval.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein a parallel plate like structure comprising the biasing electrode and the layer of the dielectric material has an effective capacitance of between about 5 nF and about 50 nF.
18. The method of claim 16, further comprising: a chucking power supply that is electrically coupled to the generator end of the electrical conductor using a supply coupling assembly.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the supply coupling assembly comprises a blocking resistor that has a resistance of more than about 1 MOhm.
20. The method of claim 16, wherein the electrical conductor comprises a first electrical conductor and a second electrical conductor that are electrically coupled in series, wherein one end of the first electrical conductor is electrically coupled to an output of the bias generator using the generator coupling assembly and one end of the second electrical conductor is electrically coupled to the biasing electrode using the electrode coupling assembly.
21. The method of claim 16, wherein the substrate support assembly further comprises a substrate support and a support base, wherein the substrate support comprises a dielectric material.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein the substrate support has a second surface that is positioned opposite to the substrate supporting surface, the support base is positioned adjacent to the second surface and comprises a plurality of cooling channels that are configured to receive a fluid from a coolant source, and the substrate support assembly further comprises an insulator plate that is disposed between a ground plate and the support base.
23. The method of claim 21, wherein the biasing electrode is disposed within the substrate support of the substrate support assembly.
24. The method of claim 21, wherein the substrate support has a second surface that is positioned below and opposite to the substrate supporting surface, and the biasing electrode is disposed below the second surface.
25. The method of claim 21, wherein the support base is configured to be used as a biasing electrode.
26. The method of claim 16, wherein a first end of the pulse generator is electrically coupled to the generator end of the electrical conductor, and a second end of the pulse generator is electrically coupled to ground.
27. The method of claim 16, wherein the generator coupling assembly comprises one of the components selected from the group consisting of a capacitor, a capacitor and an electrical conductor in series, an inductor, and an inductor and an electrical conductor in series.
28. The method of claim 16, wherein the generator coupling assembly or the electrode coupling assembly comprise an electrical conductor.
29. The method of claim 16, wherein the electrode coupling assembly comprises one of the components selected from the group consisting of a capacitor, a capacitor and an electrical conductor in series, an inductor, and an inductor and an electrical conductor in series.
30. The method of claim 16, wherein the generator coupling assembly comprises a capacitor having a capacitance in a range of about 40 nF to about 80 nF.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) So that the manner in which the above recited features of the present disclosure can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the disclosure, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to embodiments, some of which are illustrated in the appended drawings. It is to be noted, however, that the appended drawings illustrate only typical embodiments of this disclosure and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the disclosure may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
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(11) To facilitate understanding, identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical elements that are common to the figures. It is contemplated that elements and features of one embodiment may be beneficially incorporated in other embodiments without further recitation.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12) Embodiments described herein are applicable to all plasma assisted or plasma enhanced processing chambers and methods of plasma assisted or plasma enhanced processing of a substrate. More specifically, embodiments of this disclosure describe an electrode biasing scheme that enables maintaining a nearly constant sheath voltage and thus creating a mono-energetic IEDF at the surface of the substrate; consequently enabling a precise control over the shape of IEDF and the profile of the features formed in the surface of the substrate. The following definitions are used throughout this disclosure: (1) unless a reference is specified, all potentials are referenced to ground; (2) the voltage at any physical point (like a substrate or a biasing electrode) is likewise defined as the potential of this point with respect to ground (zero potential point); (3) the cathode sheath is implied to be an electron-repelling, ion-accelerating sheath that corresponds to a negative substrate potential with respect to plasma; (4) the sheath voltage (also referred to sometimes as sheath voltage drop), V.sub.sh, is defined as the absolute value of the potential difference between the plasma and the adjacent surface (e.g. of the substrate or the chamber wall); and (5) the substrate potential is the potential at the substrate surface facing the plasma.
(13) We propose a pulsed voltage biasing scheme (such as the biasing scheme described in relation to
(14) We note the possibility of using other biasing schemes for establishing a pulsed voltage waveform such as the waveform 500 (illustrated in
(15) One embodiment of the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed above is shown in the chamber diagram illustrated in
(16)
(17) (1) a nanosecond pulse generator 214 that maintains a predetermined, substantially constant positive voltage across its output (i.e. to ground) during regularly recurring time intervals of a predetermined length, by repeatedly closing and opening its internal switch at a predetermined rate. and it can be as long as several tens of nanoseconds (e.g., 10-100 ns). In turn, the time interval during which the switch transitions from the open (Off) to the closed (On) position is referred to as the rise time, .sub.rise, and it can also be several tens of nanoseconds (e.g., 25-50 ns). As the switch transitions from the open to the closed position, the output voltage of the nanosecond pulse generator gradually increases until it reaches V.sub.m. Finally, the length of time between the two consecutive transitions from the open (Off) to the closed (On) position (or vice versa) is referred to as the period. T, and it is equal to the inverse of the pulse repetition frequency, which can be as high as 400 kHz, for example. We note the following: (a) in the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein, a nanosecond pulse generator is used primarily as a charge injector (current source), and not as a constant voltage source; therefore it is not necessary to impose stringent requirements on the stability of its output voltage, in that it can vary in time even when the switch remains in the closed (On) position; (b) a nanosecond pulse generator is fundamentally a sourcing, but not a sinking supply, in that it only passes a current in one direction (so it can only charge, but not discharge a capacitor, for example); (c) when the switch remains in the open (Off) position, the voltage, V.sub.0, across the output of the nanosecond pulse generator is not controlled by the internal voltage source and is instead determined by the interaction of its internal components with other circuit elements; and (d) the name nanosecond pulse generator originates from the fact that when it is operating into a low stray capacitance/inductance, predominantly resistive load, it generates a voltage waveform across its output, which can be described as a series of ground referenced positive voltage pulses.
(18) (2) a current-return output stage, 215, with one end 215B connected to ground, and the other end 215A connected through the internal electrical conductor to the positive output of the nanosecond pulse generator and simultaneously to the external electrical conductor. The combination of the nanosecond pulse generator with the current-return output stage and the internal electrical conductor is referred to here as a pulsed bias generator 240 and it is both a sourcing and a sinking supply, in that it passes a current in both directions. A current-return output stage can be comprised of the following elements: (a) a resistor, (b) a resistor and an inductor connected in series, or (c) a more complex combination of electrical elements, including parallel capacitors, which permits a positive current flow towards the ground.
(19) (3) An external electrical conductor connecting the output of the pulsed bias generator 240 to the chucking pole. The output of the pulsed bias generator 240 is the point 215A, where the output of the nanosecond pulse generator 214 is connected through the internal electrical conductor to the current-return output stage 215. The external electrical conductor may comprise: (a) a coaxial transmission line 206, which may include a flexible coaxial cable with the inductance L.sub.flex in series with a rigid coaxial transmission line with the inductance L.sub.rigid, (b) an insulated high-voltage corona-resistant hookup wire, (c) a bare wire, (d) a metal rod, (e) an electrical connector, or (f) any combination of electrical elements in (a)-(e). Note that the internal electrical conductor may comprise the same basic elements as the external electrical conductor. The chucking pole is usually a metal plate embedded into the electrostatic chuck and separated from the plasma by a thin layer of dielectric material (e.g., 0.3 mm thick). The chucking pole can be the biasing electrode 204 embedded within the electrostatic chuck portion (i.e., ESC substrate support 205) of the ESC assembly shown in
(20)
(21) Firstly, the dielectric layer in the electrostatic chuck, and the processed substrate (e.g., a 0.8 mm thick doped-silicon slab with the capacitance of >10 nF) placed on its surface separate the chucking pole from the plasma and are represented in the circuits in
(22) Secondly, the chucking pole 204, the pulsed bias generator 240, and the external electrical conductor (such as the transmission line 206) connecting them together have: (A) some combined stray capacitance to ground, which is represented in the circuit 600 by a single stray capacitor 302 with the capacitance C.sub.s (500 pF, for example); as well as (B) some inductance, which is represented in the circuit 600 by inductors L.sub.internal (300 nH, for example) for the internal electrical conductor and other components of the pulsed bias generator 240, and L.sub.transm (500 nH, for example) for the external electrical conductor, such as the transmission line 206. The current-return output stage 215 is represented in the circuit 600 by a single resistor R.sub.ros (150 Ohm, for example).
(23) Thirdly, we use the standard electrical plasma model that represents the entire plasma in the process volume as 3 series elements:
(24) I. An electron-repelling cathode sheath 304 (which we sometimes also refer to as the plasma sheath or just the sheath) adjacent to the substrate. The cathode sheath is represented in
(25) II. a bulk plasma 305, represented in
(26) III. an electron-repelling wall sheath 306 forming at the chamber walls. The wall sheath is likewise represented in
(27)
(28)
(29) In
(30) (1) A positive voltage jump to charge the system's stray capacitor and collapse the cathode sheath, i.e., the sheath collapse phase 501, during which the sheath capacitor is discharged and the substrate potential is brought to the level of the local plasma potential (as illustrated in
(31) (2) Recharging of the chuck capacitor C.sub.e, during the ESC recharging phase 502, by rapidly injecting a charge of equal value and opposite polarity to the total charge accumulated on the substrate surface during the ion current phase 504 (described below). As during the phase 501, the nanosecond pulse generator 214 maintains a substantially constant positive voltage across its output (switch S.sub.1 remains in the On position). Similarly to the phase 501, the duration T.sub.2 of the phase 502 is much shorter than the duration T.sub.4 of the ion current phase 504 (described below) or than the overall period T, and is typically of the order of several tens of nanoseconds (e.g., 30-80 ns). This is because the plasma current during the phase 502 is also carried by electronsnamely, in the absence of the cathode sheath, the electrons reach the substrate and build up the surface charge, thus charging the capacitor C.sub.e.
(32) (3) A negative voltage jump (V.sub.OUT) to discharge the processing chamber's stray capacitor, re-form the sheath and set the value of the sheath voltage (V.sub.SH) during the sheath formation phase 503. The switch S.sub.1 in =
+
=T.sub.1+T.sub.2. To explain the effect of
(practically controlled parameter) on V.sub.OUT and V.sub.SH, we notice that both T.sub.2 and the increase in the biasing electrode voltage, V.sub.s,2, during the phase 502 are determined primarily by V.sub.m and the ion current, I.sub.i. Therefore, for given V.sub.m and I.sub.i, the total pulse width,
controls T.sub.1, which in turn determines the increase in the substrate voltage, V.sub.sub,1, and biasing electrode voltage V.sub.s,1V.sub.sub,1, during phase 501, and hence V.sub.OUT=V.sub.s,1V.sub.s,2, and V.sub.SHV.sub.sub,1.
(33) (4) A long (about 85-90% of the cycle duration T) ion current phase 504 with the duration T.sub.4, during which the nanosecond pulse generator 214 likewise does not maintain a positive voltage across its output (switch S.sub.1 remains in the Off position) and the ion current flows from plasma to ground through the current-return output stage. The ion current causes accumulation of the positive charge on the substrate surface and gradually discharges the sheath and chuck capacitors, slowly decreasing the sheath voltage drop and bringing the substrate potential closer to zero. This results in the voltage droop V.sub.sh in the substrate voltage waveform 510 shown in
(34) As can be seen from the (1)-(4) above, the combined duration of the electron current phases 501-503 constituting a single voltage pulse of the pulsed voltage waveform (such as the pulsed voltage waveform 500) is about 200-400 ns, which corresponds to the relatively short duty cycle of about 10-15%. The short duty cycle characteristic of the pulsed voltage waveform 500 is a consequence of a large ion-to-electron mass ratio that is typical for all plasmas. Thus, in the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein, the pulsed bias generator actively interacts with the plasma only during a short portion of each cycle, allowing the cathode sheath to evolve naturally for the rest of the time. By effectively using the fundamental plasma properties, this biasing scheme enables maintaining a nearly constant sheath voltage for up to 90% of the processing time, which results in a single peak IEDF (such as IEDF 520 in
(35) The pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein enables maintaining a particular substrate voltage waveform, such as the substrate voltage waveform 510 shown in
(36) A. Practical Considerations
(37) The effective simplified electrical circuit 600 and the results of numerical simulations of that circuit are shown in
(38) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 V.sub.m .sub.rise .sub.p T L.sub.internal L.sub.transm R.sub.ros C.sub.s C.sub.e C.sub.SH I.sub.i R.sub.pl C.sub.w I.sub.iw C.sub.coat 4175 V 25 ns 65 ns 2.5 s 300 nH 400 nH 150 500 pF 7 nF 150 pF 1.5 A 7.5 5 nF 5.5 A 1 F
(39)
(40) Numerical results in
(41)
where I.sub.i is the ion current flowing through the sheath. This formula reflects the fact that the ion current splits between the sheath capacitor, C.sub.SH, and the chuck capacitor, C.sub.e, and needs to discharge them both in order to change the sheath voltage. The above formula can be used to select the appropriate parameters for effective operation of the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein, and allows determination of its applicability limits.
(42) For example, from the goal of maintaining a nearly constant sheath voltage, V.sub.SH, we immediately get the requirement of a relatively small voltage droop, i.e.
(43)
For a given ion current (typically 0.5-5 A), C.sub.e and T, it gives the range of sheath voltages, for which the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein is most useful. This requirement shows that the effectiveness of this biasing scheme in producing a narrow single-peak IEDF (i.e. IEDF 520 in
(44) The above requirement also implies that the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein works better at higher pulse repetition frequencies (PRF) (or shorter periods T) of the pulsed voltage waveform (e.g. the voltage waveform 500 in
(45) It is also clear from the above requirement that it is beneficial to have a large C.sub.e, which is why the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein works most effectively when the pulsed voltage is applied to the chucking pole, rather than to the support base 207 (
(46) We note that in the pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein, the voltage switching occurs only inside a nanosecond pulse generator and only at relatively small voltages (e.g., 100-800V) that drive the primary side of the output step-up transformer. This provides a significant practical benefit when compared to previously proposed schemes, in which there is usually a second switch (positioned in place of the resistive output stage) that needs to switch at the full sheath voltage (i.e., at thousands of volts, for example). Presence of the second switch in these previously proposed biasing schemes considerably decreases the system robustness and in practical terms limits their extendibility to sufficiently high sheath voltages (e.g., V.sub.SH4000-8000 V) that are required for high aspect ratio applications. The authors were not able to identify commercially available switches capable of switching at RF frequencies (e.g., 400 kHz) and simultaneously high voltages of, e.g., 8,000V. It needs to be mentioned here that the purpose of the blocking diode in
(47) The authors further note that the current-return output stage 215 may contain a combination of reactive elements, like inductors and capacitors (e.g., series inductor), without limiting its effectiveness in producing a nearly constant sheath voltage. We also note that the value of the resistor (e.g., resistor R.sub.ros in
(48) The pulsed voltage biasing scheme proposed herein can also be readily integrated with the high-voltage module (HVM) standardly used for chucking, i.e. electrically clamping, the substrate to the substrate receiving surface of the ESC substrate support, as shown in
(49)
(50) B. Detailed Description of
(51)
(52) The processing chamber 200 features a chamber body 213 which includes a chamber lid 223, one or more sidewalls 222, and a chamber base 224 which define a processing volume 226. A gas inlet 228 disposed through the chamber lid 223 is used to provide one or more processing gases to the processing volume 226 from a processing gas source 219 in fluid communication therewith. Herein, a plasma generator configured to ignite and maintain a processing plasma 201 from the processing gases includes one or more inductive coils 217 disposed proximate to the chamber lid 223 outside of the processing volume 226. The one or more inductive coils 217 are electrically coupled to an RF power supply 218 via an RF matching circuit 230. The plasma generator is used to ignite and maintain a plasma 201 using the processing gases and electromagnetic field generated by the inductive coils 217 and RF power supply 218. The processing volume 226 is fluidly coupled to one or more dedicated vacuum pumps, through a vacuum outlet 220, which maintain the processing volume 226 at sub-atmospheric conditions and evacuate processing, and/or other gases, therefrom. A substrate support assembly 236, disposed in the processing volume 226, is disposed on a support shaft 238 sealingly extending through the chamber base 224.
(53) The substrate 203 is loaded into, and removed from, the processing volume 226 through an opening (not shown) in one of the one or more sidewalls 222, which is sealed with a door or a valve (not shown) during plasma processing of the substrate 203. Herein, the substrate 203 is transferred to and from a receiving surface of an ESC substrate support 205 using a lift pin system (not shown).
(54) The substrate support assembly 236 includes a support base 207 and the ESC substrate support 205 that is thermally coupled to, and disposed on, the support base 207. Typically, the support base 207 is used to regulate the temperature of the ESC substrate support 205, and the substrate 203 disposed on the ESC substrate support 205, during substrate processing. In some embodiments, the support base 207 includes one or more cooling channels (not shown) disposed therein that are fluidly coupled to, and in fluid communication with, a coolant source (not shown), such as a refrigerant source or water source having relatively high electrical resistance. In some embodiments, the ESC substrate support 205 includes a heater (not shown), such as a resistive heating element embedded in the dielectric material thereof. Herein, the support base 207 is formed of a corrosion resistant thermally conductive material, such as a corrosion resistant metal, for example aluminum, aluminum alloy, or stainless steel and is coupled to the substrate support with an adhesive or by mechanical means. Typically, the ESC substrate support 205 is formed of a dielectric material, such as a bulk sintered ceramic material, such as a corrosion resistant metal oxide or metal nitride material, for example aluminum oxide (Al.sub.2O.sub.3), aluminum nitride (AlN), titanium oxide (TiO), titanium nitride (TiN), yttrium oxide (Y.sub.2O.sub.3), mixtures thereof, or combinations thereof. In embodiments herein, the ESC substrate support 205 further includes a biasing electrode 204 embedded in the dielectric material thereof. In one configuration, the biasing electrode 204 is a chucking pole used to secure (chuck) the substrate 203 to a supporting surface of the ESC substrate support 205 and to bias the substrate 203 with respect to the processing plasma 201 using a pulsed-voltage biasing scheme described herein. Typically, the biasing electrode 204 is formed of one or more electrically conductive parts, such as one or more metal meshes, foils, plates, or combinations thereof. Herein, the biasing electrode 204 is electrically coupled to a high voltage module 216 which provides a chucking voltage thereto, such as static DC voltage between about 5000 V and about 5000 V, using an electrical conductor, such as the coaxial transmission line 206, e.g., a coaxial cable.
(55) The support base 207 is electrically isolated from the chamber base 224 by an insulator plate 211, and a ground plate 212 is interposed between the insulator plate 211 and the chamber base 224. In some embodiments, the processing chamber 200 further includes a quartz pipe 210, or collar, circumscribing the substrate support assembly 236 to prevent corrosion of the ESC substrate support 205 and, or, the support base 207 from contact with corrosive processing gases or plasma, cleaning gases or plasma, or byproducts thereof. Typically, the quartz pipe 210, the insulator plate 211, and the ground plate are circumscribed by a liner 208. Herein, a plasma screen 209 approximately coplanar with the substrate receiving surface of the ESC substrate support 205 prevents plasma from forming in a volume between the liner 208 and the one or more sidewalls 222.
(56) Herein, the biasing electrode 204 is spaced apart from the substrate receiving surface of the ESC substrate support 205, and thus from the substrate 203, by a layer of dielectric material of the ESC substrate support 205. Typically, the layer of dielectric material has a thickness between about 0.1 mm and about 1 mm, such as between about 0.1 mm and about 0.5 mm, for example about 0.3 mm. Herein, the biasing electrode 204 is electrically coupled to the pulsed bias generator 240 using the external conductor, such as the transmission line 206. The pulsed bias generator 240 and the components thereof are described in detail earlier in the text of this disclosure. As noted above, the dielectric material and layer thickness can be selected so that the capacitance C.sub.e of the layer of dielectric material is between about 5 nF and about 12 nF, such as between about 7 and about 10 nF, for example.
(57) Generally, a low neutral fill pressure in the processing volume 226 of the processing chamber 200 results in poor thermal conduction between surfaces disposed therein, such as between the dielectric material of the ESC substrate support 205 and the substrate 203 disposed on the substrate receiving surface thereof, which reduces the ESC substrate support's 205 effectiveness in heating or cooling the substrate 203. Therefore, in some processes, a thermally conductive inert heat transfer gas, typically helium, is introduced into a volume (not shown) disposed between a non-device side surface of the substrate 203 and the substrate receiving surface of the ESC substrate support 205 to improve the heat transfer therebetween. The heat transfer gas, provided by a heat transfer gas source (not shown), flows to the backside volume through a gas communication path (not shown) disposed through the support base 207 and further disposed through the ESC substrate support 205.
(58) The processing chamber 200 further includes a system controller 232. The system controller 232 herein includes a central processing unit (CPU) 233, a memory 234, and support circuits 235. The system controller 232 is used to control the process sequence used to process the substrate 203 including the substrate biasing methods described herein. The CPU 233 is a general purpose computer processor configured for use in an industrial setting for controlling processing chamber and sub-processors related thereto. The memory 234 described herein may include random access memory, read only memory, floppy or hard disk drive, or other suitable forms of digital storage, local or remote. The support circuits 235 are conventionally coupled to the CPU 233 and comprise cache, clock circuits, input/output subsystems, power supplies, and the like, and combinations thereof. Software instructions and data can be coded and stored within the memory 234 for instructing a processor within the CPU 233. A program (or computer instructions) readable by the system controller 232 determines which tasks are performable by the components in the processing chamber 200. Preferably, the program, which is readable by the system controller 232, includes code, which when executed by the processor, perform tasks relating to the monitoring and execution of the electrode biasing scheme described herein. The program will include instructions that are used to control the various hardware and electrical components within the processing chamber 200 to perform the various process tasks and various process sequences used to implement the electrode biasing scheme described herein.
(59) While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the present disclosure, other and further embodiments of the disclosure may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.