SHIELDED APPARATUS FOR ION ENERGY ANALYSIS OF PLASMA PROCESSES
20240177965 ยท 2024-05-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01J37/244
ELECTRICITY
H01J2237/24585
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
An apparatus for obtaining ion energy distribution measurements in a plasma processing system comprising a substrate, a plurality of ion energy sensors each having associated control circuitry disposed in the substrate, and a conductive enclosure disposed in the substrate and surrounding each ion energy sensor and associated control circuitry such that the substrate at least partially surrounds the conductive enclosure.
Claims
1. An apparatus for obtaining ion energy distribution measurements in a plasma processing system comprising: a substrate; a plurality of ion energy sensors each having associated control circuitry disposed in the substrate; and a conductive enclosure disposed in the substrate and surrounding each ion energy sensor and associated control circuitry such that the substrate at least partially surrounds the conductive enclosure.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the substrate is non-conductive.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the substrate is conductive.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, further comprising an insulating layer between the substrate and the conductive enclosure.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the substrate is semi-conducting.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the substrate is silicon.
7. The apparatus of claim 5, further comprising a semi-conducting cover on a surface of the substrate.
8. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the semi-conducting cover is silicon or Germanium.
9. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the ion energy sensors measure energy distribution at a first surface of the substrate and a cover is provided at a second surface of the substrate opposite to the first surface.
10. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising an RF antenna disposed in the substrate outside of the conductive enclosure.
11. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the RF antenna is connected to the control circuitry.
12. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the RF antenna is disposed in the non-conductive substrate.
13. The apparatus of claim 12, wherein each ion energy sensor and associated control circuitry are provided on a circuit board.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] The present application will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0035]
[0036] A four chamber plasma processing system 105 is also shown in
[0037] The imitation probe 101 is placed in the docking station 102 and communication is established through the application software on the host PC 104. The battery power supply on the wafer probe 101 is charged, stored data retrieved and the next experimental assignment scheduled to prime the wafer probe 101. The imitation wafer probe 101 is then placed in an available slot in a Front Opening Universal Pod (FOUP) which is subsequently delivered to the load lock chamber 108. The robotic arm 107 transports the imitation wafer probe 101 to the processing chamber 106 and positions it on a processing pedestal in preparation for plasma exposure. With the chamber 106 already under vacuum, the process recipe is configured and plasma ignited. When plasma is formed, plasma species begin to bombard the wafer probe 101, a sample of which enters the sensors of the probe 101 for analysis. Analysis proceeds at the times configured in the scheduler if the on-board pressure sensor reports that the threshold for high voltage application has been met. This safety mechanism prevents the accidental application of high voltage at atmospheric pressure, which could destroy the sensor due to electrical arcing. If the pressure threshold has been met, the wafer probe 101 is activated at the scheduled time. The appropriate voltages are applied to all the grids and collector, the collector current is recorded as a function of ion discrimination potential by a microcontroller (MCU), not shown, and the resultant data is stored in memory. The wafer probe 101 returns to sleep mode until the next scheduled measurement, at which point the process is repeated. When the assignment is completed, the plasma process may be terminated to allow retrieval of the wafer probe 101 from the processing pedestal using the robotic arm which transports the wafer probe back through the load lock chamber 108 to the FOUP. The user extracts the wafer probe 101 from the FOUP and places it back in the docking station 102 for data retrieval, recharging and scheduling of the next experimental assignment. Alternatively, it is possible for the wafer probe to transmit the sensor data in real-time to the docking station, from its location inside the processing chamber, using known wireless communication apparatus and methodology.
[0038] It should be appreciated that the wafer probe 101 in accordance with the present teachings is not limited for use in the system as shown in
[0039] The configuration of the wafer probe 101 will now be described in more detail. In the preferred embodiment the wafer probe 101 is fabricated on a substrate to mimic the standard semiconductor work piece. It may be manufactured using silicon, ceramic, metal, glass or any other material to mimic the types of substrates used in plasma processing, and may have the same geometry as a standard substrate with substantively the same dimensions and weight. The general configuration of the imitation wafer probe 101 is shown in
[0040] The sensors 201 may comprise alternating layers of planar, parallel, conductive metal grids and insulators, the grids being electrically polarised in a systematic way to filter out plasma electrons, separate positive ions based on their energy, suppress secondary electron emission and collect ion current for measurement. The sensors are embedded in the substrate of the imitation after probe 101. The sensor configuration shown in EP 3968353. However, it should be appreciated that the specific configuration of the sensors 201 used with the imitation wafer probe 101 is not the focus of the present application and any suitable sensor configuration may be used. Rather, the present teachings provide improved techniques for shielding the sensor and associated electronics within the substrate of the imitation probe 101.
[0041] Turning to
[0042] To protect the sensors and associated circuitry, a conductive enclosure 305 is provided surrounding each circuit board 302. It can be seen that the substrate 301 at least partially surrounds each conductive enclosure 305.
[0043] In order to measure ion energy and ion flux uniformity, it is important to ensure the distributed sensors 303 are electrically isolated from each other. Therefore, it is advantageous for the sensors 303 to be independently shielded using a conductive enclosure for each sensor 303. This ensures the sensors and associated circuitry are electrically isolated from each other. This in turn allows each sensor 303 to detect exactly what is happening at its respective location without being influenced by an artificially created continuous shield surrounding the device, which may not be representative of the real situation. That is, the absence of an artificially created continuous shield surrounding the device results in more accurate sensor measurements.
[0044] In the embodiment of
[0045] Turning to
[0046] Turning to
[0047] In this embodiment, when a conductive substrate 401 is used, it is important to break the naturally formed continuous electrical shield, which could form around the conductive substrate 401. In particular, in the case of a conducting substrate, the rf potential across the surface of the substrate can be non-uniform. To ensure that a true measurement of the plasma conditions at the sensor location is achieved, the conductive enclosure 405 (sensor shield) should be isolated from the conductive substrate 401. This is achieved by installing the insulating layer 406 between the conductive enclosure 405 and the conductive substrate 401 to break the continuity of the conductive enclosure 405 as shown in
[0048] While the embodiment of
[0049]
[0050] The substrate 501 is formed from undoped silicon. As previously mentioned, the substrate 501 of the apparatus 500 in accordance with the present teachings can be manufactured from silicon. For the previously described conductive substrates, these can be formed from doped silicon. However, for silicon based substrates, it is advantageous from a manufacturing point of view to avoid the need to dope the silicon to make it conductive. Silicon is considered a semiconductor (neither conductor nor insulator). Germanium or another semiconductor material can also be used.
[0051] In the undoped silicon substrate embodiment of
[0052] A silicon cover or a cover formed from another material may also be used with the other embodiments described herein. That is, a cover may be provided on the underside of any of the apparatuses described herein.
[0053]
[0054] An RF (loop) antenna 606 is also provided in the non-conducting substrate 601. The antenna is connected back into the control circuitry 604 within the conductive enclosure 605. This antenna 606 is used for communicating data off the apparatus 600 in real-time while the plasma is running, where digitised sensor measurements can be encoded onto the antenna by switching it on and off to modulate the power flow into the chamber at a very low level. This modulation can be sensed on the power feed line.
[0055] Although only one rectangular loop antenna 606 is shown in the cross-section view of
[0056] While the apparatus if
[0057] For certain applications, it is desirable to centralise all circuitry (and power supplies), while the sensors are distributed at various locations around the wafer. For this embodiment, the conductive enclosure needs to surround the circuitry and all sensing elements in one continuous shield. This would have the configuration of a circular disk in the centre (housing the circuitry) and extending out on spokes to each sensor position. The antenna would circumnavigates the edge of the wafer.
[0058] RF antennas (loops) for real time communication cannot be installed in conducting material (conducting substrate) as commonly used in known imitation wafer probes.
[0059] RF current must be allowed to flow through the wafer cross-section (from bottom to top) to activate the antennas. The RF antenna may also be provided in a semi-conductive region of the substrate.
[0060] With reference to
[0061] The invention is not limited to the embodiment(s) described herein but can be amended or modified without departing from the scope of the present invention.