VAPOR DEPOSITION DEVICE AND METHOD EMPLOYING PLASMA AS AN INDIRECT HEATING MEDIUM
20170067155 ยท 2017-03-09
Assignee
Inventors
- JAIME ANTONIO LI (MARTINSVILLE, VA, US)
- Coby Lee Hubbard (Patrick Springs, VA, US)
- David Lee Richardson (Stuart, VA, US)
Cpc classification
International classification
C23C16/448
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C14/56
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A vapor deposition device and a method for depositing a coating on a substrate are disclosed. The device includes a heating chamber for containing plasma and an evaporant chamber for containing an evaporant source. Evaporant is generated by heating of the evaporant source by the plasma. The heating chamber is both separated from the evaporant chamber and in thermally conductive connectivity with the evaporant chamber. The method includes supplying plasma to a heating chamber; heating an evaporant source by transfer of heat from the plasma to in an amount sufficient to generate evaporant from the evaporant source; and condensing the evaporant or a reaction product thereof on a surface of the substrate to form a coating thereon. The plasma is maintained in isolation from the evaporant source and the evaporant.
Claims
1. A vapor deposition device for forming a coating on a substrate and that utilizes plasma as an indirect heating medium to generate evaporant from an evaporant source, said device comprising (i) a heating chamber for containing said plasma and (ii) an evaporant chamber for containing an evaporant source; wherein an evaporant is generated by heating of said evaporant source by said plasma and wherein said heating chamber is both separated from said evaporant chamber and in thermally conductive connectivity with said evaporant chamber.
2. The device of claim 1 further comprising at least one plasma source.
3. The device of claim 1 further comprising a substrate coating station adjacent to said evaporant chamber.
4. The device of claim 1 further comprising a substrate coating station within said evaporant chamber.
5. The device of claim 3 wherein said substrate coating station comprises a roll-to-roll carrier including a feed roll and a take-up roll for passing said substrate within said substrate coating station.
6. The device of claim 3 further comprising at least one ion source for treating said coating or a surface of said substrate with an ion stream.
7. The device of claim 5 further comprising at least one ion source for treating said coating or a surface of said substrate with an ion stream.
8. The device of claim 6 wherein said ion source is a tunable ion source that provides for tuning or adjustment of the intensity of said ion stream.
9. The device of claim 1 further comprising an evaporant source retainer contained within said evaporant chamber.
10. A method for depositing a coating on a substrate, said method comprising supplying plasma to a heating chamber; heating an evaporant source by transfer of heat from said plasma to in an amount sufficient to generate evaporant from said evaporant source; and condensing said evaporant or a reaction product thereof on a surface of said substrate to form a coating thereon; wherein said plasma is maintained in isolation from said evaporant source and said evaporant.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein said heating step comprises heating said evaporant source to a temperature sufficient to generate evaporant at a vapor pressure suitable to form a coating on the substrate.
12. The method of claim 10 further comprising maintaining said temperature as required to obtain a constant flux of said evaporant that is continuously condensing on said substrate.
13. The method of claim 11 wherein said temperature is greater than 2000 C.
14. The method of claim 11 wherein said temperature is between 600 C. and 2200 C.
15. The method of claim 11 wherein said temperature is between 1400 C. and 2200 C.
16. The method of claim 10 further comprising forming an evaporant reaction product by reacting said evaporant with a reactant prior to or in conjunction with said condensing step.
17. The method of claim 10 further comprising feeding said substrate from a feed roll to a take-up roll in conjunction with said condensing step.
18. The method claim 10 further comprising projecting at least one ion stream at a surface of said substrate in conjunction with said condensing step.
19. The method claim 17 further comprising projecting at least one ion stream at a surface of said substrate in conjunction with said condensing step.
20. The method of claim 18 further comprising selecting the intensity of said ion stream so as to achieve a desired level of coating densification.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0015] As illustrated in
[0016] An important aspect of the device of the present invention is that the heating chamber 105 is separated from the evaporant chamber 125. Further, as heat energy from the plasma is used to heat the evaporant source to form evaporant, the heating chamber 105 is in thermally conductive connectivity with the evaporant chamber. As used herein regarding the relationship between the heating chamber and the evaporant chamber, the term separated from means that the space or volume contained by the heating chamber is discrete from the space or volume contained by the evaporant chamber such that plasma does not and cannot physically contact or interact or chemically react with either the evaporant or the evaporant source to the extent either are present in the evaporant chamber 125. As used herein regarding the relationship between the heating chamber and the evaporant source, the phrase in thermally conductive connectivity with means that heat energy can be transferred through one or more heat transfer mechanisms between the plasma in the heating chamber and the evaporant source contained in the evaporant chamber.
[0017] As the device of the present invention is useful for applying a coating to (or forming a coating on) a substrate, the device of the present invention preferably further includes a substrate coating station 135. The substrate 140 coated at substrate coating station 135 may be any substrate known in the art as coatable using conventional vapor deposition processes. Examples of suitable substrates include glass and polymeric films. At least one surface 145 of substrate 140 is placed in contact with evaporant 190 at substrate coating station 135 such that evaporant condenses on the surface 145 and forms a coating thereon. Substrate coating station 135 is preferably adjacent to evaporant chamber 125; however, it will be understood by one of ordinary skill that in certain embodiments is may desirable for coating station 135 to be located within the evaporant chamber 125. The device preferably further includes at least one ion source 165 for treating surface 145 of substrate 140 with at least one ion stream of a given intensity (multiple ion streams with total intensity C are generally shown at 170 of
[0018] In the particularly preferred embodiment shown in
[0019] While it will be understood by one of ordinary skill that plasma may be generated separately in a separate device and transported to heating chamber 105, the device of the present invention preferably also includes at least one plasma source 175 to generate the plasma 110 contained in the heating chamber 105. Plasma, as the term is used herein, is meant to include any gaseous material in which a significant percentage of the atoms or molecules are ionized. As known in the art, plasma is considered a higher energy state of matter where positively charged particles and negatively charged particles are both present, forming a quasi-neutral gas. Plasma sources are well known in the art and are typically made of electrodes that are in contact with a gas and connected to a relatively high voltage. Plasma source 175 may be selected from any plasma generators well known in the art, including hollow cathode, bipolar hollow cathode types such as is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,444,945, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, glow discharge or other suitable type. Hollow cathode plasma generators are preferred. The power source for the plasma source may be DC or AC current. The plasma source 175 may be point or linear in form and the device may include multiple plasma sources. Preferably plasma source 175 is integral with the device of the present invention.
[0020] It is an important aspect of the present invention that, since the plasma does not physically contact, interact or react with the evaporant 130 or the evaporant source 115, any limitations materially influencing the choice of plasma source that might arise from such contact, interaction or reaction are rendered moot.
[0021] Evaporant source 115 is optionally retained in an evaporant source retainer 120. The term retainer is not intending to be limiting but includes any structure that is capable of actively holding, retaining or clasping an evaporant source as well as structures capable of passively containing or supporting the evaporant source. Examples include liners and crucibles made of graphite, refractory metals, metal oxides, and combinations thereof.
[0022] Evaporant source retainer 120 is preferably located inside chamber 125 such that evaporant source 115 is housed in evaporant chamber 125. In this embodiment, evaporant chamber 125 and heating chamber 105 are separated by wall 185. Wall 185 separating the heating chamber 105 and the evaporant chamber 125 may be an integral component of one or both of the heating chamber 105 and evaporant chamber 125 or may be a separate structure and is preferably formed from a high heat-transfer material, for example graphite.
[0023] It will be understood by one skilled in the art that the materials for construction of the device of the present invention and its components will be selected based on many factors, including for example chemical reactivity and compatibility, system operating conditions and temperature. For example, materials such as tungsten, niobium, tantalum and the like will be required for higher temperature (e.g. 1400 C.) operating conditions, while devices for use in lower temperature (e.g. 600 C.) operating conditions may be constructed from stainless steel, titanium and the like.
[0024] In utilities where final coating uniformity is of paramount interest, a preferred embodiment of the vapor deposition device of the present invention may include an evaporant generation assembly with multiple heating chambers, multiple evaporant chambers, or both. In this embodiment, output of the multiple evaporant streams 190 can be varied and/or can overlap thereby minimizing potential influences from variability in process parameters such as gas distribution shape, gas pressure, source geometry, differences in individual evaporation stream rates and the like. By way of non-limiting examples, the evaporant generation assembly 102 depicted in
[0025] The evaporant source 115 may be selected from materials known in the coating art as evaporant sources for conventional deposition processes. Examples include metals, metal oxides, fluorides and sulfides. The evaporant source 115 may be in solid or liquid form.
[0026] In one embodiment, the evaporant 130 is substantially the same material or composition as the evaporant source 115 which has been converted without chemical reaction to a gaseous state or vapor. Accordingly, examples of suitable evaporant for this embodiment include metals, metal oxides, fluorides and sulfides. In another embodiment, the evaporant is an evaporant reaction product formed by reaction of the evaporant with a reactant, typically in gas or vapor form, which is present when the evaporant is generated or which is intentionally placed in reactive contact with the evaporant as or after it is formed, more preferably by injecting the reactant nearby streams 190. The chemical make-up of any evaporant reaction product will depend on many factors, including for example the selection of the evaporant and reactant, and may include for example, an oxide, nitride or similar material.
[0027] While the device of the present invention has been described above in the context of the vapor deposition art, it should be appreciated by one of ordinary skill that, in particular with regard to use of plasma as the heating media, the assembly 102 of the present invention provides a useful device for non-contact plasma heating of an evaporant source to form an evaporant is disclosed. Accordingly, as depicted in
[0028] A further aspect of the present invention is a method for depositing a coating on a substrate. The method for depositing a coating on a substrate includes supplying plasma to a heating chamber; heating an evaporant source by transfer of heat from the plasma to in an amount sufficient to generate evaporant from the evaporant source; and condensing the evaporant on a surface of the substrate to form a coating thereon. The plasma is maintained in isolation from the evaporant source and the evaporant. As used here, the phrase maintained in isolation from means does not and cannot physically contact or interact or chemically react. Accordingly, the plasma in the method of the present method does not and cannot physically interact or contact or chemically react with either the evaporant or the evaporant source.
[0029] The evaporant source is heated to a temperature sufficient to generate evaporant at a vapor pressure suitable to form a coating on the substrate. The method preferably includes maintaining the temperature to which the evaporant source is heated as required to obtain a constant flux of evaporant that is continuously condensing on the substrate. As known in the art, such temperatures will vary in part by the choice of evaporant source and its initial physical state. Particularly advantageous coatings may be formed by choosing evaporant sources requiring a heating step to generate evaporant of greater than 2000 C.; however, suitable coatings may be formed by choosing evaporant sources requiring a heating step to generate evaporant of 600 C. to 2200 C., preferably 1000 C. to 2200 C. and more preferably 1400 C. to 2200 C.
[0030] In the embodiment of the present method that includes forming an evaporant reaction product, the method includes forming an evaporant reaction product by reacting the evaporant with a reactant prior to or in conjunction with the condensing step. The reactant, typically in gas or liquid form, may be present when the evaporant is produced or may be placed in reactive contact with the evaporant as or after it is formed, for example by injecting the reactant nearby the evaporant streams.
[0031] In an embodiment where the method is a method for depositing a coating on a web or film substrate, particularly polyethylene terephthalate (PET) film substrate, the method may additionally include feeding the substrate from a feed roll 155 to a take-up roll 160 roll in conjunction with the condensing step. In this embodiment, the method of the present invention may, alone or in combination with the feeding step, further include projecting at least one ion stream having an intensity (multiple ion streams with intensity C are generally shown at 170 of