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Cryogenic etching of silicon with SF6 inductively coupled plasmas: a combined modelling and experimental study

A hybrid Monte Carlo-fluid model is applied to simulate the wafer-temperature-dependent etching of silicon with SF6 inductively coupled plasmas (ICP). The bulk plasma within the ICP reactor volume as well as the surface reactions occurring at the wafer are self-consistently described. The calculated...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of physics. D, Applied physics Applied physics, 2015-04, Vol.48 (15)
Main Authors: Tinck, Stefan, Tillocher, Thomas, Dussart, Rémi, Bogaerts, Annemie
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:A hybrid Monte Carlo-fluid model is applied to simulate the wafer-temperature-dependent etching of silicon with SF6 inductively coupled plasmas (ICP). The bulk plasma within the ICP reactor volume as well as the surface reactions occurring at the wafer are self-consistently described. The calculated etch rates are validated by experiments. The calculations and experiments are performed at two different wafer temperatures, i.e. 300 and 173 K, resembling conventional etching and cryoetching, respectively. In the case of cryoetching, a physisorbed SFx layer (x = 0-6) is formed on the wafer, which is negligible at room temperature, because of fast thermal desorption, However, even in the case of cryoetching, this layer can easily be disintegrated by low-energy ions, so it does not affect the etch rates. In the investigated pressure range of 1-9 Pa, the etch rate is always slightly higher at cryogenic conditions, both in the experiments and in the model, and this could be explained in the model due to a local cooling of the gas above the wafer, making the gas denser and increasing the flux of reactive neutrals, like F and F2, towards the wafer.
ISSN:0022-3727
1361-6463
DOI:10.1088/0022-3727/48/15/155204