From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thin films are thin material layers
ranging from fractions of a nanometre (monolayer) to several micrometres in thickness. Electronic semiconductor
devices and optical coatings are the main
applications benefiting from thin film construction.
A familiar application of thin films is the household mirror which typically has a thin
metal coating on the back of a sheet of glass to form a reflective
interface. The process of silvering was once commonly used to produce
mirrors. A very thin film coating (less than a nanometre) is used
to produce two-way
mirrors.
The performance of optical coatings (e.g. antireflective, or AR,
coatings) are typically enhanced when the thin film coating
consists of multiple layers having varying thicknesses and refractive
indices. Similarly, a periodic structure of alternating thin
films of different materials may collectively form a so-called superlattice which
exploits the phenomenon of quantum
confinement by restricting electronic phenomena to
two-dimensions.
Work is being done with ferromagnetic thin
films for use as computer memory. It is also being
applied to pharmaceuticals, via thin film drug delivery.
Thin-films are used to produce thin-film batteries.
Ceramic thin films are in
wide use. The relatively high hardness and inertness of ceramic
materials make this type of thin coating of interest for protection
of substrate materials against corrosion, oxidation and wear. In
particular, the use of such coatings on cutting tools can extend
the life of these items by several orders of magnitude.
Research is being done on a new class of thin film inorganic oxide materials, called amorphous heavy-metal cation
multicomponent oxide, which could be used to make transparent
transistors that are inexpensive, stable, and environmentally
benign.[1]
Deposition
The act of applying a thin film to a surface is thin-film
deposition - any technique for depositing a thin film of
material onto a substrate or onto previously deposited layers. "Thin" is a relative term,
but most deposition techniques control
layer thickness within a few tens of nanometres. Molecular beam epitaxy allows a
single layers of atoms to be
deposited at a time.
It is useful in the manufacture of optics (for reflective, anti-reflective coatings or self-cleaning glass, for instance),
electronics (layers
of insulators, semiconductors, and conductors form integrated circuits), packaging (i.e., aluminum-coated PET
film), and in contemporary art (see the work of Larry Bell). Similar processes are
sometimes used where thickness is not important: for instance, the
purification of copper by electroplating,
and the deposition of silicon and enriched uranium by a CVD-like process after
gas-phase processing.
Deposition techniques fall into two broad categories, depending
on whether the process is primarily chemical or physical.
Chemical
deposition
Here, a fluid precursor undergoes a chemical change at
a solid surface, leaving a solid layer. An everyday example is the
formation of soot on a cool object when it is placed inside a
flame. Since the fluid surrounds the solid object, deposition
happens on every surface, with little regard to direction; thin
films from chemical deposition techniques tend to be conformal,
rather than directional.
Chemical deposition is further categorized by the phase of the
precursor:
- Plating
relies on liquid precursors, often a solution of water with a salt of the metal to be deposited.
Some plating processes are driven entirely by reagents in the solution (usually for noble
metals), but by far the most commercially important process is
electroplating. It was not commonly used
in semiconductor processing for many years, but has seen a
resurgence with more widespread use of chemical-mechanical polishing
techniques.
- Chemical solution deposition (CSD) uses a
liquid precursor, usually a solution of organometallic
powders dissolved in an organic solvent. This is a relatively
inexpensive, simple thin film process that is able to produce
stoichiometrically accurate crystalline phases.
- Chemical vapor
deposition (CVD) generally uses a gas-phase precursor,
often a halide or hydride of the element to be
deposited. In the case of MOCVD,
an organometallic gas is used. Commercial
techniques often use very low pressures of precursor gas.
- Plasma enhanced CVD (PECVD) uses
an ionized vapor, or plasma, as a precursor. Unlike the
soot example above, commercial PECVD relies on electromagnetic
means (electric current, microwave excitation), rather than a chemical
reaction, to produce a plasma.
Physical
deposition
Physical deposition uses mechanical or
thermodynamic means to produce a thin film of solid. An everyday
example is the formation of frost. Since most engineering materials are held
together by relatively high energies, and chemical reactions are
not used to store these energies, commercial physical deposition
systems tend to require a low-pressure vapor environment to
function properly; most can be classified as physical vapor
deposition (PVD).
The material to be deposited is placed in an energetic, entropic environment, so that particles of
material escape its surface. Facing this source is a cooler surface
which draws energy from these particles as they arrive, allowing
them to form a solid layer. The whole system is kept in a vacuum
deposition chamber, to allow the particles to travel as freely as
possible. Since particles tend to follow a straight path, films
deposited by physical means are commonly directional,
rather than conformal.
Examples of physical deposition include:
- A thermal evaporator uses an
electric resistance heater to melt the material and raise its vapor
pressure to a useful range. This is done in a high vacuum, both to
allow the vapor to reach the substrate without reacting with or scattering against other
gas-phase atoms in the chamber, and reduce the incorporation of
impurities from the residual gas in the vacuum chamber. Obviously,
only materials with a much higher vapor pressure than the heating element
can be deposited without contamination of the film. Molecular beam epitaxy is a
particular sophisticated form of thermal evaporation.
- An electron beam evaporator fires a
high-energy beam from an electron gun to boil a small spot of
material; since the heating is not uniform, lower vapor pressure
materials can be deposited. The beam is usually bent through an
angle of 270° in order to ensure that the gun filament is not
directly exposed to the evaporant flux. Typical deposition rates
for electron beam evaporation range from 1 to 10 nanometres per
second.
- Sputtering relies on a plasma
(usually a noble gas,
such as argon) to knock material
from a "target" a few atoms at a time. The target can be kept at a
relatively low temperature, since the process is not one of
evaporation, making this one of the most flexible deposition
techniques. It is especially useful for compounds or mixtures,
where different components would otherwise tend to evaporate at
different rates. Note, sputtering's step coverage is more or less
conformal.It is also widely used in the optical media. The
manufacturing of all formats of CD, DVD, and BD are basically done
with the help of this technique. It is a fast technique and also it
provides a good thickness control. Now a days in sputtering,
Nitrogen and Oxygen gases are also being used.
- Pulsed laser
deposition systems work by an ablation process. Pulses of focused laser light vaporize the surface of
the target material and convert it to plasma; this plasma usually
reverts to a gas before it reaches the substrate.
- Cathodic arc
deposition (arc-PVD) which is a kind of ion beam
deposition where an electrical arc is created that literally
blasts ions from the cathode. The arc has an extremely high power density resulting in a high level of
ionization (30-100%),
multiply charged ions, neutral particles, clusters and
macro-particles (droplets). If a reactive gas is introduced during
the evaporation process, dissociation, ionization and excitation can occur during interaction with
the ion flux and a compound film will be deposited.
Other
deposition processes
Some methods fall outside these two categories, relying on a
mixture of chemical and physical means:
- In reactive sputtering, a small amount of some
non-noble gas such as oxygen
or nitrogen is mixed with
the plasma-forming gas. After the material is sputtered from the
target, it reacts with this gas, so that the deposited film is a
different material, i.e. an oxide or nitride of the target
material.
- In molecular beam epitaxy
(MBE), slow streams of an element can be directed at the substrate,
so that material deposits one atomic layer at a time. Compounds
such as gallium arsenide are usually deposited
by repeatedly applying a layer of one element (i.e., gallium), then a layer of the
other (i.e., As),
so that the process is chemical, as well as physical. The beam of
material can be generated by either physical means (that is, by a
furnace) or by a chemical
reaction (chemical beam epitaxy).
- In topotaxy, a specialized technique similar
to epitaxy, thin film crystal growth occurs in three dimensions due
to the crystal structure similarities (either heterotopotaxy or homotopotaxy) between the substrate
crystal and the growing thin film material.
Thin-film photovoltaic
cells
Thin-film technologies are also being developed as a means of
substantially reducing the cost of photovoltaic (PV)
systems. The rationale for this is that thin-film modules
are cheaper to manufacture owing to their reduced material costs,
energy costs, handling costs and capital costs. This is especially
represented in the use of printed electronics (roll-to-roll) processes.
Thin films belong to the second and third photovoltaic
cell generations.
Thin-film
batteries
Thin-film printing technology is
being used to apply solid-state lithium polymers to
a variety of substrates
to create unique batteries for specized applications. Thin-film
batteries can be deposited directly onto chips or chip packages in
any shape or size. Flexible batteries can be made by printing onto
plastic, thin metal foil, or paper.[2]
See also
References
Further
reading
- Anders, Andre (editor) "Handbook of Plasma Immersion Ion
Implantation and Deposition" (2000) Wiley-Interscience ISBN
0-4712-4698-0
- Bach, Hans and Dieter Krause (editors) "Thin Films on Glass"
(2003) Springer-Verlag ISBN 3-540-58597-4
- Birkholz, M., with contributions by Fewster, P. F. and Genzel,
C. "Thin Film Analysis by X-ray
Scattering" (2006) Wiley-VCH, Weinheim ISBN 3-527-31052-5
- Bunshah, Roitan F (editor). "Handbook of Deposition
Technologies for Films and Coatings", second edition (1994)
- Glaser, Hans Joachim "Large Area Glass Coating" (2000) Von
Ardenne Anlagentechnik GmbH ISBN 3-00-004953-3
- Glocker,and I. Shah (editors), "Handbook of Thin Film Process
Technology", Vol.1&2 (2002) Institute of Physics ISBN 0 7503
0833 8 (2 vol. set)
- Mahan, John E. "Physical Vapor Deposition of Thin Films" (2000)
John Wiley & Sons ISBN 0-471-33001-9
- Mattox, Donald M. "Handbook of Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD)
Processing" (1998) Noyes Publications ISBN 0-8155-1422-0
- Mattox, Donald M. "The Foundations of Vacuum Coating
Technology" (2003) Noyes Publications ISBN 0-8155-1495-6
- Mattox, Donald M. and Vivivenne Harwood Mattox (editors) "50
Years of Vacuum Coating Technology and the Growth of the Society of
Vacuum Coaters" (2007), Society of Vacuum Coaters ISBN
978-1-878068-27-9
- Westwood, William D. "Sputter Deposition", AVS Education
Committee Book Series, Vol. 2 (2003) AVS ISBN 0-7354-0105-5
- Willey, Ronald R. "Practical Monitoring and Control of Optical
Thin Films (2007)" Willey Optical, Consultants ISBN
978-6151-3760-5
- Willey, Ronald R. "Practical Equipment, Materials, and
Processes for Optical Thin Films" (2007) Willey Optical,
Consultants ISBN 978-6151-4397-2
- Ohring, Milton "Materials Science of Thin Films: Deposition and
Structure" 2nd edition (2002) Elsevier, Inc. ISBN
978-0-12-524975-1