Title: PlasmaBased Processes and Potential Applications to Biomaterials
1Plasma-Based Processes andPotential Applications
to Biomaterials
- Andranik Sarkissian, Ph.D., P.Phys.MBA
2Outline
- Objectives
- Introduction to Fundamental Concepts in Plasma
Physics - Various Plasma Sources
- Interaction of Plasma-Materials
- Applications to Surface Engineering
- Examples
3Objectives
- To provide an overview of the basic concepts in
plasma physics - To describe how these concepts help us to design
the necessary tools that find applications in
Surface Engineering - To describe how these tools can be used to modify
the surface properties of materials
4Introduction What is a Plasma
- States of Matter (Ancient View)
- Earth, Water, Wind, Fire
- States of Matter (Modern View)
- Solid, Liquid, Gas, Plasma
5What is a Plasma
- Neutral Atoms or Molecules
- Electrons bonded to the nucleus
- Charged Atoms or Molecules
- Electron(s) detached from nucleus (ionization)
- Requires additional supply of Energy
- Electron attached to a neutral (negative ions)
6Introduction Plasma Production
- Energy Transfer often involves EM field
- Accelerating electrons transfer energy to neutral
atoms and molecules via collisions - DC Field (0 Hz)
- AC Field (100 Hz)
- RF Field (13.6MHz, 27 MHz)
- Microwave (300MHz-10 GHz)
- A e -gt A e e A e -gt A e
- A2 e -gt A A e e A2 e -gt A A e e
7Charged Particle Motion in Electric and Magnetic
Fields
- In an electric field E force on particle with
charge q is F qE - In a uniform magnetic field B the force on a
charged particle moving with a velocity V is F
qVxB
8Motion in Magnetic Fields
- Cyclotron Frequency ?c eB/m
- Gyro radius rg ?c V gt
- rg V / ?c
- 10 eV electron in a 100G field has a gyration
radius of 1mm.
9Charged Particle Motion in Electric and Magnetic
Fields
- In a crossed Electric and Magnetic field the
Force on the particle is F q.E VxB - Drift motion for the charged particles with Vd
E/B
10Collisions Mean Free Path
- Mean Free Path between Collisions ? 1 /
(Nst), - st is total collision cross section st Ssi
- N is the gas particle density
11Collisions
- Collision Frequencies in Plasma
- ? ve.t gt ?k Nsve where ve is the average
electron speed - Gas phase Reaction Rate R ne?k
- Maxwellian Energy Distribution
- ve,, ?k , R, can be calculated
- Typical Collision Frequencies
- ?ee 3.10-5 ne /Te3/2 ?ei 1.510-5
ne /Te3/2
12Mobility
- The changes in drift velocity of a charged
particle in response to a change in an applied
electric field is defined as charged particle
mobility VdµiE - An important consequence of different mobility
for electrons and ions in a rapidly changing
field is the application of RF-BIASING
scheme
13Collective Behavior
- Plasmas under go collective behavior unlike non
ionized gases. - A plasma (composed of charged particles) is
electrically neutral over a volume a ?D3 where
Debye Shielding Distance - ?D Const.(Te / ne)1/2, Const (e0/e2)
- ?D 740.(Te (eV)/ ne)1/2 cm,
- Plasma Frequency ?c ?D / Ve
- In a Chamber d50 cm, at 1 Torr (3.2x 1016
cm-3), Te 1 eV, ne 1010 cm-3 gt ?D 74 µm
- Te 10 eV, ne 103 cm-3 gt ?D 74 cm Can we
speak of Plasma in this case?
14Plasma Sheath
- Plasma Sheath
- Random Flux of Particles to adjacent wall
G(1/4)N.v - Charge separation due to difference in electron
and ion fluxes gt Electric Field - The region where E field is established is call
Plasma Sheath
15Non-equilibrium Plasma
- Energy Gain From Field Wf F. ? eE ?
- Force on a charged particle F q.E eE
- Loss of electron Energy per collision
- ?W(2me/mH)(We - WH) Wf
- (We - WH) 1/2 (me/mH)(eE/Nsel)
- e.g. 1 Torr gas pressure and eE 1eV/cm
- (We - WH) 1000 eV
- Te gt Tigt Tg 10eV gt 0.5eV gt 0.05eV
- Low pressure discharges are not in a
thermodynamic equilibrium state
16Various types of Plasma Sources
- DC Discharges
- Without Magnetic Confinement
- Discharge Tubes
- Parallel Plate
- Hollow Cathode
17Various types of Plasma Sources
- With Magnetic Confinement
- Magnetron (variety)
- PIG Discharges
18Various types of Plasma Sources
- RF Discharges
- Capacitively Coupled
- Inductively Coupled
19Various types of Plasma Sources
20Various types of Plasma Sources
- Microwave Discharge
- Remote Plasma
- Microwave Cavity
21Various types of Plasma Sources
- Microwave Discharge
- Electron Cyclotron Resonance (ECR)
- The condition when electron cyclotron frequency,
?eeB/me , is the same as the frequency of the
electric field oscillations is called ECR. The
result is that electrons gain energy from the
field constantly. - The resonance condition for electrons at 2.45 GHz
corresponds to B 875 Gauss
22Various types of Plasma Sources
- Plasma Torches
- DC
- RF
- Microwave
23How Biomaterials Field Benefits from Plasma
Technology
- The Non-Equilibrium State of Plasma Allows
Development of New Material Coatings Not
available by Conventional Means - Charged particles Can Be Manipulated by External
Fields in Order to Impart a predermined energy on
the Material surface thus influencing the film
Characteristics - Higher kinetic energy of impinging particles on
the surface allows reducing the process
temperature
24Advantages of Plasma Surface Engineering
- Most Medical Prosthesis (as well as many other
high tech components) require surface properties
that differ from bulk properties - Plasma Technology allows us to control the
material structure on atomic scale (monolayer)
25Disadvantages of Plasma Surface Engineering
26Plasma-Based Processes
- Implantation (1)
- Sputtering(2)
- Etching (3)
- Deposition
- Physical (4)
- Chemical (5,6)
- Others
- Arc evaporation
- e-beam
27Ion Implantation (conventional)
- Plasma Created
- Ions extracted from plasma
- Ions accelerated to high energy
- Ions Implanted
- non selective
28Ion Implantation (conventional)
- Plasma Created
- Ions extracted from plasma
- Ions accelerated to high energy
- Ions Mass Separated Magnetically
- Selected Ions Implanted
29Ion Implantation (Plasma-Based)
- Plasma Created
- Object Immersed in Plasma
- Object Biased to Negative Voltage
- Electrons repelled
- Ions accelerated and interact with object
30Applications of Ion Implantation
- Metal parts on heart valves are ion implanted by
carbon to make them biocompatible - Radioisotops are implanted in prosthesis for
localized radiotherapy
31Sputtering
- Ion Beam Assisted
- Plasma-Based Sputtering (immersion)
32Plasma-Based Deposition
- Physical Vapor Deposition
- Sputter Deposition
- e-beam deposition
- Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition
- Deposition by Plasma Spray
- Deposition by Laser Ablation
33Sputter Deposition
- Ion Plating
- Ion Beam Assisted Deposition
- Planar Diode
- DC
- RF
- Triode Discharge
34Sputter-Deposition
35Applications of Sputter Deposition
- Sputter deposition can be used for coating
medical implants. It allows insulating films,
such as calcium phosphate, to be deposited
uniformly over large areas. The coating is
relatively dense, adheres well to the substrate,
and closely resembles that of the object.
Sputtering can also coat materials that are
sensitive to heat. - Example of rf magnetron sputtering deposited thin
( 1µm) films of hydroxyapatite onto titanium.
A cross-sectional view of an in vivo
calcium-phosphate-coated implant nine weeks after
it was put in place. The pink areas show natural
bone, while the black area is the implant
(magnification x40).
36PECVD
- Plasma Produces Significant Radicals
- Allows deposition at lower temperatures
- Allows deposition of new materials
- All Types of Plasma sources can be used for
applications to PECVD - Lower frequency sources gt higher ion energy
- Higher frequency sourcesgt stable discharge
37Other Deposition Techniques
- Cathodic Arc Discharge
- Arc is a self sustained current channel
- Laser Ablation
- Plasma Spray
38Applications of Plasma Spray
- Plasma spray of bioceramics is a mature
technology - Plasma-Assisted coatings for reduced friction and
wear
39Plasma Polymerization
- Plasma polymerization is a procedure, in which
gaseous monomers, stimulated through a plasma
condense on substrates, as high cross-linked
layers. - Condition for this process is the presence of
chain-producing atoms, such as carbon, silicium
or sulfur, in the working gas. - Monomer molecules in plasma fragment into
reactive components resulting in cross-linked and
disordered structures
40Plasma-Material InteractionsPolymers
- Three Ways To Modify Surface of Polymers by
Plasma (1) - Treatment of Functional Groups gt Alter Chemical
Reactivity of the Surface gt Surface properties
Change but Bulk Remains the same - Hydrophobicity or Hydrophilicity
- Decrease or Increase Capillary flow
- Cleaning, prior to adhesive bonding,
- catheters, Dialysis Pump Parts, Syringe
Components, blood bags, etc - Sterilizing, etc
41Plasma-Material InteractionsPolymers
- Three Ways To Modify Surface of Polymers by
Plasma (2) - Plasma Induced Grafting by Interaction of noble
gas ions (Ar or He) with the Surface gt New Free
Radical Sites gt Reaction with other monomers gt
Surfaces with Special Properties - Low friction film can be grafted to polyethylene
catheters by exposing them to pure Ar plasma
initially, and then to CH4, CH4/CF4, or H2/CF4
plasmas for film deposition. - Cleaning time / Deposition time (1- 2 min /
30-60 min)
42Plasma-Material InteractionsPolymers
- Three Ways To Modify Surface of Polymers by
Plasma (3) - Plasma Deposition
- In plasma deposition, a thin polymer coating is
formed at the substrate surface through
polymerization of the process gas. Depending on
the selection of the gas and process parameters,
these thin coatings can be deposited with various
properties or physical characteristics. Coatings
produced in this manner through plasma deposition
exhibit different properties than films derived
from conventional polymerization, including a
high degree of cross-linking and extremely strong
adherence to the substrate.
43Applications of Plasma-Polymer Interactions
- ADHESION PROMOTION
- Many polymers have a low to medium surface
energyexamples include polypropylene,
polyethylene and Teflon. - Difficult to effectively apply adhesives or
coatings. - Using oxygen plasma increase hydrophilicity gt
Improve adhesive bonding - For example, plasma processing can increase the
surface energy of polypropylene from 29 to 72
dynes/cm - Medical applications include surface preparation
for adhesive bonding of catheters and balloon
catheters, dialysis filters, and other
components, and bonding needles to syringe hubs.
44Applications of Plasma-Polymer Interactions
- HYDROPHILIC PROPERTIES
- A specially developed plasma activation process
can be used to make a substrate surface
hydrophilic. This permanently hydrophilic
character can impart to woven or nonwoven
textiles the capability to be used as blood
filters or filtering membranes for various
applications, including microfiltration
components for dialysis filter systems.
45Applications of Plasma-Polymer Interactions
- BIOCOMPATIBILITY
- Plasma activation of surfaces to prepare them for
cell growth or protein bonding is another
important application. - Examples of in vitro uses of plasma treatment
include preparation of petri dishes and
microtiter plates for laboratory experiments or
drug-production purposes. - Examples of in vivo uses includes use of plasma
to enhance the biocompatibility of implants by
treating the surface of a device to increase the
adherence of a hemocompatible coating. Among the
applications in this domain are vascular grafts,
lenses, and drug-delivery implants. When
required, surfaces can also be modified to
decrease the bonding of proteins.
46Applications of Plasma-Polymer Interactions
- BARRIER COATINGS
- Plasma modification can be used to deposit thin,
dense barrier coatings that have the effect of
decreasing the permeability of plastic parts to
alcohol or other liquids or vapors. - For example, plasma treatment of high-density
polyethylene can decrease the material's
permeability to alcohol by a factor of 10.