Title: Microplasma Optical Emission Spectrometer (MOES) on a chip
1Microplasma Optical Emission Spectrometer (MOES)
on a chip
SFR Workshop November 8, 2000 Michiel Krüger,
David Hsu, Scott Eitapence, K. Poolla, C.
Spanos, D. Graves, O. Solgaard Berkeley, CA
2001 GOAL to build a microplasma generating
system and test it with bulk optical components
by 9/30/2001.
2Motivation and background
- Motivation
- Precise detection of compounds near substrate
required during semiconductor manufacturing - Organic compounds, emitted during DUV, can coat
optics of stepper - Background
- Small atmospheric pressure glow discharges can be
used for species excitation. - Glow discharge optical emission spectroscopy has
long history in analytical chemistry
3Microplasma Optical Emission Spectrometer
- Basic idea
- OES from plasma reveals info about gas
composition in chamber - Interdisciplinary
- plasma physics and chemistry
- MEMS processing
- optics and metrology
- Inter-departmental
- chemical engineering
- electrical engineering
- mechanical engineering
4MOES (cont.)
- Generation of plasma with hollow cathode
- Generation of plasma possible if
0.05ltp.Dlt10Torr.cm - Smaller diameter (?75 mm) allows plasma
generation at atmospheric pressure! - This results in smaller sensor
- Many applications in (and outside!) IC processing
industry (for example in lithography)
D
5Schematic of initial MOES experimental
configuration
- Combination of
- Bulk optical optical
- components
- Microplasma chamber,
- fabricated in Si substrate
- Light emitted from
- discharge is captured by
- lens and collimated onto grating
- Diffracted light from grating is
- focused on detector array to record spectrum
6First experiments plasma in 200mm hole, 100Torr
N2 ambient
molybdenum
chip
mica dielectric
vacuum chamber
7Currently fabricated in UCB Microlab
- Relatively simple to make
- XeF2 etch to achieve required depth and undercut
- Very small diameters, i.e. high pressure, possible
plasma
cathode
anode
8Fabrication process and challenges
- Fabrication
- OES cavity defined by deep reactive ion
etching/XeF2 isotropic etch - anode/cathode defined on front and backside of
wafer (metal or doped Silicon) - Challenges
- Microplasma stability and contamination
- Device sensitivity
- Packaging of device
- Exploration of pulsed operation to make
autonomous power supply possible - Integration of micro discharges onto chips for
other applications
92002 and 2003 Goals
Build micro-optics for spectral analysis.
Complete the preliminary designs for integrated
MOES, by 9/30/2002. Design and test integrated
MOES. Calibration studies, sensor
characterization, by 9/30/2003.