Specific Process Knowledge/Etch/RIE (Reactive Ion Etch): Difference between revisions
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*Can vary from isotropic to anisotropic with vertical sidewalls and on to a physical etch were the sidewalls are angled but without etching under the mask. | *Can vary from isotropic to anisotropic with vertical sidewalls and on to a physical etch were the sidewalls are angled but without etching under the mask. | ||
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!style="background:silver; color:black" align="left"|Process parameter range | |||
|style="background:WhiteSmoke; color:black"| | |style="background:LightGrey; color:black"|Process pressure||style="background:WhiteSmoke; color:black"| | ||
*~20-200 mTorr | *~20-200 mTorr | ||
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Revision as of 11:37, 13 December 2007
Etching using the dry etch technique RIE (Reactive Ion Etch)
At Danchip we have three RIE's. Two (RIE1 and RIE2) for etching silicon based materials (silicon, silicon oxide, sillicon nitride) and one (III-V RIE) for etching III-V materials (is discussed under III-V processing). The hardware of RIE1 and RIE2 is very similar but you cannot count on that identical recipes on RIE1 and RIE2 perform exactly the same. In addition to that the main difference between RIE1 and RIE2 is the cleanness of the two equipment. In rough terms RIE1 is the clean system and the RIE2 is the dirty system. This means that in RIE2 opposed to RIE1 it is allowed have small amounts of metals exposed to the plasma. Look in the manuals for RIE1 and RIE2 to read the details for this difference (you can find the manuals in LabManager [1]).
Process information
Purpose | Dry etch of |
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Performance | Etch rates |
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. | Anisotropy |
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Process parameter range | Process pressure |
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. | Gas flows |
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Substrates | Batch size |
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. | Substrate material allowed |
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. | Possible masking material |
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