Specific Process Knowledge/Etch/Etching of Bulk Glass: Difference between revisions
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
*[[/AOE etching of fused silica|AOE etching of fused silica]] | *[[/AOE etching of fused silica|AOE etching of fused silica]] | ||
*[[/HF Etch of Glass|HF Etch of Glass (fused silica and borofloat)]] | *[[/HF Etch of Glass|HF Etch of Glass (fused silica and borofloat)]] |
Revision as of 14:45, 22 April 2014
Feedback to this page: click here
Comparing methods for etching bulk glass at Danchip
Etching of Glass can be done either wet or dry. Wet etching is done with HF. Dry etching can be done either with AOE using Flourine chemistry (only fused silica) or with IBE by sputtering with Ar ions and/or using Flourine chemistry.
At Danchip, we have two types of bulk glass substrates: Borosilicate glass (Borofloat 33 (like pyrex)) and fused silica glass which in cleanliness is similar to quartz. Both types are etched wet in a special set-up placed in a fumehood using a strong HF-solution (isotropic etch). The set-up consists of a 5L plasic beaker placed on a stirring plate (magnetic stirring) and a special horizontal wafer holder. Normally a 40% pre-mixed HF solution is used.
Masking materials and pre-treatment of the glass surface prior to the deposition of the masking material is a special concern in particular for deep etching (> 10µm).
Due to the high cleanliness fused silica is allowed access to basically all machines meaning that e.g. LPCVD silicon can be deposited as masking material. This is an excellent mask even for quite deep etches.
Regarding borosilicate glass masking is more tricky. Sputtered Si, Cr or Cr/Au can be used. It is a challange to avoid delamination, pinholes and cracks in the masking material.
Compare the methods for bulk glass etching
Wet Silicon Oxide etch (BHF/HF) | RIE (Reactive Ion Etch) | AOE (Advanced Oxide Etch) | IBE/IBSD Ionfab 300 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Generel description |
|
|
|
|
Possible masking materials |
|
|
|
|
Etch rate range |
|
|
|
|
Substrate size |
|
|
|
|
Allowed materials |
In the dedicated bath:
In a plastic beaker:
|
|
|
|