Ion-Beam-Induced Modifications of Thin Films: Growth Simulations

1987 ◽  
Vol 93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl-Heinz Müller

ABSTRACTIf the thermal adatom mobility is limited during film growth, the kinetic energy delivered to the film surface by arriving species is the key parameter which determines the resulting film microstructure and properties. Kinetic models and growth simulations of nonequilibrium film growth have been used to study the influence of incident kinetic energy of adatoms and energetic ions on the film microstructure, microporosity, density, stoichiometry and epitaxy. Deposition processes like vapor, sputter, ion-assisted and ionized cluster beam deposition, could be examined in detail with particular emphasis on optical coatings. The theoretical descriptions used are based on the solid-gas, thermal spike, collision cascade and molecular dynamics model.

1991 ◽  
Vol 236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Herbots ◽  
O.C. Hellman ◽  
O. Vancauwenberghe

AbstractThree important effects of low energy direct Ion Beam Deposition (IBD) are the athermal incorporation of material into a substrate, the enhancement of atomic mobility in the subsurface, and the modification of growth kinetics it creates. All lead to a significant lowering of the temperature necessary to induce epitaxial growth and chemical reactions. The fundamental understanding and new applications of low temperature kinetics induced by low energy ions in thin film growth and surface processing of semiconductors are reviewed. It is shown that the mechanism of IBD growth can be understood and computed quantitatively using a simple model including ion induced defect generation and sputtering, elastic recombination, thermal diffusion, chemical reactivity, and desorption The energy, temperature and dose dependence of growth rate, epitaxy, and chemical reaction during IBD is found to be controlled by the net recombination rate of interstitials at the surface in the case of epitaxy and unreacted films, and by the balance between ion beam decomposition and phase formation induced by ion beam generated defects in the case of compound thin films. Recent systematic experiments on the formation of oxides and nitrides on Si, Ge/Si(100), heteroepitaxial SixGe1−x/Si(100) and GaAs(100) illustrate applications of this mechanism using IBD in the form of Ion Beam Nitridation (IBN), Ion Beam Oxidation (IBO) and Combined Ion and Molecular beam Deposition (CIMD). It is shown that these techniques enable (1) the formation of conventional phases in conditions never used before, (2) the control and creation of properties via new degrees of freedom such as ion energy and lowered substrate temperatures, and (3) the formation of new metastable heterostructures that cannot be grown by pure thermal means.


1988 ◽  
Vol 128 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Nagakubo ◽  
T. Yamamoto ◽  
M. Naoe

ABSTRACTFe films have been deposited by using dual ion beam sputtering apparatus under various conditions, and the dependence of their magnetic properties and morphology on preparation parameters such as film thickness, δt, and argon gas pressure, PAr, have been investigated in detail. The saturation magnetiza ion 4πMs of the specimen films did not change remarkably with 6t in the range of 50 ∼1000nm. However, with decrease of 6t below 50 nm, 4πMs decreased to less than 20 kG and coercivity Hc increased to more than 16 Oe. As PAr increased from 0.5 to 1.6 mTorr without ion bombardment, 4πMs decreased to less than 20 kG and Hc increased to about 20 Oe. The SEM micrographs of these films deposited at higher PAr showed the columnar structure. On the other hand, the films deposited at Yower PAr and ones bombarded by argon ions with proper kinetic energy during deposition did not present any texture and exhibited better soft magnetism. Such a morphology may be attributed to the difference in arrival energy of sputtered Fe particles to film surface and related closely to soft magnetism. It has been found that the dual ion beam sputtering method can control 4πMs and Hc with changing PAr and so prepare Fe films with superior soft magnetism by adjusting the kinetic energy of bombarding argon ions at lower PAr.


1997 ◽  
Vol 504 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Carosella ◽  
G. K. Hubler ◽  
C. M. Cotell ◽  
S. Schiestel

ABSTRACTThe collision cascade, the fundamental event in ion-solid interactions, is responsible for the beneficial effects on thin films deposited by low energy ion beam assisted deposition (IBAD) or by energetic ion assisted deposition processes in general. However, the fundamental implications of the marriage of collision cascades and film growth processes have yet to be fully realized. The first half of this paper reviews the effects of ion bombardment on film growth and reaches some new conclusions. We propose that IBAD represents a different ion-solid interaction in a fundamental sense, and that as such, it should lead to new microstructures unattainable by other materials synthesis methods.The second part of this paper discusses the deposition of metal nanoclusters in a dielectric matrix by means of beam assisted phase separation (BAPS), a term coined here to describe deposition of phase-separated multicomponent materials. Examples discussed are gold nanoparticles in both niobium oxide and silica matrices.


1977 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kunihiro Yagi ◽  
Shozo Tamura ◽  
Takashi Tokuyama

1989 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Bai ◽  
CH. SteinbrÜChel ◽  
T.-M. Lu

ABSTRACTIn ion-assisted deposition techniques such as partially ionized beam deposition, ions derived from the depositing material itself concurrently bombard the surface during thin film growth. The ion percentage in the deposition beam ranges from less than 0.1% to 100% (Ion Beam Deposition) with the ion energy varying between a few eV and several keV. When the sputtering yield of the self-sputtering is greater than one, there is a critical ion percentage, for a given ion energy, above which no net deposition can be obtained. The self-sputtering yield is shown to have a square root dependence on the ion energy above the threshold energy by fitting the experimental data obtained from the literature. The critical ion percentage for Al, Cu, Au, Ag, and C is then calculated and plotted as a function of the ion energy so that deposition and no-deposition regions are illustrated in terms of the ion energy and ion percentage.


2003 ◽  
Vol 792 ◽  
Author(s):  
James K. Hirvonen

ABSTRACTThe beneficial roles energetic ions play in thin film vacuum processes have long been recognized by the vacuum coating community. Optical coaters were among the first to adopt the process in the form of concurrent, low energy, directed ion beam bombardment of physical vapor deposition [electron beam] coatings for producing dense, adherent, robust, and environmentally resistant optical coatings. The international research and development community has also been actively pursuing the study of ion beam assisted deposition (IBAD) for both studying the mechanisms of ion/solid interactions during thin film growth as well as for developing coating protocols for specific application areas, including: tribological coatings, anti-corrosion coatings, optical coatings, superconducting buffer layers and coatings for temperature sensitive substrates such as polymers. This paper will review selected areas of this active field and will attempt to identify emerging application areas.


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