2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(24h) Plasma Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition of Silicon Carbonitride
Authors
We use PEALD to deposit silicon carbonitride by alternating a thermal exposure of a silane derived single source precursor, bis(dimethylamino)dimethylsilane, containing Si-N, Si-C, and N-C bonds at 100 °C and a plasma step as a model system for SiCN deposition. A plasma step is needed to create a surface on which the precursor can chemisorb leading to the desired film composition. An experimental capacitively coupled radio frequency plasma source is used to understand how different plasmas, including ammonia, hydrogen, nitrogen, and pure argon impact the nature of chemisorption and film nature. Films were characterized using in situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. First principles simulations are used to assess the fundamental mechanisms at play.
Changing the plasma condition had a large effect on carbon concentrations of deposited films, changing the C:Si ratio from 0 with an NH3/Ar plasma to 4.3 with a N2/Ar plasma. In addition to converting precursor-based adsorbates into a film, the choice of plasma changes the surface modalities (NHx, undercoordinated Si-N, or Si-H modes), thereby altering the precursor-surface interactions during the adsorption step. This principle was exploited to tune film compositions to realize carbon concentrations ranging from C:Si ratios between 0.1 to 0.7 by using multiple plasma exposures to generate mixed modality surfaces for precursor adsorption.