4.plasma Reactors
4.plasma Reactors
Plasma Reactors
Vacuum
pumps
Gas cylinders
86
Sec. 4.1 Plasma Systems 87
• Partial pressures of the feed gases, or flow rates of the different gases
• Total pressure in reactor
• Substrate temperature and bias
88 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
Plasma Parameters
Densities (charged and neutral particles)
Temperatures
Residence time
Surface Parameters
(substrate/electrode)
Material (conductingllnsulating)
Bias
Temperature
Fig. 4-2 Complexity of interaction between plasma variables (after [3], reprinted
with permission). The arrows indicate the possible interactions between pro
cess parameters; they do not indicate that all the described interactions
always ta1ce place.
anisotropy. The flow rates, total pressure, and reactor geometry can determine the
uniformity of the process.
The gas flow rate, the pumping speed, and the pressure are interrelated. The
pressure can be changed in two ways: by changing the flow rate at constant
pumping speed or by changing the pumping speed at constant flow rate. While
the two methods can provide the same pressure, they result in different residence
times for the species in the reactor (see Sec. 4.1.2). The different residence times
can cause changes in the chemistry of the process [4].
The frequency of the electric field is also a system parameter that can affect
the plasma process or the properties of the product. A variation of the frequency
can affect the number and energy of ions that can follow the alternating field, thus
changing the flux and energy of the particles bombarding the plasma treated
surface.
90 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
4.1.2 Scale-up
gas flow rates proportional to electrode area normal to the flow direction,
or proportional to volume of reaction zone.
It thus appears that the main changes in plasma parameters during scale-up
are the linear extrapolations of electric power and gas flow rates. However, these
changes alone may not be sufficient. In practice, a change in reactor geometry
may affect other important intrinsic plasma parameters, especially if the reactors
are not of the parallel plate type.
The foregoing description of scale-up principles did not take into consider-
ation how the active species are formed along the flow path of the gas from the
gas inlet to the treated substrate and their interaction before reaching the substrate.
The formation and transport of the reactive species that form the final product are
dependent on the flow patterns and on the time spent along the path to the
substrate. The diffusion of the precursor molecules takes place along most of the
distance from the gas inlet to the substrate, while diffusion of reactive species
takes place mainly from the boundary of the plasma zone to the substrate. The
reactor geometry and the geometry of the electrodes (size, distance between them)
can change the gas flow patterns, the relative volume of the plasma region, the
transport of the reactive species, and the rate and uniformity of the process.
Electric field patterns, especially at the edges, are also influenced by the
reactor geometry and may affect the uniformity of the process at the edges of the
substrate. This is especially true for tubular reactors or for bell jar reactors, often
used in plasma polymerization [6]. In such reactors the volume of the plasma is
not defined by the electrodes and is dependent on the interaction between different
plasma parameters. Finally, the wall temperature of the scaled-up reactor is gen-
erally different from that in the smaller one, causing different gas retention or
memory effects.
Because of these effects, the approximated parameters of the. scaled-up reac-
tor have to be generally readjusted either empirically or using theoretical
modelling of the process and reactor. The last approach would generally still need
empirical fine-tuning of the process parameters.
The ease with which a reactor can be cleaned has to be given careful
consideration during its design. This is especially important for deposition reac-
tors. Film material that deposits and accumulates on the surroundings of the
deposition zone and on the walls of the reactor has to be regularly removed from
any deposition system to avoid flaking and powder formation that may have
adverse effects on the quality of the film deposited on the substrates.
Another important aspect to be considered when scaling up a laboratory
system to a commercial manufacturing unit is the efficiency of precursor utiliz-
ation, or the material efficiency of the process. In a deposition process, the
material efficiency can be defined as the ratio between the weight of the deposited
film and the weight of the film components in the feed gas. The material effi-
ciency can be defined similarly for an etching process, in this case taking into
account the removed instead of the deposited material. The highest material
Sec. 4.3 RF Reactors 93
efficiency is generally obtained at high plasma density and low flow rates and, at
a first approximation, is independent of pressure for the processes described in
this book (based on gaseous precursors). The pressure, however, affects the
process efficiency in sputtering processes, where the sputtering yield is pressure
dependent. Because of the condition of low flow rate, high material efficiency is
usually associated with lower process rates in deposition and' etching. As a result,
high material efficiency does not always imply maximum process efficiency,
which demands high process rates [5].
The optimum trade-off between reactor design, material efficiency, and pro-
cess rate is determined by each individual manufacturing process. The develop-
ment of a manufacturing process is finally to a large extent empirical in defining
the optimal conditions for achieving either film deposition or etching rate uni-
formity.
Due to the diversity of plasma reactor designs and plasma parameters, it is
not within the scope of this chapter to describe in detail all designs and experi-
mental approaches used. Only the general principles of the most common used
reactor designs for producing the plasmas, based on the methods discussed in
Chapter 2, are described in the following.
4.2 DC REACTORS
DC plasma reactors operate as described in Sec. 2.1. The plasma is sustained
between two parallel plate electrodes as illustrated in Fig. 2-1, and the electric
power is supplied to excite the plasma in the abnormal discharge mode. The
distance between the electrodes and the pressure in the reactor have to satisfy
Paschen's law for the used gas mixture (see Sec. 2.1.1).
The power supplies used to sustain DC plasmas can generally be used at
constant voltage, constant current, or constant power mode. The power supplies
should be able to control the preset value in each mode. The excitation and
sustainment of a DC plasma require the use of electrically conductive electrodes
and samples. However, electrically insulating films may deposit locally on the
surface of the electrodes or samples due to contaminants formed in the plasma.
In such cases, local dielectric breakdown normally occurs, causing arcing that
results in spikes of high currents.
The power supply must be able to withstand these spikes and return to normal
operation without shutting off. However, it must also be able to distinguish
between the transient arcing currents and shorts that may occur between the
electrodes and grounded surfaces. This feature, called arc suppression, must be a
characteristic of a DC power supply of a plasma reactor.
4.3 RF REACTORS
The power supplies used to sustain commercial RF plasma systems are operated
at specific frequencies established by international agreements [7]. The most used
94 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
frequency is 13.56 MHz, but sometimes the higher harmonics of 27.12 MHz and
40.68 MHz are also used. The RF generators are designed to operate at constant
output impedance of 50 O. The impedance of the glow discharge is, however,
much higher and varies with the process parameters. An impedance matching
network or matching unit is thus required between the RF power supply and the
reactor. Otherwise, most of the power will reflect to the power supply instead of
being absorbed into the plasma.
The matching unit is placed physically as close as possible to the powered
electrode. In parallel plate reactors the matching unit is usually mounted on the
flange supporting the powered electrode. Normally, variable automatic matching
units are used, and these adjust themselves to keep the output impedance of the
RF power supply constant at 50 0, independent from the changing plasma con-
ditions.
Although the terms of inductive and capacitive coupling are often used as just
defined, the inductive coupling is not purely inductive, and it always has a
capacitive component too, through the wall of the reactor. Thus, when an induc-
tive coupling is used, deposition on the walls is often observed to follow a pattern
matching the shape of the coil. This is an indication of localized stronger electric
fields on the walls, showing that the coupling is at least partly capacitive through
the walls of the reactor [2 l.
In a tubular reactor of one of the types shown in Fig. 4-3, and especially in
Fig. 4-3(a), the strength of the electric field is not uniform along the reactor.
Therefore the substrate position inside the reactor becomes a parameter that can
Sec. 4.3 RF Reactors 95
& ;o (la
RF
RF
of b
RF
(b)
~(C)
Fig. 4-3 RF coupling methods to electrodeless reactors.
affect the result of the process and can be controlled to achieve desirable proper-
ties [8, 9]. In tubular reactors the substrates are usually positioned with their
surfaces perpendicular to the axis of the reactor.
The types of RF reactors just described, also called barrel reactors, are used
sometimes for industrial applications, although they are more popular in research
laboratories, being relatively inexpensive and easy to set up. In industrial appli-
cations, the tubular reactors are normally used for ashing of photoresist or etching
in microelectronic fabrications and for noncritical deposition processes where
uniformity is of no great concern.
A barrel reactor used for etching often includes an etch tunnel. The metallic
perforated cylindrical etch tunnel, illustrated in Fig. 4-4, is inserted in the reactor
Gases in Gases in 7
/ Etch -
~DDD c..._
Quart z /4~~'"
reactor tunnel
Subs trates
to improve temperature uniformity along the length of the sample holder and to
minimize particle bombardment of the substrates. This metallic cylinder acts as a
Faraday cage and confines the glow region to the annulus between the etch tunnel
and the wall of the reactor. Substrates are thereby shielded from direct contact
with the plasma and are subject to little, if any, ion or electron bombardment.
Neutral species diffuse, nevertheless, through the perforations and reach the sur-
face of the processed substrates.
96 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
Sho werhead
\
e /
Insulated
feedthrough
-!-
---
\.
-.. Elec trodes
/
/ Su bstrate
--
Fig. 4-5 Power coupling to a planar diode reactor.
For RF discharges, the surface of the electrodes in contact with the plasma
are no longer required to be electrically conductive since RF voltages can be
coupled through any kind of impedance. The surface of the electrode, substrate,
or deposited coating can be electrically insulating. The RF power is, nevertheless,
supplied in all cases through a conductive backing to the electrodes, to ensure
uniform electric potential across the electrode.
Although the discharge is mainly confined between the electrodes, plasma
species also diffuse to the side walls of the reactor. The interaction between
plasma and electrodes can result in contamination of the plasma with atoms, which
are either physically sputtered or chemically etched from the electrodes. The same
is true, though to a lesser extent, for contamination with atoms from the walls.
The right choice of materials for electrodes and reactor is therefore of utmost
importance, especially in microelectronic processing, for which prevention of
contamination is imperative. The electrodes are usually made of stainless steel and
the reactors are built from stainless steel, aluminum, or quartz.
Capacitive coupling to parallel electrodes inside the reactor enables the cre-
ation of uniform electric fields, making it possible to achieve high process uni-
fonnity over large areas, determined by the size of the electrodes. However, the
uniformity of the electric field alone is not sufficient to guarantee the unifonnity
of the results of PECVD processing when reactive gases are involved. Depending
on their concentration and consumption and on their flow pattern in the reactor,
Sec. 4.3 RF Reactors
the gases can be depleted of the reactive components along their path. This
depletion can cause nonuniform deposition or nonuniform etching across the
surface of the substrate.
The radial flow reactor, originally developed by Reinberg [10, II], was
designed to allow compensation for the depletion of the gases from the reactive
components, thus improving process uniformity. The precursor gases were intro-
duced at the periphery of the sample electrode and then flowed inward where they
were exhausted at the center as shown schematically in Fig. 4-6. The discharge
intensity is highest in the central region, promoting faster depositions in that area:
Electrodes
_ Substrate
To pump
The higher velocity and consequent shorter residence time of the gases at the
center of the electrodes can counterbalance the higher discharge intensity in the
center, leading in many cases to a uniform deposition rate across the whole radius.
A reactor similar to the Reinberg reactor used for PECVD processing is
shown in Fig. 4-7 [12]. In this case, however, the gas enters through the center
of the lower electrode and flows out at the periphery. Another often-used approach
for achieving uniformity over a large area is by feeding the gas through a
showerhead that forms one of the electrodes in the parallel plate reactors. The
sample electrode can sometimes be heated or rotated to smooth out nonunifonnity
in processing.
If both electrodes in a parallel plate RF reactor are insulated from the walls,
the reactor is called a triode-type reactor. In the triode reactor, each electrode and
the reactor walls can be powered independently, and each can be biased, floating,
or grounded. A diagram of a triode reactor is shown in Fig. 4-8.
Another version of the triode reactor is the one in which the discharge is
sustained between two electrodes and the substrate is supported on a third elec-
98 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
Shielded
RF Power input
!
Electrode
~~a·K·~~
""I~_I
Heater
11....---_
Heater
1 Rotating shaft
Out to Out to
VAC pump VACpump
Magnetic ~WUJ~
rotation
drive
1
Gases in
Fig. 4-7 Diagram of a radial flow reactor (from [ 12], reprinted with permission from
Thin Solid Films, vol. 113, p. 135, 1984).
trode, which can be biased separately [ 13 ]. The electrodes in a triode reactor can
be powered by combinations of power supplies, such as RF and microwave, RF
and DC, RF and AC ( < 50 kHz). While in the diode reactors, the RF power
density may be limited by the maximal bias allowable on the substrate electrode,
this limitation is eliminated in the triode reactors. The plasma density is controlled
Insulation
Substrate
AC
by the power sustaining the plasma, while the substrate bias and thereby the
energy of the ions bombarding it is controlled directly by the generator supplying
the power to the substrate electrode.
Sometimes the discharge in a planar reactor may be assisted by thermionic
electrons emitted from a hot filament; this type of reactor is also called a triode
reactor.
Gas inlet
RF power
Processing
chamber
External
antenna
\ 13.56 MHz
Source solenoid
Chamber
solenoid
Fig. 4-10 High-density plasma reactor with helicon source (from [ 15], reprinted with
permission).
magnetic field is strong enough, such that the ion cyclotron radius is smaller than
the radius of the tube, it can also confine the ions by reducing their loss to the
walls. For a tube 15 em in diameter, a magnetic field of ~ 100 G can achieve
the confinement.
The helicon source is operated in the pressure range 10- 4 -10 - 2 torr, and
the plasma diffuses from the source into the reaction chamber. The diffusion is
controlled with additional magnets placed around the chamber. These can be
permanent magnets in a multipolar configuration or electromagnets [ 15 ]. A reac-
tion chamber 30 em long and 30 em in diameter can be operated with a helicon
source 22 em long and 15 em in diameter. The helicon source can be operated
over a large frequency range, the range 2-70 MHz appearing to be most suit-
able [ 15].
The RF reactors in the different configurations are the most versatile reactors
and are most used for plasma processing. The RF reactors can process electrically
conductive or insulating samples and are used for deposition of inorganic or
Sec. 4.4 Microwave Reactors 101
polymeric films, for surface treatment of organic or inorganic solids, and for
plasma and reactive ion etching.
Fig. 4-11 Diagram of microwave power system for cold plasma excitation .
Quartz tube
MW cut-off shield
of the highest electric field in the waveguide, facilitating the acceleration of the
electrons by the microwave. To prevent leakage of microwave outside the reactor,
the discharge region is enclosed on both sides by metallic tubes with diameters
smaller than the cut-off diameter corresponding to the wavelength of the used
microwave [ 16 ].
The diameter of the reactor is limited in this case by the size of the wave-
guide, whose width for a frequency of 2.45 GHz is 7.21 em.
Fig. 4-13 illustrates a different way of microwave coupling to the plasma by
a quarter-wave microwave cavity or an Emerson antenna. It is essentially a
resonance cavity that is fed by a coaxial cable and is suitable for low powers
( < 200 W). The cavity has a removable cap that allows easy disconnection of the
1A
Discharge tube o,
Section B-8
,
1.0·
Scale
Fig. 4-13 Coaxial 1/4 cavity (from [17], reprinted with permission from Plasma
Chemistry in Electrical Discharges, p. 65, 1967).
reactor from the cavity. For microwaves of a frequency of 2.45 GHz, the diameter
of the reactor is generally limited to less than 2 em.
Microwave plasmas of larger volumes than those attainable by direct coupling
through the waveguide (Fig. 4-12) can be produced by coupling the microwaves
through a larger cavity. Special axisymmetric microwave couplers can convert the
Sec. 4.4 Microwave Reactors 103
Axisymmetric coupler
Waveguide
•
+-Cavity
Quartz bell ja
.,...,I-~--Plasma
Substrate
Fig. 4-14
I ~aust
An axisymmetric microwave coupler (from [18]. reprinted with permission
from Research & Development Magazine. October. 1989. by Cabners Pub-
lishing Company).
Microwave reactors have been designed for plasma treatment of even larger
areas. A reactor designed for large-area etching of polymers [19, 20] combines
a long and narrow microwave applicator (42 x 7.5 em") with a translational
movement of the substrate, in a direction perpendicular to the applicator.
Water
!
External
coax
Flange to
Fig. 4-15 Coaxial microwave coupling to
reactor
a plasma reactor.
104 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
Microwave power can be coupled into a plasma also by using coaxial appli-
cators. As illustrated in Fig. 4-15, the central conductor of the coax is in direct
contact with the plasma and has to be generally water cooled. The insulator that
separates the central conductor from the external one has also to provide a vacuum
seal at the insertion in the reactor.
2O ....-- - -r"\
10
:[
~ 0 I----t'----t
! · 10
-20 '--~---'
o0.2 0.4 0.6 0 .8 1.0
Magnetic Flu. ( kG I
--. DiAs
(a) (b)
Fig. 4-16 Diverging field-type ECR reactor: (a) plasma source and reactor; (b) dis-
tribution of magnetic field along the plasma.
processing chamber, along the diverging magnetic field lines, creating an electric
field which causes the extraction of the ions. A potential of 15-20 eV is com-
monly developed and is imparted to the ions extracted from the source. If higher
ion energy is needed, it can be achieved by placing extracting grids between the
ECR source and the processing chamber. The grids can also improve the uniform-
ity of the extracted plasma beam.
Additional magnets are sometimes added outside the source to permit shaping
of the magnetic field in the vicinity of the substrate and to achieve better control
and confinement of the plasma. The auxiliary magnets can be located behind the
substrate holder to improve the uniformity of ion current density across the
substrate and to ensure the arrival of ions perpendicular to the surface.
Sec. 4.5 ECR Reactors 105
Uniform plasma
In the diverging field ECR plasma system shown in Fig. 4-16, the ions flow
along the magnetic field lines, making it a line-of-sight process, while in the
multipolar ECR the plasma is essentially isotropic in the internal processing region
of the reactor.
For some applications, the substrates have to be treated while having a linear
translational movement through the plasma. This requires a linear plasma source
having a uniform density perpendicular to the direction of the substrate movement.
A special ECR source using a hom antenna expanding to an aperture of 60 x 9
em? has been developed for such applications [24]. The source is called by the
authors an elongated-mirror-geometry (EMG) source.
Because of the short wavelength of the microwaves, both regular microwave
and ECR plasmas can be confined to small volumes. As a result, processing in
microwave I ECR plasmas can be performed in several reactor arrangements:
Processing performed using the last two configurations is also called processing
by remote plasma, which will be discussed later.
The ECR plasmas, characterized by high degrees of ionization, can produce
high-density plasmas over a broad range of pressures. The energies of the ions are
intrinsically low in the ECR plasmas, but can be increased using extraction grids.
Because of these features, ECR reactors produce large fluxes of low-energy ions,
are characterized by high processing rates, and are therefore used for single-wafer
processing, for etching of wafers, or for deposition of coatings. The large mean
free path of the particles at the low operating pressures of the ECR plasmas results
Sec. 4.6 Magnetically Enhanced Reactors 107
in directionality of the ion and neutral beams. When used for anisotropic etching ,
ECR reactors cause lower wafer damage than reactive ion etching performed in
RF reactors at much higher ion energies.
The high-density plasmas obtained in the ECR reactors are a result of the inter-
action between the electric field at microwave frequencies and the superposed
magnetic field. The value of the magnetic field has to be adjusted to create
resonance between the frequency of the electric field and the electron cyclotron
frequency. Magnetic fields can be used to enhance plasma densities also at
nonresonant conditions. Two types of magnetically enhanced plasma reactors are
described in the following .
The magnetically confined reactor (MeR), is essentially a triode reactor that
uses additional magnetic fields to confine the plasma and to reduce the loss of
Top View
Side View
FIg. 4-19 Magnet arrangement in a magnetically confined reactor. The arrows indicate
the magnetic field lines (from [25], reprinted with permission) .
108 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
charged species to the walls. The triode reactor, similar to the one shown in Fig.
4-8, uses two power supplies at different frequencies: one for exciting the plasma
and one for biasing the substrate electrode. A 13.56-MHz power supply is used
to sustain the plasma, while a 100-kHz power supply provides the bias to the
substrate. The magnetic confmement is produced by permanent magnets arranged
around the perimeter of the reactor and imbedded in the grounded upper electrode,
as illustrated in Fig. 4-19.
The power supplied by the high-frequency field controls the amount of
dissociation and generation of reactive species. The low-frequency field controls
the ion flux to the substrate and enhances the directionality of the process,
especially in etching.
The confmement of the plasma by the magnetic fields results in an enhanced
plasma density. The arrangement of the magnets keeps the magnetic filed lines
away from the processed wafer (see Fig. 4-19), preventing a direct influence of
the magnetic field on the process. The MCR is used at pressures of a few mtorr
[25, 26]. Being based on RF power supplies and using a magnetic field that is
independent from the frequency of the electric field, the equipment used for the
MeR is much simpler than that required for ECR reactors.
A different version of a magnetically enhanced plasma reactor used especially
for magnetically enhanced reactive ion etching (MERlE), is the rotating field
reactor. This is essentially a parallel plate RF reactor in which a time-varying
magnetic field is applied on the substrate electrode. As shown in Fig. 4-20, several
electromagnets are arranged around the substrate electrode, which in most cases
serves as the cathode of the discharge. The plasma is sustained by a 13.56-MHz
generator. The electromagnets produce a magnetic field that rotates slowly, at a
Wafer
(clamped
and cooled)
cathode
Fig. 4-10 Cathode and electromagnets in a rotating field reactor (from [27 ], reprinted
with permission).
Sec. 4.7 Remote PECVD Reactors 109
frequency of 0.5 Hz, in the plane of the electrode. This arrangement produces a
high flux of low-energy ions, resulting in high processing rates with reduced
substrate damage [27]. Both MCR and rotating field reactors are considered
alternatives to ECR reactors, especially for plasma etching.
/ Quartz tube
RFcoll
o
o
~ /GaSeS ln
o
o o
Proces s
Dispersion -M-- - -(( chamber
ring
-- Substrate
Many manufacturing processes using PECVD consist of multiple steps, with one
or more plasma reactors. This is especially the case in manufacturing micro-
electronic components. For example, manufacturing of DRAM computer chips
involves hundreds of process steps and the processing of the 64-Mbit DRAM chips
will require up to 1000 steps [29].
For better control of the fabrication process and yield improvement, the
wafers have to be moved between process steps without exposure to environment
to avoid contamination. For this purpose, cluster tools that are modular, multi-
chamber, integrated process systems were developed in the last few years. A
cluster tool, as illustrated in Fig. 4-22, consists of a central handling station (the
core) and a number of peripheral modules also called process stations. Processing
modules, which include the reactors, load-locks, or inspection stations, can be
arranged in any configuration around the central core. PECVD reactors are often
included in the cluster tools. Each processing unit is mechanically and electrically
independent and has its own vacuum and control system.
The central handling platform contains transport mechanisms that move the
processed specimens from module to module. Several central platforms may be
interconnected for further process integration.
The modules of a cluster tool can be of two types:
• Single-process modules, which are usually batch modules for processing
multiple specimens in low rate processes.
Sec. 4.9 Questions 111
Procoss modu lo
Samplo
holdor
Contral
transtor modulo
Load-lock
Insortlon
modu lo
4.9 QUESTIONS
I. A certain plasma process has an optimum for a residence time of 0.4 sec, when
the process is performed in the pressure range of 100 mtorr to I torr. The
process will be performed in a parallel plate reactor having two electrodes, 8
in. in diameter and 3 in. apart. One electrode serves as a showerhead for
introduction of the gases in the system. What is the maximum range of mass
flow controllers to be used with this reactor? Explain.
2. The mass flow controller to be used with a plasma reactor requires a minimum
pressure difference of 10 psi between its ends for proper operation. The plasma
process performed at a pressure of 5 torr in the reactor has to use a precursor
that has a vapor pressure of 600 torr at room temperature. Describe an experi-
mental arrangement for supplying the precursor to the reactor at controlled flow
rate.
3. Another precursor has a vapor pressure of 50 torr at room temperature. De-
scribe the experimental arrangement for supplying this precursor at a controlled
flow rate. What is determining the flow rate?
4. One of the precursors for a plasma process has a very-low-vapor pressure at
room temperature. What experimental arrangement is required to supply a
controlled flow rate of this precursor to the reactor?
112 Plasma Reactors Chap. 4
4.10 REFERENCES
[1] Hollahan, J. R., and R. S. Rosier, In Thin Film Processes, eds. J. L. Vossen
and W. Kern, p. 335. New York: Academic Press, 1978.
[2] Vossen, J. L., and W. Kern, eds., Thin Fi/m Processes. New York: Academic
Press, 1978.
[3] Catherine, Y., In Plasma Processing, eds. G. S. Mathad, G. C. Schwartz, and
G. Smolinsky, p. 317. Pennington, NJ: Electrochemical Society, 1985.
[4] Hess, D. W., and D. B. Graves, In Microelectronics Processing, eds. Dennis
W. Hess and Klavs F. Jensen, p. 377. Washington, DC: American Chemical
Society, 1989.
[5] Mort, J., and F. Jansen, eds. Plasma Deposited Thin Films. Boca Raton, FL:
CRe Press, 1986.
[6] Yasuda, H. K., Plasma Polymerization. New York: Academic Press, 1985.
[7] U.S. Federal Communications Commission Rules and Regulations. Washing-
ton, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1964.
[8] Mayo, N., U. Carmi, I. Rosenthal, R. Avni, R. R. Manory, .and A. Grill, J.
Appl. Phys., 55: 4404 (1984).
[9] Grill, A., A. Raveh, and R. Avni, Surf. Coat. Techno/., 43/44: 745 (1990).
[10] Reinberg, A. R., U.S. Patent, 3, 757, 733 (1973).
Sec. 4.10 References 113
[11] Reinberg, A. R., In Proc. Electrochem. Soc. Meet., p. 30. San Francisco, May
12-75, 1975.
[12] Shennan, A., Thin Solid Films, 113: 135 (1984).
[13] Chapman, I. B., Glow Discharge Processes: Sputtering and Plasma Etching.
New York: J. Wiley & Sons, 1980.
[14] Flamm, D. L., Solid State Technol., 34(3): 47 (1991).
[15] Perry, A. J., D. Vender, and R. W. Boswell, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B9, 310
(1991).
[16] Marcuwitz, N., Waveguide Handbook. London: Peter Peregrinus, 1986.
[17] McTaggart, F. K., Plasma Chemistry in Electrical Discharges. Amsterdam:
Elsevier, 1967.
[18] Post, R. S., J. R. Conrad, and D. K. Smith, Res. Dev. Mag., 31(10), 106
( 1989).
[19] Lamontagne, B., A. M. Wrobel, G. Jalbert, and M. R. Wertheimer, J. Phys.
D., 20: 844 (1987).
[20] Wrobel, A. M., B. Lamontagne, and M. R. Wertheimer, Plasma Chern.
Plasma Process. 8: 315 (1988).
[21] Matsuo,S., and M. Kiuchi, J. Appl. Phys. 22: L210 (1983).
[22] Denison, D. R., M. S. Chang, and T. Ebata, Microelectron. Manufact. Test.
22 (July 1990).
[23] Burke R. R., and C. Pornot, Solid State Technol. 31(2): 67 (1988).
[24] Geisler, M., J. Kieser, E. Rauche, and R. Wilhelm,.l Vac. Sci. Technol. A8:
908 (1990).
[25] Engelhardt, M., Semicond. Int., 52 (July 1991).
[26] Laporte, P., Y. Melaku, and M. Goethals, Solid State Technol. 34(4): 69
(1991).
[27] Nguyen, S. V., G. Christman, D. Dobuzinsky, and D. Hannon, Solid State
Technol., 33(10): 73 (1990).
[28] Lucovsky,. G., D. V. Tsu, and R. J. Markunas, In Handbook of Plasma
Processing Technology, eds. Stephen M. Rossnagel, Jerome J. Cuomo, and
William D. Westwood, p. 387. Park Ridge, NJ: Noyes Publications, 1990.
[29] Bader, M. E., R. P. Hall, and G. Strasser, Solid State Technol. 33(5): 149
(1990).