Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
Spatial atomic layer deposition (SALD) is a variation of ALD in which precursors are continuously supplied at different locations and kept apart by an inert gas region. Film growth is achieved by exposing the substrate to the locations containing the different precursors. In this article, the fundamentals of SALD and its historical development are presented. A brief description of the different reactors developed to date is then given, followed by the description of specific fluid dynamics aspects and the engineering challenges associated with SALD. Finally, some applications of SALD are described.
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Read the articleAUTHOR
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David MUÑOZ-ROJAS: Research Fellow, CNRS - Materials and Physical Engineering Laboratory (LMGP), Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA)-CNRS, Grenoble, France
INTRODUCTION
Field: Thin film deposition techniques
Degree of technology diffusion: Growth
Technologies involved : Chemical Vapor Deposition
Applications: Energy and microelectronics materials, functional thin films, corrosion protection, surface and interface nano-engineering.
Main French players :
Centers of expertise: Materials and Physical Engineering Laboratory (Grenoble INP, CNRS),
Manufacturers: EnHelios Nanotech
Other players worldwide :
Beneq, Applied Materials, Jusung Engeenering, Solaytec, TNO, Kodak
Contact: [email protected]
In conventional Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD), precursors are sequentially exposed to the substrate via short injections, while being kept physically separated by intermediate purging steps. Spatial ALD (SALD) is a recently developed variation of ALD in which the precursors are continuously sent to different locations, separated by a region or zone containing an inert gas. Film growth is achieved by exposing the substrate to locations containing different precursors. It can also be carried out at ambient pressure, without the need for vacuum. As a result, ALD becomes faster, compatible with high-throughput techniques such as roll-to-roll (R2R), and much more versatile, easier and cheaper to develop on a large scale.
Since the first publications in 2004 and 2008 on the subject, the number of publications has continued to grow, reaching almost 70 articles in 2016. SALD has also made the transition from laboratory to industrial scale, and several commercial systems are already available for both laboratory and production scale.
Because precursors are continuously injected into the SALD, efficient separation by the gas/inert zone flow must be ensured. Analytical fluid dynamics studies and modeling are therefore commonly used when designing reactors and evaluating optimal deposition conditions.
The combination of ALD's unique strengths with much higher deposition rates and the possibility of air deposition, design flexibility and easy large-scale development should make SALD one of the leading thin-film deposition techniques.
This article provides an introduction to the principles and applications of SALD.
At the end of the article, readers will find a table of acronyms, notations and symbols used throughout the article.
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KEYWORDS
atomic layer deposition | spatial atomic layer deposition | high throughput processing | Surface and interface nanoengineering | thin film deposition
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Spatial Atomic Layer Deposition (SALD)
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Research laboratories
TNO – Innovation for life
Delft TU – Delft University of Technology
Astral – Lappeenranta University of Technology – Finland
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