[labnetwork] Oxford ICP helium backside cooling performance

Aebersold,Julia W. julia.aebersold at louisville.edu
Mon Feb 19 10:46:58 EST 2018


We emphasize a very clean backside before processing is performed.  Also, if processing has been performed prior to etching on the wafer then it can incur deformational stress that just makes it hard to sit on the chuck without an elevated leak up rate.

We also change the chuck o-rings when the rate starts to climb and perform O2 chamber cleans on a regular basis.

Cheers!

Julia Aebersold
Manager, Micro/Nano Technology Center
University of Louisville
Shumaker Research Building, Room 233
2210 South Brook Street
Louisville, KY  40292
(502) 852-1572

http://louisville.edu/micronano/

From: labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu [mailto:labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu] On Behalf Of Luciani, Vincent (Fed)
Sent: Friday, February 16, 2018 3:49 PM
To: labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu
Subject: [labnetwork] Oxford ICP helium backside cooling performance

Hello All,

We have 2 Oxford Plasmalab 100 ICP etch tools that are heavily used.  100 mm wafers are the most popular.  I am sure I discussed with many of you the trials and tribulations about these tools.  My question is about a yur experiences and lessons learned with regard to keeping the helium leak rate from underneath the wafer under control.  I am trying to get a general idea of what is typical and how we are doing compared to that.  We have several users that utilize the cryonic etching capability of our tools so the helium cooling is very important.  For those using the tool at -100 C, we find that 8 sccm is too high and users request repair.  We generally try to keep the leak rate < 5 sccm at all time but find this difficult to do with the variety of substrates and etch recipes.  We made some progress by ordering  specially made quartz discs with a cutout for the wafer flat for better wafer positioning.  I am happy to share the dwg if anyone would like it.

What is your experience?  What leak rate do you find tolerable and at what leak rate do you shut the tool down.  Any tricks you can share?


Thanks,
Vince


Vincent K. Luciani
NanoFab Manager
Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.cnst.nist.gov_&d=DwMFAg&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=l9C3cuOkWyGd6C0ye_FDTBHMFl4lPXPJztVHQPL_Bao&m=mdoZzuh-iVfW2dkEtxoD3tB5i278Se94ZmSWmOELTeI&s=EaRs0ZZXBmYM6V4o-hRirTnx1nBy5yHN8foZcdY62h4&e=>
National Institute of Standards and Technology
100 Bureau Drive, MS 6201
Gaithersburg, MD 20899-6200 USA
+1-301-975-2886





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