Chemically active species in an Oxygen Inductively Coupled Plasma

POSTER

Abstract

Oxygen plasmas are used in a wide variety of applications including ion implantation and photoresist striping. Here we combine non{\-}invasive optical emission spectroscopy (OES) measurements and numerical simulations to investigate the plasma parameters in both oxygen inductively coupled plasmas (ICP) and oxygen-argon ICPs. An emission model makes use of available electron impact excitation cross sections for atomic and molecular oxygen to relate measured O and O$_{\mathrm{2}}^{\mathrm{+}}$ emission intensities to corresponding plasma parameters, including the electron temperature, electron density, and the dissociation fraction of the neutral oxygen. For plasma simulations we use the CRTRS, 2D/3D code that self{\-}consistently solves for ICP power deposition, electrostatic potential and plasma dynamics in the drift{\-}diffusion approximation (or full momentum equations). Comparison of the experimental OES measurements are used to check the validity of the plasma simulation which yields results that the OES approach has difficulty in measuring including the relative fluxes of O$^{\mathrm{+}}$ and O$_{\mathrm{2}}^{\mathrm{+}}$, which is important for ion implantation.

*The authors acknowledge support from NSF grant PHY-1068670, and from Dr. Shahid Rauf for developing CRTRS

Authors

  • Nathaniel Ly

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • John Boffard

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Chun Lin

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Amy Wendt

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Svetlana Radovanov

    • Applied Materials, Varian Semiconductor
  • Harold Persing

    • Applied Materials, Varian Semiconductor
  • Alexandre Likhanskii

    • Applied Materials, Varian Semiconductor