The invention relates to a device and method according to the preambles of the independent claims.
The use of coating sources that form an evaporator bench is known from metal coating of sheet-like substrates. The coating sources often have an elongated shape and are then referred to as evaporator boats. The evaporating material, preferably aluminum, forms a vapor lobe with a characteristic intensity distribution or emission characteristic of the evaporated material over the individual evaporator boats. In typical devices for sheet coating, the sheet-like substrate is unwound from a feed roller and fed to a take-up roller and then moved in the area above the evaporator bench, so that the downward-facing side of the substrate is coated with metal evaporated in the evaporator boats.
A special device for continuous coating of sheet-like substrates is known from DE 40 27 034 C1 and EP 074,964 B1. According to them, a number of evaporator boats of roughly the same size and configuration arranged parallel and at roughly equal spacings to each other along the bench running direction, forming an evaporator bench, are provided. The evaporator boats are all formed from an electrically conducting ceramic and can be heated by direct-current passage. A device for continuous feed of wire to be evaporated to the evaporator boats is also provided. The individual evaporator boats lying parallel to each other or to the sheet-running direction of the evaporator bench are arranged offset with respect to one another, whereby all the evaporator boats together cover a narrow coating zone that extends across the running direction of the sheet.
It is known, among other things, from documents DE 40 27 034 C1 and EP 074,964 B1, that a non-uniform layer distribution on the sheet being coated is formed by overlapping of the vapor lobes. In the ideal case, this is a wave-like distribution with maxima and minima above or between the evaporator boats. The layer uniformity achievable in the best case is determined by the amplitude of the maxima and minima, the amplitude being dependent on the geometric arrangement and emission characteristics of the individual evaporator boats and on the interaction of the vapor lobes of the evaporator boats with one another. To improve layer-thickness uniformity in individual evaporator boats of the evaporator bench arranged parallel to on another, it is proposed in the documents cited to arrange the evaporator boats offset relative to one another, so that together they cover a narrow coating zone. However, a loss of efficiency during coating then occurs.
A coating device with several evaporator boats directly adjacent to each other is also known from EP 1,408,135 A1, the boats being arranged at an angle with respect to the running direction of the substrate. In order to achieve improved layer uniformity, several evaporation baths are seen in each boat, so that higher coating quality should be produced.
The present invention is based on the task of devising another and better possibility of achieving higher coating quality during coating of a sheet-like substrate by means of evaporator boats forming an evaporator bench.
The task mentioned is solved according to the invention by the features of the independent claims.
It is proposed according to the invention that the evaporator bench be formed by a set A and a set B of evaporator boats. During coating, the sheet-like substrate can be moved in a running direction X perpendicular to a direction Y. The set A of evaporator boats has a length LA in a range between L0−δA and L0+δA, whereas the evaporator boats of set B have a length LB and a range between L0−δB and L0+δB. The evaporator boats of set A and set B are arranged within a zone extending parallel to the Y direction with a width in the X direction of at most 2 L0+δA+δB.
The evaporator boats of set A are each arranged at an angle α in a range between −1° and −89° with respect to direction X, the angle being oriented clockwise. The evaporator boats of set B are each arranged at an angle β in a range between 1° and 89° with respect to direction X, the angle being oriented clockwise. The evaporator boats of set A and set B are arranged alternating next to each other and form a herringbone pattern. The evaporator boats of set A and set B therefore each have a deviation from parallelism to running direction X. The evaporator boats of set A are also rotated with respect to the evaporator boats of set B.
With these deliberate deviations from parallelism of the evaporator boats with respect to running direction X, as well as their mutual orientation, a higher layer uniformity can surprisingly be achieved than with evaporator boats that are arranged parallel to the running direction X and parallel to one an other. Simulation calculations were performed to understand these results. It was assumed in the simulation calculations that the vapor lobe of an individual evaporator boat has a Gaussian or cosn intensity distribution across the longitudinal axis of an evaporator boat. This type of intensity distribution was described, for example, in the article by Susaki and Ikarashi (AIMCAL Fall Technical Conference, Reno, Oct. 22, 2007, Vacuum Webcoating Sessions, Session 2 B, FIG. 8).
In a Gaussian or cosn intensity distribution, the vapor lobes have arms. With a number of evaporator boats, interaction of the vapor lobes is assumed, to the extent that the intensity distribution becomes narrower and sharper, the more the vapor lobes interact with one another. In an arrangement of boats parallel to the sheet-running direction, the arms of the vapor lobes point toward the center of greatest intensity of the next boat of subset A or B. This should lead to a concentration of the distribution. During rotation of the evaporator boats according to the invention, one arm points outward, whereas the other arm points between the density centers of the adjacent boats. In both cases, lower interaction of the vapor lobes is expected. Based on simulation calculations, it is suspected that the reduction in layer-thickness fluctuation is due to the fact that the variation of intensity distribution of the overlapping vapor lobes of the evaporator boats arranged in the evaporator bench becomes lower, since the intensity distribution of the individual boats has become wider overall.
The preferred values of angles α and β depend on the geometric arrangement of the evaporator boats, as well as the shape of the vapor lobe, i.e., the characteristic intensity distribution over the evaporator boats.
In a particularly simple variant, the angles of all evaporator boats of sets A and/or B are equally large.
In modifications of the invention, angle α lies in a range between −5 and 15° and/or angle β lies in a range between 5° and 15°.
It has also been found that it is advantageous if the sum of angles α and β equals 0°.
Design advantages are gained if the evaporator boats of set A have length L0 and/or the evaporator boats of set B have length L0.
In another variant of the invention, the evaporator boats of set A are arranged in a strip SA and/or the evaporator boats of set B are arranged in a strip SB, strips SA and SB having an overlapping zone Z. The evaporator boats of set A and/or set B are therefore geometrically combined, so that the choice of appropriate values for angles α and β is facilitated. Strips SA and SB could each have constant widths BA and BB. Strips SA and SB can favorably have the same width. It is particularly favorable, if strips SA and SB are each arranged parallel to direction Y, i.e., perpendicular to running direction X.
The [width of the] overlapping zone Z can be smaller than or equal to the width of the narrowest of these strips SA and SB.
In a preferred variant, all evaporator boats have length L0, the angle of the evaporator boats of set A equals α, the angle of the evaporator boats of set B equals β, and strips SA and SB have the same constant width B. Strips SA and SB can be also be arranged parallel to the Y direction. In this case, geometric points of the same type of the evaporator boats of set A each lie on a straight line parallel to direction Y, whereas the geometric points of the same type of evaporator boats of set B are arranged on a straight line shifted parallel to this line. Geometric points of the same type include corner points or center points of the evaporator boats. An overlapping zone Z with width BZ and a range between 0.1 B and 0.95 B is preferred, with particular preference between 0.6 B and 0.8 B. A further reduction in layer-thickness fluctuation can be achieved thereby.
The evaporator boats of set A and/or set B preferably have the same spacing from one another, with respect to the geometric points of the same type of evaporator boats. It is understood that different spacings can also be provided.
Optimal values can be chosen according to the invention for angles α and β, so that the value of layer-thickness fluctuation (Dmax−Dmin):(Dmax+Dmin) is minimal.
The task is also solved by a method for laying out a device for coating a sheet-like substrate, in which the substrate can be moved during coating in a running direction X perpendicular to a direction Y, with a number of evaporator boats that form an evaporator bench, the number of evaporator boats being formed by a set A and a set B of evaporator boats, the evaporator boats of set A having a length LA in a range between L0−δA and L0+δA, the evaporator boats of set B having a length LB in a range between L0−δB and L0+δB, and the number of evaporator boats within an area extending parallel to direction Y with a width of, at most, 2 L0+δA+δB being arranged in the X direction. It is then proposed that the evaporator boats of set A and set B be arranged alternating next to each other and the evaporator boats of set A be each arranged at an angle β in a range between −1° and −89° with respect to direction X and the evaporator boats of set B be each arranged at angle β between 1° and 89° with respect to direction X.
Additional advantageous variants of the invention can also be seen independently from their summary in the claims and the following drawings, as well as the corresponding description.
In the drawings:
A schematic side view of the vacuum chamber 1 with a coating installation 2 is shown in
The evaporator boats 9, 10 preferably have a rectangular shape, preferably consist of temperature-resistant ceramic, and can have a recess, referred to as a cavity, on their surface. Evaporator boats without a cavity are also known. The surface can also additionally have fluting or other structures. Aluminum, in particular, is considered as the material of the wires being evaporated.
Rectangular evaporator boats 9, 9′ and 10, 10′ are shown in a top view in
Whereas only four evaporator boats are shown in the depiction of
The length of the evaporator boats can also be different.
According to the invention, the evaporator boats form a set A and a set B, the elements of set A having a length LA in a range between L0−δA and L0+δA and the elements of set P [should be: B] having a length LB in the range between L0−δB and L0+δB. The boats of set A have an angle α between −1° and −89° with respect to the Y direction, the evaporator boats of set B an angle β in a range between 1° and 89°. The evaporator boats of sets A and B are arranged in an area with a maximum width of 2 L0+δA+δB.
The arrangement of the evaporator boats according to the invention in a herringbone pattern permits a reduction in the layer-thickness fluctuation (Dmax−Dmin):(Dmax+Dmin) with respect to known arrangements of the evaporator boats, whereby Dmax denotes the maximum and Dmin the minimum layer thickness of a coated substrate.
The resulting layer-thickness fluctuations were calculated in simulation calculations for the arrangements in evaporator boats corresponding to
As shown in
The invention relates to a device and method according to the preambles of the independent claims.
The use of coating sources that form an evaporator bench is known from metal coating of sheet-like substrates. The coating sources often have an elongated shape and are then referred to as evaporator boats. The evaporating material, preferably aluminum, forms a vapor lobe with a characteristic intensity distribution or emission characteristic of the evaporated material over the individual evaporator boats. In typical devices for sheet coating, the sheet-like substrate is unwound from a feed roller and fed to a take-up roller and then moved in the area above the evaporator bench, so that the downward-facing side of the substrate is coated with metal evaporated in the evaporator boats.
A special device for continuous coating of sheet-like substrates is known from DE 40 27 034 C1 and EP 074,964 B1. According to them, a number of evaporator boats of roughly the same size and configuration arranged parallel and at roughly equal spacings to each other along the bench running direction, forming an evaporator bench, are provided. The evaporator boats are all formed from an electrically conducting ceramic and can be heated by direct-current passage. A device for continuous feed of wire to be evaporated to the evaporator boats is also provided. The individual evaporator boats lying parallel to each other or to the sheet-running direction of the evaporator bench are arranged offset with respect to one another, whereby all the evaporator boats together cover a narrow coating zone that extends across the running direction of the sheet.
It is known, among other things, from documents DE 40 27 034 C1 and EP 074,964 B1, that a non-uniform layer distribution on the sheet being coated is formed by overlapping of the vapor lobes. In the ideal case, this is a wave-like distribution with maxima and minima above or between the evaporator boats. The layer uniformity achievable in the best case is determined by the amplitude of the maxima and minima, the amplitude being dependent on the geometric arrangement and emission characteristics of the individual evaporator boats and on the interaction of the vapor lobes of the evaporator boats with one another. To improve layer-thickness uniformity in individual evaporator boats of the evaporator bench arranged parallel to on another, it is proposed in the documents cited to arrange the evaporator boats offset relative to one another, so that together they cover a narrow coating zone. However, a loss of efficiency during coating then occurs.
A coating device with several evaporator boats directly adjacent to each other is also known from EP 1,408,135 A1, the boats being arranged at an angle with respect to the running direction of the substrate. In order to achieve improved layer uniformity, several evaporation baths are seen in each boat, so that higher coating quality should be produced.
The present invention is based on the task of devising another and better possibility of achieving higher coating quality during coating of a sheet-like substrate by means of evaporator boats forming an evaporator bench.
The task mentioned is solved according to the invention by the features of the independent claims.
It is proposed according to the invention that the evaporator bench be formed by a set A and a set B of evaporator boats. During coating, the sheet-like substrate can be moved in a running direction X perpendicular to a direction Y. The set A of evaporator boats has a length LA in a range between L0−δA and L0+δA, whereas the evaporator boats of set B have a length LB and a range between L0−δB and L0+δB. The evaporator boats of set A and set B are arranged within a zone extending parallel to the Y direction with a width in the X direction of at most 2 L0+δA+δB.
The evaporator boats of set A are each arranged at an angle α in a range between −1° and −89° with respect to direction X, the angle being oriented clockwise. The evaporator boats of set B are each arranged at an angle β in a range between 1° and 89° with respect to direction X, the angle being oriented clockwise. The evaporator boats of set A and set B are arranged alternating next to each other and form a herringbone pattern. The evaporator boats of set A and set B therefore each have a deviation from parallelism to running direction X. The evaporator boats of set A are also rotated with respect to the evaporator boats of set B.
With these deliberate deviations from parallelism of the evaporator boats with respect to running direction X, as well as their mutual orientation, a higher layer uniformity can surprisingly be achieved than with evaporator boats that are arranged parallel to the running direction X and parallel to one an other. Simulation calculations were performed to understand these results. It was assumed in the simulation calculations that the vapor lobe of an individual evaporator boat has a Gaussian or cosn intensity distribution across the longitudinal axis of an evaporator boat. This type of intensity distribution was described, for example, in the article by Susaki and Ikarashi (AIMCAL Fall Technical Conference, Reno, Oct. 22, 2007, Vacuum Webcoating Sessions, Session 2 B, FIG. 8).
In a Gaussian or cosn intensity distribution, the vapor lobes have arms. With a number of evaporator boats, interaction of the vapor lobes is assumed, to the extent that the intensity distribution becomes narrower and sharper, the more the vapor lobes interact with one another. In an arrangement of boats parallel to the sheet-running direction, the arms of the vapor lobes point toward the center of greatest intensity of the next boat of subset A or B. This should lead to a concentration of the distribution. During rotation of the evaporator boats according to the invention, one arm points outward, whereas the other arm points between the density centers of the adjacent boats. In both cases, lower interaction of the vapor lobes is expected. Based on simulation calculations, it is suspected that the reduction in layer-thickness fluctuation is due to the fact that the variation of intensity distribution of the overlapping vapor lobes of the evaporator boats arranged in the evaporator bench becomes lower, since the intensity distribution of the individual boats has become wider overall.
The preferred values of angles α and β depend on the geometric arrangement of the evaporator boats, as well as the shape of the vapor lobe, i.e., the characteristic intensity distribution over the evaporator boats.
In a particularly simple variant, the angles of all evaporator boats of sets A and/or B are equally large.
In modifications of the invention, angle α lies in a range between −5 and 15° and/or angle β lies in a range between 5° and 15°.
It has also been found that it is advantageous if the sum of angles α and β equals 0°.
Design advantages are gained if the evaporator boats of set A have length L0 and/or the evaporator boats of set B have length L0.
In another variant of the invention, the evaporator boats of set A are arranged in a strip SA and/or the evaporator boats of set B are arranged in a strip SB, strips SA and SB having an overlapping zone Z. The evaporator boats of set A and/or set B are therefore geometrically combined, so that the choice of appropriate values for angles α and β is facilitated. Strips SA and SB could each have constant widths BA and BB. Strips SA and SB can favorably have the same width. It is particularly favorable, if strips SA and SB are each arranged parallel to direction Y, i.e., perpendicular to running direction X.
The [width of the] overlapping zone Z can be smaller than or equal to the width of the narrowest of these strips SA and SB.
In a preferred variant, all evaporator boats have length L0, the angle of the evaporator boats of set A equals β, the angle of the evaporator boats of set B equals β, and strips SA and SB have the same constant width B. Strips SA and SB can be also be arranged parallel to the Y direction. In this case, geometric points of the same type of the evaporator boats of set A each lie on a straight line parallel to direction Y, whereas the geometric points of the same type of evaporator boats of set B are arranged on a straight line shifted parallel to this line. Geometric points of the same type include corner points or center points of the evaporator boats. An overlapping zone Z with width BZ and a range between 0.1 B and 0.95 B is preferred, with particular preference between 0.6 B and 0.8 B. A further reduction in layer-thickness fluctuation can be achieved thereby.
The evaporator boats of set A and/or set B preferably have the same spacing from one another, with respect to the geometric points of the same type of evaporator boats. It is understood that different spacings can also be provided.
Optimal values can be chosen according to the invention for angles α and β, so that the value of layer-thickness fluctuation (Dmax−Dmin):(Dmax+Dmin) is minimal.
The task is also solved by a method for laying out a device for coating a sheet-like substrate, in which the substrate can be moved during coating in a running direction X perpendicular to a direction Y, with a number of evaporator boats that form an evaporator bench, the number of evaporator boats being formed by a set A and a set B of evaporator boats, the evaporator boats of set A having a length LA in a range between L0−δA and L0+δA, the evaporator boats of set B having a length LB in a range between L0−δB and L0+δB, and the number of evaporator boats within an area extending parallel to direction Y with a width of, at most, 2 L0+δA+δB being arranged in the X direction. It is then proposed that the evaporator boats of set A and set B be arranged alternating next to each other and the evaporator boats of set A be each arranged at an angle β in a range between −1° and −89° with respect to direction X and the evaporator boats of set B be each arranged at angle β between 1° and 89° with respect to direction X.
Additional advantageous variants of the invention can also be seen independently from their summary in the claims and the following drawings, as well as the corresponding description.
In the drawings:
A schematic side view of the vacuum chamber 1 with a coating installation 2 is shown in
The evaporator boats 9, 10 preferably have a rectangular shape, preferably consist of temperature-resistant ceramic, and can have a recess, referred to as a cavity, on their surface. Evaporator boats without a cavity are also known. The surface can also additionally have fluting or other structures. Aluminum, in particular, is considered as the material of the wires being evaporated.
Rectangular evaporator boats 9, 9′ and 10, 10′ are shown in a top view in
Whereas only four evaporator boats are shown in the depiction of
The length of the evaporator boats can also be different.
According to the invention, the evaporator boats form a set A and a set B, the elements of set A having a length LA in a range between L0−δA and L0+δA and the elements of set β [should be: B] having a length LB in the range between L0−δB and L0+δB. The boats of set A have an angle α between −1° and −89° with respect to the Y direction, the evaporator boats of set B an angle β in a range between 1° and 89°. The evaporator boats of sets A and B are arranged in an area with a maximum width of 2 L0+δA+δB.
The arrangement of the evaporator boats according to the invention in a herringbone pattern permits a reduction in the layer-thickness fluctuation (Dmax−Dmin):(Dmax+Dmin) with respect to known arrangements of the evaporator boats, whereby Dmax denotes the maximum and Dmin the minimum layer thickness of a coated substrate.
The resulting layer-thickness fluctuations were calculated in simulation calculations for the arrangements in evaporator boats corresponding to
As shown in
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60872757 | Dec 2006 | US |