This invention relates to ion sources that are suitable for use in ion implanters and, more particularly, to ion sources having indirectly heated cathodes.
An ion source is a critical component of an ion implanter. The ion source generates an ion beam which passes through the beamline of the ion implanter and is delivered to a semiconductor wafer. The ion source is required to generate a stable, well-defined beam for a variety of different ion species and extraction voltages. In a semiconductor production facility, the ion implanter, including the ion source, is required to operate for extended periods without the need for maintenance or repair.
Ion implanters have conventionally used ion sources with directly heated cathodes, wherein a filament for emitting electrons is mounted in the arc chamber of the ion source and is exposed to the highly corrosive plasma in the arc chamber. Such directly heated cathodes typically constitute a relatively small diameter wire filament and therefore degrade or fail in the corrosive environment of the arc chamber in a relatively short time. As a result, the lifetime of the directly heated cathode ion source is limited. As used herein, source “lifetime” refers to the time before repair or replacement of the ion source.
Indirectly heated cathode ion sources have been developed in order to improve ion source lifetimes in ion implanters. An indirectly heated cathode includes a relatively massive cathode which is heated by electron bombardment from a filament and emits electrons themionically. The filament is isolated from the plasma in the arc chamber and thus has a long lifetime. Although the cathode is exposed to the corrosive environment of the arc chamber, its relatively massive structure insures operation over an extended period.
The cathode in the indirectly heated cathode ion source must be electrically isolated from its surroundings, electrically connected to a power supply and thermally isolated from its surroundings to inhibit cooling which would cause it to stop emitting electrons. Known prior art indirectly heated cathode designs utilize a cathode in the form of a disk supported at its outer periphery by a thin wall tube of approximately the same diameter as the disk. The tube has a thin wall in order to reduce its cross-sectional area and thereby reduce the conduction of heat away from the hot cathode. The thin tube typically has cutouts along its length to act as insulating breaks and to reduce the conduction of heat away from the cathode.
The tube used to support the cathode does not emit electrons, but has a large surface area, much of it at high temperature. This area loses heat by radiation, which is the primary way that the cathode loses heat. The large diameter of the tube increases the size and complexity of the structure used to clamp and connect to the cathode. One known cathode support includes three parts and requires threads to assemble.
Another indirectly heated cathode configuration is disclosed in International Publication No. WO 01/88946 published Nov. 22, 2001. A disk-shaped cathode is supported by a single rod at or near its center. A cathode insulator electrically and thermally isolates the cathode from an arc chamber housing. The disclosed cathode assembly provides highly satisfactory operation under a variety of operating conditions. However, in certain applications, deposits of contaminants on the insulator may cause a short circuit between the cathode and the arc chamber housing, thereby requiring repair or replacement of the ion source.
All of the known prior art indirectly heated cathode ion sources have had one or more disadvantages, including, but not limited to, short operating lifetimes and excessive complexity. Accordingly, there is a need for improved indirectly heated cathode ion sources.
According to a first aspect of the invention, a cathode assembly is provided for use in an indirectly heated cathode ion source. The cathode assembly comprises a cathode including an emitting portion, a support rod attached to the emitting portion and a skirt extending from a periphery of the emitting portion, the skirt and the emitting portion defining a cavity, a filament for heating the emitting portion of the cathode positioned within the cavity in proximity to the emitting portion of the cathode, and a clamp assembly for mounting the cathode and the filament in a fixed spatial relationship and for conducting electrical energy to the cathode and the filament.
In some embodiments, the emitting portion of cathode is disk-shaped and has a front surface and a rear surface. The support rod may be attached at or near the center of the rear surface of the emitting portion. The skirt may be cylindrical and may extend rearwardly from the periphery of the emitting portion. The skirt functions to shield the filament from the plasma in the arc chamber of the ion source, but is not used for mechanical mounting of the cathode or for conducting electrical energy to the cathode.
The clamp assembly may include a cathode clamp affixed to the support rod of the cathode, first and second filament clamps affixed to first and second connecting leads of the filament, and an insulator block. The cathode clamp and the first and second filament clamps are mounted in fixed positions to the insulator block.
According to another aspect of the invention, a cathode is provided for use in an indirectly heated ion source. The cathode comprises an emitting portion having a front surface, a rear surface and a periphery, a support rod attached to the rear surface of the emitting portion, and a skirt extending from the periphery of the emitting portion.
According to a further aspect of the invention, an indirectly heated cathode ion source is provided. The indirectly heated cathode ion source comprises an arc chamber housing defining an arc chamber, an indirectly heated cathode positioned within the arc chamber, and a filament for heating the indirectly heated cathode. The indirectly heated cathode comprises an emitting portion having a front surface, a rear surface and a periphery, a support rod attached to the rear surface of the emitting portion and a skirt extending from the periphery of the emitting portion.
According to another aspect of the invention, an indirectly heated cathode ion source is provided. The indirectly heated cathode ion source comprises an arc chamber housing defining an arc chamber, an indirectly heated cathode positioned within the arc chamber, a filament positioned outside the arc chamber for heating the indirectly heated cathode, and a shield positioned outside the arc chamber in proximity to the filament and the indirectly heated cathode.
The ion source may further comprise a vacuum vessel enclosing the arc chamber, the indirectly heated cathode, the filament and the shield. The filament and the indirectly heated cathode are located on one side of the shield and an adjacent portion of the vacuum vessel is located on an opposite side of the shield. In some embodiments, the arc chamber housing and the vacuum vessel are at a common potential and the shield is at filament potential. In other embodiments, the vacuum vessel is connected to a reference potential and the shield is electrically floating.
The ion source may further comprise a clamp assembly for mounting the cathode and the filament in a fixed spatial relationship and for conducting electrical energy to the cathode and the filament. The shield may be mounted to the clamp assembly. The clamp assembly may comprise first and second filament clamps affixed to first and second connecting leads respectively, of the filament. In some embodiments, the shield is mechanically and electrically connected to one of the filament clamps. In other embodiments, the shield is mechanically mounted by electrical insulators to one of the filament clamps.
According to a further aspect of the invention, an indirectly heated cathode ion source is provided. The indirectly heated cathode ion source comprises an arc chamber housing defining an arc chamber, an indirectly heated cathode positioned within the arc chamber, a filament positioned outside the arc chamber for heating the indirectly heated cathode, wherein the indirectly heated cathode provides electrons for generating a plasma within the arc chamber, and means for inhibiting escape of the electrons and the plasma from a region outside the arc chamber in proximity to the filament and the indirectly heated cathode.
According to a further aspect of the invention, a method for operating an ion source is provided. The method comprises providing an arc chamber housing that defines an arc chamber, positioning an indirectly heated cathode within the arc chamber, heating the indirectly heated cathode with a filament positioned outside the arc chamber to provide electrons for generating a plasma within the arc chamber, and inhibiting escape of the electrons and the plasma from a region outside the arc chamber in proximity to the filament and the indirectly heated cathode.
For a better understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein by reference and in which:
An indirectly heated cathode ion source in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is shown in
A gas to be ionized is provided from a gas source 32 to arc chamber 14 through a gas inlet 34. In another configuration, not shown, arc chamber 14 may be coupled to a vaporizer which vaporizes a material to be ionized in arc chamber 14.
An arc power supply 50 has a positive terminal connected to arc chamber housing 10 and a negative terminal connected to cathode 20. Repeller electrode 22 can be floating as shown in
A bias power supply 52 has a positive terminal connected to cathode 20 and a negative terminal connected to filament 30. The bias power supply 52 may have a rating of 600 volts at 4 amperes and may operate at a current of about 2.5 amperes and a voltage of about 350 volts. The bias power supply 52 accelerates electrons emitted by filament 30 to cathode 20 to produce heating of cathode 20.
A filament power supply 54 has output terminals connected to filament 30. Filament power supply 54 may have a rating of 6 volts at 200 amperes and may operate at a filament current of about 140 to 170 amperes. The filament power supply 54 produces heating of filament 30, which in turn generates electrons that are accelerated toward cathode 20 for heating of cathode 20.
A source magnet 60 produces a magnetic field B within arc chamber 14 in a direction indicated by arrow 62. Typically, source magnet 60 includes poles at opposite ends of arc chamber 14. The direction of the magnetic field B may be reversed without affecting operation of the ion source. Source magnet 60 is connected to a magnet power supply 64, which may have a rating of 20 volts at 60 amperes. The magnetic field produces increased interaction between electrons emitted by cathode 20 and the plasma in arc chamber 14.
It will be understood that the voltage and current ratings and the operating voltages and currents of power supplies 50, 52, 54 and 64 are given by way of example only and are not limiting as to the scope of the invention.
An extraction electrode 70 and a suppression electrode 72 are positioned in front of extraction aperture 12. Each of extraction electrode 70 and suppression electrode 72 have an aperture aligned with extraction aperture 12 for extraction of a well-defined ion beam 74. Extraction electrode 70 and suppression electrode 72 are connected to respective power supplies (not shown).
An ion source controller 100 provides control of the ion source through an isolation circuit 102. In other embodiments, circuitry for performing the isolation function may be built into power supplies 50, 52 and 54. The ion source controller 100 may be a programmed controller or a dedicated special purpose controller. In one embodiment, the ion source controller is incorporated into the main control computer of the ion implanter.
When the ion source is in operation, the filament 30 is heated resistively by filament current IF to thermionic emission temperatures, which may be on the order of 2200° C. Electrons emitted by filament 30 are accelerated by the bias voltage VB between filament 30 and cathode 20 and bombard and heat cathode 20. The cathode 20 is heated by electron bombardment to thermionic emission temperatures. Electrons emitted by cathode 20 are accelerated by arc voltage VA and ionize gas molecules from gas source 32 within arc chamber 14 to produce a plasma discharge. The electrons within arc chamber 14 are caused to follow spiral trajectories by magnetic field B. Repeller electrode 22 builds up a negative charge as a result of incident electrons and eventually has a sufficient negative charge to repel electrons back through arc chamber 14, producing additional ionizing collisions. The ion source of
An ion source in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is shown in
Referring to
As further shown in
As shown in
An embodiment of cathode 20 is shown in
Support rod 230 is used for mechanical mounting of cathode 20 and conducts electrical energy to cathode 20. Preferably, support rod 230 has a small diameter relative to emitting portion 220 to limit thermal conduction and radiation. In one embodiment, support rod 230 has a diameter of 0.125 inch and a length of 0.759 inch, and is attached to the center of rear surface 224 of emitting portion 220.
Skirt 232 functions to shield filament 30 from the plasma in arc chamber 14, but is not used for mechanical mounting of cathode 20 or for conducting electrical energy to cathode 20. In particular, skirt 232 does not physically contact the clamp assembly used for mounting cathode 20 in the arc chamber and does not physically contact arc chamber housing 10. In one embodiment, skirt 32 has a wall thickness of about 0.050 inch and has a axial length of about 0.560 inch.
Emitting portion 220 is relatively thick and functions as the main electron emitter for the ion source. In one embodiment, emitting portion 220 has a diameter of 0.855 inch and thickness of 0.200 inch. It will be understood that the above dimensions are given by way of example only and are not limiting to the scope of the invention.
An example of filament 30 is shown in
As best shown in
Referring again to
The ion source may further include a shield 400, as best shown in
The shield 400 may have a box-like structure and may be fabricated of a refractory metal. In the embodiment of
As noted above, shield 400 substantially encloses region 402 outside arc chamber 14 in proximity to cathode 20 and filament 30. Operation of the ion source involves generation of electrons by filament 30 and cathode 20, and formation of a plasma in arc chamber 14. Under ideal conditions, the electrons generated by filament 30 impact cathode 20, the electrons generated by cathode 20 remain within arc chamber 14, and, the plasma remains within arc chamber 14. However, in a practical ion source, the electrical potentials on various components, such as the vacuum vessel that encloses the ion source and components of the extraction system, may result in undesired electron emission, arcing and/or and plasma formation. Such undesired conditions may degrade the stability of the ion source and may reduce its lifetime. The space between cathode 20 and arc chamber housing 10 provides a path for escape of plasma from arc chamber 14. The shield 400 effectively isolates the vacuum vessel and the components of the extraction system from filament 30, cathode 20 and arc chamber 14.
A first embodiment of shield 400 and related ion source components is shown in
A second embodiment of shield 400 and related ion source components is shown in
Shield 400 may have any suitable size and shape and is not limited to a box-like structure. The shield 400 substantially may be fabricated of a refractory metal such as tantalum, tungsten, molybdenum or niobium, for example. Because of the severe environment within the ion source, shield 400 should be resistant to high temperatures and corrosive materials.
Shield 400 permits the elimination of an insulator between cathode 20 and arc chamber housing 10, which has been used to inhibit escape of plasma from arc chamber 14 while electrically isolating cathode 20 from arc chamber housing 10. The insulator in this location is subject to conductive deposits which can reduce the lifetime of the ion source.
The ion source may further include an insulator shield 460 between insulator block 310 and cathode 20 (see
The above description is intended to be illustrative and not exhaustive. The description will suggest many variations and alternatives to one of ordinary skill in this art. All these alternatives and variations are intended to be included within the scope of the attached claims. Those familiar with the art may recognize other equivalents to be specific embodiments described herein which equivalents are also intended to be encompassed by the claims attached hereto. Further, the particular features presented in the independent claims below can be combined with each other in other manners within the scope of the invention such that the invention should be recognized as also specifically directed to other embodiments having any other possible combination of the features of the dependent claims.
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