The present invention relates to a method for producing a field-emitter structure having controlled apex sharpness.
In the following specification of the present invention, the pertinent prior art comprises the following documentation:
Henry F. Gray, Richard F. Greene, Method of manufacturing a field-emission cathode structure, U.S. Pat. No. 4,307,507 issued Dec. 29, 1981.
H. Umimoto, S. Odanaka, and I. Nakao, Numerical Simulation of Stress-Dependent Oxide Growth at Convex and Concave Corners of Trench Structures, IEEE Electron Device Letters, Vol. 10, No. 7, July 1989, pp. 330
M. Sokolich, E. A. Adler, R. T. Longo, D. M. Goebel, R. T. Benton, Field emission from submicron emitter arrays, International Electron Device Meeting, 1990. IEDM '90. Technical Digest, IEDM90-159.
Henry F. Gray, George J. Campisi, Process for fabricating self-aligned field-emitter arrays, U.S. Pat. No. 4,964,946 issued Oct. 23, 1990.
Steven M. Zimmerman, Structures and processes for fabricating field emission cathodes, U.S. Pat. No. 5,141,459 issued Aug. 25, 1992.
Robert B. Marcus and Tirunelvell S. Ravi, Method for making tapered microminiature silicon structures, U.S. Pat. No. 5,201,992 issued Apr. 13, 1993.
Shinya Akamine, Casting sharpened microminiature tips, U.S. Pat. No. 5,580,827 issued Dec. 3, 1996
Byeong Kwon Ju, Myung Hwan Oh, Micro-tip for emitting electric field and method for fabricating the same, U.S. Pat. No. 5,827,752 issued Oct. 27, 1998.
Takayuki Yagi, Tsutomu Ikeda, Zasuhiro Shimada, Female mold substrate having a heat flowable layer, method to make the same, and method to make a microprobe tip using the female substrate, U.S. Pat. No. 6,227,519 B1 issued May 8, 2001.
Egbert Österschulze, Rainer Kassing, Georgi Georgiev, Verfahren zur Herstellung einer schmale Schneide oder Spitze aufweisenden Struktur and mit einer solchen Struktur versehener Biegebalken, DE 102 36 149 A1 issued Feb. 26, 2004.
W. P. Dyke and J. K. Trolan, Field emission: large current densities, space charge, and the vacuum arc, Phys. Rev. 89, 799-808 (1953).
M. Dehler, A. E. Candel, E. Gjonaj, Full scale simulation of a field-emitter arrays based electron source for free electron lasers, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B24 (2), pp. 892-897 (2006).
In this specification, a method to precisely control the shape of the mold holes is described for the purpose of producing field-emitter arrays with uniform apex sharpness and blunted side ridges. The field-emitter arrays are produced by the deposition of the electron emitter material onto the mold substrates and subsequent removal of the mold substrates. The sharpness of the emitter apex and the side ridges of the emitters are controlled by precisely shaping the mold holes by the crystal orientation dependent etching of single-crystal substrates in combination with the topography-dependence of the oxidation rate.
1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to new methods of controlling the shape of the mold used for manufacturing high-current emitting field-emitter array structures.
One prior art method is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,307,507 issued Dec. 29, 1981 to Gray et al. This patent describes a method of manufacturing field-emitter array structures by using pyramidal-shaped mold holes, formed by lithography and crystal-orientation dependent etching on a single-crystal semiconductor wafer, with an optional passivation layer, such as a thermal SiO2 layer, a Si3N4 layer, or a metal layer, typically 30 Angstrom thick. The field-emitter array structures are formed by the deposition of the electron emitter material onto the mold wafer and the subsequent removal of the mold wafer. In this way, pyramidal-shaped electron emitter arrays with sharp emitter apex are obtained. However, in this method, the sharpness of the emitter apex fabricated by a mold without a passivation layer, or by a mold with an insufficiently thick passivation layer, is often degraded during the wafer removing process. When a sufficiently thick thermal SiO2 layer is used on a Si wafer as described by a prior art in U.S. Pat. No. 5,580,827 issued Dec. 3, 1996 to Akamine, the fast oxidation rate of the side facets of the pyramidal-shaped mold compared to the slow oxidation rate of recessed areas due to the stress dependent reduction of the oxygen diffusion rate (H. Umimoto, S. Odanaka, and I. Nakao, Numerical Simulation of Stress-Dependent Oxide Growth at Convex and Concave Corners of Trench Structures, IEEE Electron Device Letters, Vol. 10, No. 7, July 1989, pp. 330) results in several undesirable consequences such as;
The importance of the optimal apex diameter for the high current can be illustrated by a following numerical example: as reported by Dyke and Trolan (W. P. Dyke and J. K. Trolan, Field emission: large current densities, space charge, and the vacuum arc, Phys. Rev. 89, 799-808 (1953)), the stable field-emission current is obtained when the current density is kept at most around ˜107 A/cm2 with the corresponding emitter apex field in the order of 50-100 MV/cm. Accordingly, when the apex diameter is 1 nm, the total emission current per emitter is at most ˜300 nA. However, when the apex diameter is 100 nm, the total emission current per emitter is ˜3 mA. When the apex diameter is somewhere in between the two values and ˜0.2 mA/tip is realized, a field-emitter array device with 40,000 tips in 0.5 mm diameter (or array with 5 micrometer pitch) can emit total current below 10 A with the total thermal emittance below 0.1 mm mrad. Recent numerical calculation by M. Dehler et al. (M. Dehler, A. E. Candel, E. Gjonaj, Full scale simulation of a field-emitter arrays based electron source for free electron lasers, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B24 (2), pp. 892-897 (2006)) has demonstrated that an electron gun using a field-emitter cathode equipped with an extraction gate and a focusing gate can indeed produce such a high quality electron beam that is applicable to construct a compact free-electron laser for sub-nanometer emission wavelength.
2. Description of the Related Art
Zimmerman (U.S. Pat. No. 5,141,459) disclosed a method to fabricate a field-emitter structure with non-sharp tip apex diameter by incompletely filling the mold holes with the sacrificial material. However, with this method, achieving uniform apex diameter is not an easy task.
Marcus et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,201,992) disclosed a method to manufacture a field-emitter structure made of silicon having a flat top as an intermediate step to manufacture ultra-sharp tips with apex diameter of a few nanometers. As such, the uniformity of the flat-topped emitter apex is an issue here. They disclosed a method to control the apex diameter larger than a few nanometers by first repeatedly applying oxidation to the flat-topped structure to form emitter structures having uniform but sharp apex diameters less than a few nanometers, and then applying further oxidation processing to thus formed emitter structures with sharp apex to increase the apex diameter above 2.5 nm.
B. K. Ju et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,827,752) disclosed a method to form mold holes with large apex diameters in a silicon substrate by first manufacturing pyramidal shaped holes by the crystal-orientation-dependent etching of a silicon (100) substrate, then oxidizing the substrate, and finally removing the silicon dioxide.
Yagi et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 6,227,519 B1) disclosed a method to control the tip-shape based on the molding method by applying a heat flowable material in the mold holes.
Österschulze et al. (DE 102 36 149 A1) disclosed a method to form mold recesses to manufacture tips with 100 nm and below by utilizing a selective etching of a thin film deposited on a pre-recessed semiconductor substrate.
Accordingly, it is therefore an object of the present invention to fabricate uniform field-emitter array structures with controlled apex sharpness and controlled sharpness of the side ridges of the pyramidal-shaped field-emitters.
The object of the present invention is achieved by modifying the shape of the mold produced using a single-crystal semiconductor wafer by lithography and crystal-orientation dependent etching, whilst maintaining the thickness of a passivation layer on the mold to protect the electron emitting material during the substrate removal process. The field emission cathode structure is formed in the thus modified mold by coating the inside with electron emitting material, followed by removal of the mold substrate.
In particular, a method according to the present invention is presented in more detail.
The method provides a way of manufacturing a field-emitter structure with apex of desired sharpness with diameter between 1 and 100 nm and blunted side riges; comprising the steps of:
a) providing a substrate wafer (101) of a single-crystal material having a number of pyramidal shaped holes (110);
b) oxidizing the substrate wafer with the holes by thermal oxidation of the substrate wafer at least in the region of said holes in order to form an oxidized layer (103) on the surface of the regions of the substrate wafer;
c) removing the oxidized layer (103) from the substrate wafer (102) to form a pre-treated substrate wafer (104);
d) oxidizing the substrate wafer (104) with the holes by thermal oxidation of the substrate wafer at least in the region of said holes (112) in order to form an oxidized layer (106) on the surface of the regions of the substrate wafer;
e) coating the pre-treated substrate wafer with an electron emitting material to form the field-emitter structure;
f) removing the substrate wafer by chemical etching in order to excavate the field-emitter structure (
Further additional features can be taken from the remaining dependent claims.
Preferred examples of the present invention are described hereinafter with reference to the following drawings, which depict the following.
The invention can be best described with reference to
The starting point of the invented process is a wafer substrate 101 (see
In the next step, a thermal oxidation process is applied to the wafer substrate 101, which forms a superficial oxide layer 103 (see
Following the thermal oxidation to form the oxide layer 103, the oxide film 103 is selectively removed and the mold wafer 104 having smooth, concave junctions at the bottom of the modified holes 112 and at the side ridges is formed (see
In the next step, thermal oxidation is again applied to the so-modified wafer 104, which forms another oxide layer 106 on top of the resulting wafer 105 (see
The field-emitter array cathode is subsequently obtained by coating the mold with electron emitting layer, which is extended to sufficient thickness to sustain the resultant field-emitter array, and then by removing the resulting wafer substrate 105 and the oxide film 106 by chemical etching. The apex diameter of individual emitters is now typically in the range of tens of nanometers (see
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 011 691.6 | Jun 2008 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/056595 | 5/29/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/27/2010 |