Conventional techniques for manufacturing electronic devices, may involve the formation and manipulation of thin layers of materials. One example of such manipulation is the transfer of a thin layer of material from a first (donor) substrate to a second (target) substrate. This may be accomplished by placing a face of the donor substrate against a face of the target substrate, and then cleaving the thin layer of material along a sub-surface cleave plane formed in the donor substrate.
The donor substrate may comprise valuable, high quality crystalline material that is expensive to produce. Thus, following such a layer transfer process, the donor substrate may be sought to be reclaimed for subsequent use in further layer transfer efforts. Accordingly, there is a need in the art for methods and apparatuses of processing a donor substrate to allow for its reclamation for subsequent layer transfer.
Embodiments relate to reclaiming a donor substrate that has previously supplied a thin film of material in a layer transfer process. Certain embodiments selectively perform annular grinding upon edge regions only of the donor substrate. This serves to remove residual material at the edge regions, with grind damage not impacting subsequent transfer of material from central regions of the donor substrate. Some embodiments accomplish reclamation by applying energy to the donor substrate after cleaving has occurred. The energy is calculated to interact with a cleave region (e.g., resulting from ion implantation) underlying the residual material, thereby allowing separation of that residual material at the cleave region. This reclamation approach can remove residual material in donor substrate central regions (e.g., resulting from a void), without requiring invasive grinding and post-grinding processing to remove grind damage. Embodiments may apply energy in the form of a laser beam absorbed at the cleave region.
Semiconducting materials find many uses, for example in the formation of logic devices, solar cells, and increasingly, illumination. One type of semiconductor device that can be used for illumination is the high-brightness light emitting diode (HB-LED). In contrast with traditional incandescent or even fluorescent lighting technology, HB-LED's offer significant advantages in terms of reduced power consumption and reliability.
An optoelectronic device such as a HB-LED may rely upon materials exhibiting semiconductor properties, including but not limited to type III/V materials such as gallium nitride (GaN) or Aluminum Nitride (AlN) that is available in various degrees of crystalline order. However, these materials are often difficult to manufacture.
Examples of possible approaches for fabricating a template suitable for high quality GaN growth, are described in U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/181,947 filed Jun. 19, 2015 (“the '947 provisional application”), and also the U.S. nonprovisional patent application Ser. No. 15/186,184 filed Jun. 17, 2016, both of which are incorporated by reference in its entirety herein for all purposes.
In this example, a donor substrate 102 comprises high-quality GaN material. A cleave region 104 is located at a sub-surface region of the donor substrate. This cleave region may be formed, for example, by the energetic implantation 105 of particles such as hydrogen ions, into one face of the GaN donor substrate.
Here, it is noted that the crystalline structure of the GaN donor substrate, results in it having two distinct faces: a Ga face 102a, and an N face 102b.
In a next step of the process of
The release layer may comprise a variety of materials capable of later separation under controlled conditions. As described in the '947 provisional application, candidate releasable materials can include those undergoing conversion from the solid phase to the liquid phase upon exposure to thermal energy within a selected range. Examples can include soldering systems, and systems for Thermal Lift Off (TLO).
In certain embodiments the release system may comprise silicon oxide. In particular embodiments this bond-and-release system can be formed by exposing the workpieces to oxidizing conditions. In some embodiments this bond-and-release system may be formed by the addition of oxide, e.g., as spin-on-glass (SOG), or other spin on material (e.g., XR-1541 hydrogen silsesquioxane electron beam spin-on resist available from Dow Corning), and/or SiO2 formed by Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) techniques.
In a next step of the process of
Following cleaving of the GaN,
The Ga face is exposed and available for growth of additional high quality GaN material under desired conditions. Additional GaN may be formed by Metallo-Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition (MO-CVD), for example. That additional thickness of GaN material (with or without the accompanying substrate and/or dielectric material) may ultimately be incorporated into a larger optoelectronic device structure (such as a HB-LED).
Returning to the third (cleaving) step shown in
However, before such re-use can properly take place, the GaN donor substrate may need to first be reclaimed so that it is suitable for the intended processing. In particular, the Ga face of the donor substrate may exhibit properties such as surface roughness, defects, and/or non-planarity resulting from the previous cleaving step, that render it unsuitable for immediate implantation and bonding.
A donor substrate reclamation procedure is shown generally as step 130 in
In particular,
Specifically
Accordingly, upon performance of the cleaving step shown in
The residual GaN material remains at a height corresponding to the depth of the original cleave region. This creates substantial non-planarity in the donor GaN substrate. Because implant penetration depth is dependent upon the thickness of material, this non-planarity renders the GaN donor substrate unsuited for immediate implant and reuse.
Moreover, it is the Ga face of the GaN donor substrate that exhibits non-planarity. This Ga face exhibits substantial hardness (e.g., ˜430 GPa), rendering it unsuited for removal except under relatively exacting conditions such as grinding.
Accordingly, the specific embodiment of a donor reclamation process shown in the remaining
Conventionally, extended and costly surface treatment processes (e.g., polishing) would be employed to remove the surface roughness and/or defects caused by the grinding.
However, in this donor reclamation embodiment, the ongoing presence of surface roughness/defects confined to edge portions of the donor substrate, is acceptable. This is because the subsequent donor reuse 240 involving ion implantation, bonding, and cleaving processes (e.g., in
It is noted that the process flow shown in
Moreover, this second embodiment shows that the existence of the void in the central portion also results in residual, non-transferred material 310 remaining in the central portion of the GaN donor following the cleaving.
Unlike residual material GaN material in the edge regions, residual GaN material in the central region is not amenable to removal by local grinding. This is due to the difficulty of precisely positioning a grinder (typically a bulky wheel) at the central substrate location.
Moreover, even if highly precise grinding of central donor substrate portions could be achieved, such grinding would give rise to defects extending to depths in the GaN material. As mentioned above, such defects arising from grinding are amenable to removal only via lengthy/costly post processing steps (e.g., polishing).
Accordingly,
This is followed in
The nature and/or magnitude of this applied energy may be the same as, or different from, the energy previously used to accomplish cleaving to release the thin layer of GaN material along the cleave region (e.g., as shown in
The particular embodiment shown in
However, it is noted that alternative embodiments may instead apply the energy 320 in a global (rather than local) manner. For example, energy could be applied globally to the surface of the GaN donor substrate (e.g., by scanned laser or heat lamp), in order to remove the residual GaN material.
Whatever its manner of application, the energy of
The resulting separation of the residual GaN portions is depicted in
However, unlike the extensive defects arising from the application of harsh grinding techniques, these surface roughness/features 322 do not extend deeply into the GaN donor substrate. Rather, as shown in
Thus, in the manner described, the application of energy to interact with a cleave region, followed by fine processing, may result in reclamation of a donor substrate without the necessity of resorting to harsh grinding conditions. This can substantially improve process throughput and reduce cost.
In an optional second step 404, image processing of the surface of the substrate is performed.
In a third step 406, energy is applied to the substrate in order to separate the residual material from the substrate at the cleave region. In a fourth step 408, the substrate is exposed to one or more fine processing techniques.
It is noted that the substrate reclamation embodiments described in
While the above description has focused upon the reclamation of a donor substrate comprising GaN material, this is not required. Alternative embodiments could feature donor substrates comprising other Group III/V materials, including but not limited to GaAs. According to certain embodiments a donor such as GaAs may further include a backing substrate such as sapphire.
While the above embodiments have described the reclamation of a donor substrate comprising GaN, this is not required. Alternative embodiments could employ annular grinding and/or energy application in order to remove other types of non-transferred materials. Examples of such non-transferred materials can include but are not limited to high hardness materials such as silicon, silicon carbide, aluminum nitride, sapphire, as well as other materials whose hardness conventionally requires harsh grinding techniques for removal, followed by prolonged polishing to remove damage inflicted by grinding.
And while the above embodiments have described the application of energy to reclaim a donor substrate in which a cleave region is already present (e.g., for layer transfer in central donor substrate portions), this is also not required. Certain embodiments could deliberately create a sub-surface cleave region (e.g., by ion implantation), followed by the application of energy at the cleave region, to prepare a substrate surface that would otherwise require grinding.
That is, implantation followed by energy application according to embodiments, could serve as a substitute for conventional harsh grinding techniques to prepare a high-hardness surface. Such an approach could improve throughput by avoiding not only the grinding step itself, but also extensive/prolonged post-grinding processing to remove grind damage.
Returning to
However, other embodiments are possible. For example some applications (e.g., power electronics) may call for growth of GaN material from the N face, rather than from the Ga face. Incorporated by reference herein for all purposes are the following articles: Xun Li et al., “Properties of GaN layers grown on N-face free-standing GaN substrates”, Journal of Crystal Growth 413, 81-85 (2015); A. R. A. Zauner et al., “Homo-epitaxial growth on the N-face of GaN single crystals: the influence of the misorientation on the surface morphology”, Journal of Crystal Growth 240, 14-21 (2002). Accordingly, template blank structures of some embodiments could feature a GaN layer having an N face that is exposed, rather than a Ga face. Alternatively, an N face donor assembly could be used to fabricate a Ga face final substrate when bonded to a final substrate instead of a releasable transfer substrate as in
While the above is a full description of the specific embodiments, various modifications, alternative constructions and equivalents may be used. Although the above has been described using a selected sequence of steps, any combination of any elements of steps described as well as others may be used. Additionally, certain steps may be combined and/or eliminated depending upon the embodiment. Furthermore, the particles of hydrogen can be replaced using co-implantation of helium and hydrogen ions or deuterium and hydrogen ions to allow for formation of the cleave region with a modified dose and/or cleaving properties according to alternative embodiments. Still further, the particles can be introduced by a diffusion process rather than an implantation process. Of course there can be other variations, modifications, and alternatives. Therefore, the above description and illustrations should not be taken as limiting the scope of the present invention which is defined by the appended claims.
The instant nonprovisional patent application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Appl. 62/367,911 filed Jul. 28, 2016 and incorporated by reference in its entirety herein for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62367911 | Jul 2016 | US |