This application claims the benefit of German Patent Application No. 10 2021 120 332, filed 4 Aug. 2021, the contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The disclosure relates to a multiple sputtering target for magnetron arrangements having tubular magnetrons, for coating stationary substrates or substrates which are transported along or on a circular path through a vacuum chamber.
Tubular magnetrons, in which a spatially fixed magnet bar is located, are generally known, the magnetrons being rotatably mounted in a magnetron end block on one side or additionally in a counterbearing, and the magnetron end block providing a rotary drive for the tubular magnetron and, on the other hand, the necessary cooling water and the energy supply for the magnetron.
DE 10 2008 048 785 A1 discloses such a magnetron arrangement having a rotatable tubular magnetron. The end block contains, on the one hand, a rotary drive for the tubular target and, on the other hand, the necessary energy supply for igniting and maintaining a plasma between the tubular magnetron and the substrate to be coated. The tubular target consists of a carrier tube and an externally applied target material.
With such a magnetron arrangement, large-area substrates which are moved past the magnetron can be coated in a vacuum chamber. A particular disadvantage is the fact that only one material can be sputtered during each pass and that, for sputtering other materials, after air has been admitted to the vacuum chamber, a different tubular target must be mounted and the vacuum chamber must be evacuated again.
A further tubular magnetron with an internal magnet system is also disclosed in WO 2003/081 634 A2. The tubular magnetron consists principally of a target carrier in the form of a tube and an outer target, consisting of a multiplicity of planar target plates which rest tangentially on the tubular target carrier, resulting in a gap-free polygonal target surface.
In order to achieve an improvement in this respect, that is to say in order to be able to sputter different materials in succession, commercially available “target turrets” have become available in which a plurality of complete magnetrons offset at an angle are installed about a central axis, which magnetrons require a relatively large installation space as a result of the generation of the necessary magnetic field, of the anodes, of the necessary cooling, and of the current connections, and are quite expensive as a result of their complex construction.
In order to be able to carry out a sputtering operation, the “target turret” must be rotated in fixed angular steps as a function of the number of magnetrons installed until the desired magnetron is located opposite the substrate to be coated, thus enabling a sputter plasma to be ignited between the magnetron and the substrate. The advantage of such a “target turret” can be regarded as the fact that different materials can be sputtered in the same device.
It is an object of the present disclosure to provide a multiple sputtering target with which substrates transported along or on a circular path through a vacuum chamber can be coated successively with a selectable multiplicity of materials by magnetron sputtering with little effort.
This is achieved with a multiple sputtering target for magnetron arrangements having tubular magnetrons. The tubular magnetron is mounted in an end block or some other drive unit. A magnet bar is located in the tubular magnetron. At least one polygonal carrier tube having an angular cross section is provided. The polygonal carrier tube has a plurality of longitudinally extending outer surfaces for receiving targets. A free space is located in the at least one polygonal carrier tube. The free space extends longitudinally through the polygonal carrier tube. In the polygonal carrier tube a magnet bar for forming plasma clouds outside the polygonal carrier tube is located in a working position in front of a target which can be selected by rotating the polygonal carrier tube. The moving or stationary substrate is located at a predetermined distance in front of the plasma clouds.
A target of identical or preferably different materials is located on each of the outer surfaces of the carrier tube. The latter allows successive sputtering of different materials onto the same substrate, or onto the same substrates of a batch, without interruption of the vacuum.
The targets are preferably mechanically fastened on the outer surfaces by bonding or in some other way.
In a further embodiment, the polygonal carrier tube has a triangular, quadrangular, pentagonal, hexagonal, heptagonal or octagonal cross section, thus enabling a corresponding number of targets to be accommodated on the polygonal carrier tube.
Finally, the polygonal carrier tube can be rotated in angular steps in such a way that the targets can be positioned individually between the magnet bar and the plasma clouds located in front of the latter.
In a further embodiment, the magnet bar is positioned in a fixed position at the top of the free space, above the axis of symmetry of the latter.
Alternatively, it is also possible for the magnet bar to be positioned in a fixed position at the bottom of the free space, below the axis of symmetry of the latter, or in a fixed position at the side of the free space, to the side of the axis of symmetry of the latter. In this way, the known sputtering methods, sputter-up, sputter-down and sputter-side methods, or else obliquely to the horizontal or vertical, can be implemented in a particularly simple manner by appropriate pivoting or arrangement of the magnet bar.
In a particular variant, two magnet bars located opposite one another are arranged in a fixed position in the free space, in such a way that in each case two plasma clouds are formed at the top and bottom in front of the respective target. In this way, the sputter-up and sputter-down methods can be applied simultaneously to identical or different substrates.
In order to allow better utilization of the targets, the polygonal carrier tube can be moved in an oscillating motion around the fixed magnet bar.
In a further development, the magnet bar located in the free space can be pivoted in angular steps relative to the polygonal carrier tube, with the result that the positions of the magnet bar which are required for the various sputtering methods can be set particularly easily.
Finally, the polygonal carrier tube is connected via a connection element to a commercially available magnetron end block for driving the carrier tube in rotation, for supplying energy and for supplying cooling water to the magnet bar.
The multiple sputtering target can be used equally for carrying out the sputter-up, sputter-side or sputter-down method or can be mounted obliquely to the horizontal or vertical for coating substrates.
In one particular embodiment, two polygonal carrier tubes, each having a magnet bar located in their free space and targets located on their outer surfaces with the same distance or different distances between the magnet bar and the associated target, are arranged in a bipolar arrangement parallel to one another in a common vacuum chamber having a common MF power supply. By simply positioning targets made of different materials, i.e. by rotating both polygonal carrier tubes in angular steps until the desired targets are positioned over the respective magnet bar, virtually any desired material combinations can be produced.
In a further development, a polygonal carrier tube having a magnet bar located in a free space in the latter and a conventional tubular magnetron or a planar magnetron are arranged in a bipolar arrangement parallel to one another in a common vacuum chamber having a common MF power supply. Here too, it is possible to produce a multiplicity of material combinations on a substrate, and it is also possible to include materials which are actually only available for planar magnetrons.
With the polygonal carrier tube of the multiple sputtering target which can be rotated in angular steps, it is possible to sputter a plurality of different or identical materials in succession and to deposit them on a substrate with substantially less effort.
For multiple sputtering, polygonal elongate carrier tubes having an angular cross section are used for this purpose instead of the customary elongate tubular targets, in which polygonal elongate carrier tubes targets made of different or identical materials are applied as sputtering sources to the longitudinally extending outer surfaces.
The targets can be fastened to the preferably equally large outer surfaces of the carrier tubes, which during sputtering serve as material sources for the coatings to be applied to a substrate, by means of conventional clamping rails (claws) or by bonding.
The carrier tubes can have a multiplicity of cross sections, such as a triangle, a quadrilateral, a pentagon, a hexagon, a heptagon or else an octagon, and can be covered with a corresponding number of targets made of different materials. Special shapes, such as a carrier tube with a triangular or quadrangular cross section and three or four different targets as well as with beveled corners, are also possible.
The novel multiple sputtering target provides the following advantages:
The following detailed description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the invention or the application and uses of the invention. Furthermore, there is no intention to be bound by any theory presented in the preceding background or the following detailed description.
The multiple sputtering target in the form of a polygonal carrier tube 1 is equipped with a plurality of outer surfaces 3 for receiving targets 2, wherein a magnet bar 4 is located in a free space 5 within the polygonal carrier tube 1. The free space 5 extends longitudinally through the center of the carrier tube 1 and preferably has an annular cross section.
It is self-evident that the coatings described below with the various variants of the multiple sputtering target with the polygonal carrier tube 1 must be produced under a vacuum in a vacuum chamber (not illustrated).
The spatially fixed magnet bar 4, which is positioned at the top in the free space 5, that is to say above the axis of symmetry of the latter, is located within the carrier tube 1. With the magnet bar 4, two plasma clouds 6 are generated in front of the respective target 2 located at the top on the carrier tube 1, with the aid of which a substrate 7 located above or guided past the plasma clouds 6 is coated with the material sputtered off from the target 2 in the sputter-up method.
As is known, the sputter-up method has the advantage that sputtered particles which are accelerated primarily upward are deposited on the substrate 7.
In principle, such beveled edges can also be implemented in a three-fold target system according to
Furthermore,
In most of the variants described above, the magnet bar 4 is located in the free space 5, above the axis of symmetry of the latter, the free space 5 extending centrally through the carrier tube 1.
An exception to this positioning can be useful, if the polygonal carrier tube 1 has a particularly large diameter, to prevent the distance between the magnet bar 4 in the polygonal carrier tube 1 and the target 2 on the outer surface 3 of the carrier tube 1 from becoming too large and the intensity of the plasma clouds 7 from being weakened as a result. In this case, said distance should be reduced.
The different hatching of the targets 2 fastened on the outer surfaces 3 of the carrier tube 1 is intended to symbolize different materials in each case. In order to select the material to be sputtered off, the carrier tube 1 has only to be rotated in equal angular steps until the desired target 2 is positioned at the top above the magnet bar 4. The required plasma clouds 6 are then generated during operation of the magnet bar 4 in front of the target 2 located at the top.
The polygonal carrier tubes 1 with different cross sections can be operated with a commercially available magnetron end block 8 via a connection element 9, it being possible for a spatially fixed magnet bar 4 of a conventional tubular target to be used in the interior of the carrier tube 1.
Particularly long carrier tubes 1 can be mounted with their free end in a counterbearing (not illustrated) in order to limit deflections to a minimum.
The sputter plasma required for sputtering is generated by the magnet bar 4 in the vicinity of the target surface due to the magnetic field. By rotating the carrier tube 1 with the targets 2 located thereon, different or identical materials can thus be sputtered off in succession with respect to the magnet bar 3—depending on how the targets 2 are distributed on outer surfaces 3 of the carrier tube 1—and a substrate 7 guided past can be coated accordingly. In addition, an oscillating motion of the polygonal carrier tube 1 or of the magnet bar 4 can achieve an expanded target erosion field, whereby better use of the targets 2 is achieved.
Other sputtering methods, such as the sputter-down method, can be implemented in a simple manner with the multiple sputtering target in conjunction with the polygonal carrier tube 1 described above, in that the magnet bar 4 is pivoted downward by 180 axis about an imaginary pivoting axis, with the result that the magnet bar 4 is below the axis of symmetry of the free space 5. Alternatively, the magnet bar 4 is to be positioned pointing downward in the free space 5, with the result that the plasma clouds 6 are formed in front of a target 2 located at the bottom on the carrier tube 1.
In this case, the particles sputtered off from the target 2 are deposited on a substrate 7 to be coated, which is guided past below the plasma clouds 6. (
If a sputter-side method, i.e. lateral deposition on a substrate 7, is to be implemented, then the magnet bar 4 would have to be moved through 90° into a lateral position, with the result that the plasma clouds 6 are formed in front of the target 2 to be positioned laterally. In this case, the substrate 7 to be coated would have to be positioned or passed laterally perpendicularly in front of the plasma clouds 6. (
A special embodiment is illustrated in
A parallel arrangement of two multiple sputtering targets with a common MF power supply 10 for depositing identical materials on a substrate 7 is illustrated in
Finally,
A combination of a multiple sputtering target with a conventional planar magnetron (not illustrated) and with a common MF power supply in a common vacuum chamber is also possible without problems. With this combination too, it is possible to deposit material combinations on the substrate which is to be guided past.
Instead of the polygonal carrier tubes illustrated in
The advantage of this embodiment of the multiple sputtering target allows sputter-up and sputter-down methods to be carried out simultaneously.
Standard magnet bars or any other suitable magnet bars can be used as magnet bars 4 in the free space 5.
The round connection elements 9 required for operation on a magnetron end block 8 and in the support bearing can be joined to the carrier tube 1 by welding, or a corresponding connection element 9 is used as an adapter. (
Instead of the commercially available magnetron end block 7, it is also possible to use other suitable receiving devices with adjusting motors, provided that an angularly accurate rotary movement is produced in order to bring the various targets 2 on the polygonal carrier tube 1 into the correct position, i.e. parallel to the substrate 7, 7.1 to be coated.
An oscillating motion of the polygonal carrier tube 1 of the multiple target about the fixed magnet bar is also conceivable.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to the disclosed or illustrated embodiments but, on the contrary, is intended to cover numerous other modifications, substitutions, variations and broad equivalent arrangements that are included within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2021 120 332.5 | Aug 2021 | DE | national |