The invention relates to a target material according to the preamble of patent claim 1 as well as to the use of same.
It relates to the field of glass coating, in particular the coating of glass with a heat-treatable sun protection layer system.
Coated glass, which is to be bent, is required for many applications. Such an application is, for example, a curved window pane on the corner of a building, which serves as a display window. The process of uniformly coating bent glass is technically very difficult. For that reason attempts have been made to coat the glass first and then to deform it subsequently. However, here the problem is encountered that the coating peels off or forms bubbles. The problem of peeling or bubble formation also occurs with planar architectural glass which only needs to be warmed. Architectural glass is heated for a few minutes to temperatures of approximately 700° C. and subsequently cooled very rapidly. In the event the glass is destroyed, the glass, unlike untempered glass, breaks into many small glass splinters due to these heating and cooling processes. This property is often demanded for technical safety reasons.
A method for the production of a thermally treated coated glass is already known, in which, first, a solar control layer or an electrically conducting layer is formed on a glass substrate and thereon a protective layer is deposited (EP 0 546 302 B1). The solar control layer here is comprised of a metal, for example corrosion-resistant steel, titanium, chromium, zirconium, tantalum or hafnium or of a nitride, boride or carbide of these metals. The protective layer, on the other hand, comprises for example boron nitride, silicon nitride, silicon nitride or carbonitride.
In addition, coated glass is known, which can be subjected to heat treatment and in which a heat protection film and a further protective film are layered one above the other (EP 0 501 632 B1). The further protective film is transparent for the wavelength of visible light and is fabricated of a silicon oxinitride, represented by the formula SiOxNy, where x is in the range of 0.65 to 1.25 and y in the range of 0.05 to 0.67.
In another heat-treatable glass pane the coating contains a metal nitride layer, enclosed between two dielectric layers (WO 02/090281 A2). One of the dielectric layers is herein at least partially nitrated and disposed such that the metal nitride layer is between these dielectric layers and the glass substrate.
A sputter target is also known, which serves for the deposition of nitridic or oxidic silicon layers (DE 198 10 246 A1). This sputter target comprises a solidified formed silicon body with a doping substance added in the melt. The doping substance is comprised of 1 to 15 percent by weight of aluminum.
The invention addresses the problem of providing a temperable coating for a substrate by means of sputtering in which a very high sputter rate is attained.
This problem is solved according to the characteristics of patent claim 1.
The invention consequently relates to a target material for the production of a protective layer for a solar control and absorption layer by means of sputtering. This target material is comprised of silicon doped with titanium. The protective layer, which can be produced with the target material, is heatable without its properties changing significantly. It is therefore also suitable for coating glass which is heated and subsequently bent.
One advantage attained with the invention comprises that the layer system shields against sun light and heat radiation with a transmission between 5 and 50% and in which the transmission is settable. In addition, the layer system can have different reflection colors, and these different colors can also readily be set.
The layer system is furthermore mechanically highly stable and has high scratch resistance. Therewith individual glazings having a long service life are possible. The fact that the layer is temperable, permits the efficient production sequence with coating, cutting, tempering. A further advantage of the invention comprises that during the tempering optical parameters, such as color, transmission and reflection, change not at all or only slightly. The scattered light component, i.e. the so-called haze values, hardly increase during the tempering.
An advantage of the target materials according to the invention for Si:Ti as well as also for AlSi:Ti is the sputter rate which is approximately 20% higher compared to pure silicon. This higher sputter rate can be ascribed to the titanium doping. The titanium furthermore leads to better adhesion of ceramic layers, such as titanium-containing silicon nitride, on metal layers. The improved adhesion of titanium-containing ceramic layers on, for example, chromium, is thought to be due to Ti—Cr bridges.
An embodiment example of the invention is shown in the drawing and will be explained in further detail in the following. In the drawing depict:
Between the pumps 10, 11 is disposed an installation cover 12, on whose underside a cathode mount 13 is fastened, which supports a cathode 14 with a target 15. This target 15 is comprised of a composition of silicon, aluminum and titanium or only silicon and titanium. An anode 16 beneath the target 15 is fastened on a mount 17, which includes a cooling system 18 and is connected across an insulation 19 with a wall 20 of the coating chamber 2. Next to the anode 16 are provided supply lines 21, 38 for sputter gases. In a cathode covering hood 22 are provided cathode cooling water conduits 23, 24, which serve for the forward and return transport of cooling water. By 25 is denoted the cathode connection. A gap interlock 26 connects the coating chamber 2 with the buffer chamber 4.
37 denotes a pressure sensor, which via a line 27 is connected with a control 28 and measures the pressure in the coating chamber 2. The gas pressure in the coating chamber 2 is controlled according to the measured pressure via control lines 29, 30 and valves 31, 32 and the cathode-anode voltage via lines 33, 34.
The two gas lines 21, 38 extend on both sides along the cathode 14. The two outer lines 21 and the two inner lines 38 are in each instance connected with one another.
The voltage and the current of the plasma discharge are measured via lines 33, 34, and specifically time-dependent, in order to determine the instantaneous power.
It is important for the present invention that target 15 is a ceramic Si or SiAl target, which is doped with titanium. If this target is sputtered while nitrogen and oxygen are supplied, an (SiAl:Ti)NO layer is formed on the substrate 5 if, for example, the fraction of Ti is 2 percent by weight, Al 10 percent by weight and Si 88 percent by weight. However, a mixture of 0.5 to 50 percent by weight of titanium would also be possible. The colon between SiAl and Ti indicates that the material in front of the colon is doped with titanium.
The (SiAl:Ti)NO layer is preferably produced by means of a mixed target. It is, however, also possible to apply this layer by simultaneously sputtering two targets. The first target in this case could be a metallic Ti target or a ceramic TiOx target, while the second target in this case would be an Si or an SiAl target. It is also conceivable to mix the aluminum with the titanium. All variants of sputtering could in principle be employed, i.e. planar as well as also rotating cathodes, DC and AC sputtering.
Of importance for the layer is that titanium and silicon form a compound with oxygen or with nitrogen. Thus a reactive sputter process must take place in an oxygen and nitrogen-containing atmosphere. These gases are introduced through lines 21, 38 into the sputter chamber. In this case layers result which, apart from Al compounds, contain additionally also the reaction products TiO2, TiN, SiO2 and Si3N4 in varying amounts. Titanium can also form a compound with hydrogen, since hydrogen, due to the dissociation of water, is present in the background atmosphere. Titanium hydride improves the adhesion capacity of the sputtered layers. Consequently, it is of advantage if at least small quantities of water or hydrogen-containing gas are supplied to the process gas. Known hydrogen-containing gases are for example the so-called forming gases, nitrogen-hydrogen mixtures or mixtures of argon and hydrogen.
It is unexpected that optically transparent layers are generated although pure TiN in thicker layers has a golden color and is not transparent. The aluminum fraction is not required for the layer properties; it serves to improve the workability of the silicon target, which, starting at an aluminum content of approximately 5%, markedly loses the brittleness of pure aluminum. In addition, the sputter properties are also improved by adding aluminum.
If, when sputtering with two targets, one target of TiOx is employed, even without the addition of oxygen an (SiaAlb:Tic)x NyOz layer can be formed, which has a greater component of oxygen. The indices a, b, c, x, y, z represent integers.
In adaptation to the particular adjacent layers, the protective layer (SiaAlb:Tic)x NyOz can also vary from (SiaAlb:Tic) N to (SiaAlb:Tic) O.
In
Both targets 15, 42 can be sputtered simultaneously or sequentially. The target with which the solar control layer or the absorber layer is produced, is not shown in
In
A further layer sequence is shown in
In
The sputter rates, which are obtained using the same generator and a target area of 1500 cm2, are the following:
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/05923 | 6/2/2004 | WO | 3/2/2007 |