Atomic Layer Deposition (Oxford FlexAL)

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Atomic Layer Deposition (Oxford FlexAL)
FlexAL.jpg
Tool Type Vacuum Deposition
Location Bay 2
Supervisor Brian Lingg
Supervisor Phone (805) 893-8145
Supervisor E-Mail lingg_b@ucsb.edu
Description Oxford FlexAL Atomic Layer Deposition
Manufacturer Oxford Instruments Plasma Technologies
Vacuum Deposition Recipes
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About

The Oxford Instruments FlexAL Atomic Layer Deposition system at UCSB is a plasma-enhanced ALD system for the precise growth of ultra-thin oxides and nitrides. Self-limiting layer by layer growth ensures precise control, film conformality, and repeatability of the films.

The system currently has metallorganic precursors for Aluminum, Hafnium, Titanium, Platinum, Zirconium, and Silicon oxides and nitrides. Water and Ozone are available for thermal oxides and Oxygen, Ammonia, Nitrogen, and Hydrogen are available for plasma assisted oxides and nitrides. Remote ICP plasma powers up to 600W are possible.

The system is load-locked and can accommodate sample temperatures up to 550°C. Processing temperature windows are defined for each material based on growth limitations. The system is step-by-step programmable through a flexible GUI interface.

Cluster Configuration

We have three separate chambers on the Oxford Cluster tool, two of which are ALD chambers.

One ALD chamber is dedicated to metals and the other dedicated to dielectrics. The other chamber on the cluster is the Oxford Ion Mill.

Procedures & Documentation

  • Operating Instructions
    • Includes recipe names for various films, and approx. dep. rates
  • Film Thicknesses are restricted to 30nm or less.
    • Thicker films are allowed with prior staff approval - please ask Tool Supervisor if you want to deposit a thicker film!

ALD Recipes

  • The Atomic Layer Deposition: Recipes page shows all available recipes and data/measurements.
  • Only staff-provided recipes are allowed to be run on this tool, as achieving the atomic-layer regime is rather complex. Bill Mitchell is the resident expert on ALD recipe development.

Etch Rates of ALD Films