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US3583361A - Ion beam deposition system - Google Patents

Ion beam deposition system
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Publication number
US3583361A
US3583361AUS886168AUS3583361DAUS3583361AUS 3583361 AUS3583361 AUS 3583361AUS 886168 AUS886168 AUS 886168AUS 3583361D AUS3583361D AUS 3583361DAUS 3583361 AUS3583361 AUS 3583361A
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ion
substrate
ions
ionization region
deposition
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US886168A
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Arthur Laudel Jr
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US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
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Abstract

An ion-beam deposition system including means for providing atoms of depositant material to an ionization region, first and second means for injecting electrons into the ionization region to ionize said depositant atoms, means for periodically and individually energizing the first and second injecting means, and means for extracting and accelerating ions from the ionization region to a substrate.

Description

MTRQQ Inventor Appl. No.
Filed Patented Assignee Arthur Laudel, r. [56] References Cited gag Kans- UNITED STATES PATENTS 18 1969 2,428,868 10/1947 Dimmick 118/49 3,071,533 1/1963 Blankenship 118/7X 3168418 2 1965 J 1187 The United States of America Payne, r.
3,192,892 7/1965 Hanson et a] 1l8/49.1 represented by the United States Atomic Energy Commission 3,316,468 4/1967 Hanks 11s/9x 3,324,825 6/1967 Brumfield.... 118/49.5 3,344,054 9/1967 Laegreid 118/49.5X 3,371,649 3/1968 Gowen 118/49.1 3,437,734 4/1969 Roman et al ll8/49.5X
Primary Examiner-Morris Kaplan AttorneyRoland A. Anderson ION BEAM DEPOSITION SYSTEM 8 Chums 2 Drawmg Flgs' ABSTRACT: An ion-beam deposition system including means US. Cl 1 18/495, for providing atoms of depositant material to an ionization re- 219/121EB gion, first and second means for injecting electrons into the Int. Cl C23c 13/12 ionization region to ionize said depositant atoms, means for Field of Search 118/6, 7, 8, periodically and individually energizing the first and second 49.1, 49.5; 219/121 EB; 117/lnquired, 93.4,
POWER SUPPLY OOOOOOOO POWER SUPPLY VACUUM PUMP POWER SUPPLY POWER SUPPLY injecting means, and means for extracting and accelerating ions from the ionization region to a substrate.
PATENTEUJUN 8 197:
FIG
OOOOOOOOf POWER SUPPLY M 6 RY M 2 H U wP UM 0U MW PS V 2 3 O 2 .1
POWER SUPPLY POWER SUPPLY FIG. 2
. INVENTOR. ARTHUR LAUDEL,JR.
ION BEAM DEPOSITION SYSTEM BACKGROUND OF INVENTION Films or layers of material may be deposited on substrates by various techniques, for example, vapor deposition, various types of sputtering, and ion-beam deposition. Each of these techniques and other related techniques may have certain advantages for particular applications and in some cases may be combined to provide some desired combination of advantages to achieve a particular finished product.
Ion-beam deposition techniques generally provide the advantage of obtaining good film adhesion by ion bombardment cleaning of the substrate surface and ion penetration of sub strate surface. However, previous ion-beam deposition techniques and systems may be limited as to the ion current output (e.g., deposition rate) to the substrate, and therefore limited as to deposition rates, due to, among other things, inherent ion losses within the system from attraction by negatively biased electrodes required by the system. If an attempt is made to control ion losses to biased electrodes, very high extraction and acceleration voltages are used to draw the ions from the ionization region before they are attracted to these electrodes. Such high voltage acceleration and extraction voltages increase the difficulties in controlling the ion beam and the energies of the ions striking the substrate. For example, as the acceleration voltage is increased, a greater portion of the ions striking the substrate will serve to sputter off part of the substrate rather than contribute to the deposition. It has been found in many cases, that the extraction voltage gradient must be so high to achieve ion extraction from the ionization re gion, therefore, the extraction region itself must be small, and deposition rates are at a low level.
Ion deposition systems which require high extraction and acceleration voltages to overcome space charge and other electric fields within the ionization region may accelerate ions against the substrate with a wide range of energies. Such variations and nonuniformities in ion energies do not permit control of deposited film properties. Further, ions striking the substrate cause the substrate to be heated. If a sufficient number of these ions are of high energy, the substrate may be heated to a degree which may also adversely affectthe deposited film. Thus, it may be necessary to cool the substrate, decrease the rate of deposition or decrease the extraction and acceleration voltages. Maintaining high electric fields in the presence of metal ions is very difficult because of the insulation system which is required.
Many prior ion deposition system also require some type of carrier gas to achieve ionization of the depositant material. Since the carrier gas is also ionized, these gas ions may be accelerated to the substrate and form a part of the deposited film. In many applications, such gas deposition may be detrimental to the final product. r
SUMMARY OF INVENTION In view of the limitations of the prior art as noted above, it is an object of this invention to provide an ion-beam deposition system capable of high ion current output and high efficiency with low extraction and acceleration voltages.
It is a further object of this invention to provide an ion-beam deposition which is capable of producing high ion currents and uniform ion energies with a low extraction voltage.
It is a still further object of this invention to provide an ionbeam deposition system with high ion current output without a carrier gas under a vacuum.
Various other objects and advantages will appear from the following description of embodiments of the invention, and the most novel features will be particularly pointed out hereinafter in connection with the appended claims. It will be understood that various changes in the details, materials and arrangements of the parts, which will herein be described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art within the principles and scope of the invention.
The invention comprises an ion-beam deposition system in which ions are produced for acceleration to and deposition on a substrate by at least two electron sources periodically injecting electrons into an ionization region against atoms of depositant material.
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS The present invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawing wherein:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic view of an ion beam deposition system incorporating this invention; and
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic view in perspective of an alternate embodiment of this invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION FIG. 1 illustrates diagrammatically an ion-beam deposition system which incorporates principles of this invention. It will be readily apparent, that the various elements and apparatus utilized in this system may be standard or conventional apparatus, such as conventional thermionic filaments, grids, accelerating electrodes, etc.
The ion-beam deposition system shown in FIG. 1 includes anionization region 10 disposed within a suitable container orbell jar 12 which may be evacuated by a suitable vacuum pump 14 to some desired level of vacuum, such as from about 10 to l0" Torr. Asource 16 ofdepositant material 17 may be disposed withinbell jar 12 adjacent to theionization region 10 to provide atoms of the depositant material toregion 10. At least afirst electron source 18 and asecond electron source 20 may be disposed at different and spaced-apart positions, such as at opposite locations, aboutionization region 10 to supply electrons toregion 10 and ionize atoms of the depositant material. Additional electron sources or electron source pairs may be positioned aboutionization region 10 at different locations to provide increased electron injection intoregion 10 and further decrease ion attraction to electron sources. The ionized depositant material may then be withdrawn fromionization region 10 and accelerated to asuitable substrate 22 by extraction and acceleration means 24.
Source 16 may be any conventional source which will evaporate or otherwise provide atoms toionization region 10. Thesource 16 is illustrated as a conventional evaporation source or boat heated bypower supply 26.
Substrate 22 may be of any convenient or desired shape, cross section or size and be made of either a nonconductive or conductive material. As a conductive material,substrate 22 may form a part of the accelerating means by biasingsubstrate 22 to an accelerating voltage. On occasions,substrate 22 may be a nonconductor so that the accelerating voltage may be applied by apower supply 28 to an appropriately designedgrid 30 which will permit the accelerated ions to pass therethrough tosubstrate 22. For insulating substrates, the ions tend to build up a charge which would prevent additional deposition. To permit use of insulating substrates anelectron emitter 46 can be added in the region of the substrate and be powered bypower supply 44. The electrons are repelled by the extraction grid and attracted by any charge buildup on the substrate. The extraction field may be achieved by aseparate grid 32 disposedadjacent ionization region 10 and energized bypower supply 28 to an extraction voltage.Grid 32 preferably is designed, likegrid 30, so as not to obstruct passage of ions through the grid.
Electron sources 18 and 20, and any other sources used, may be energized bypower supply 34 so that each individual electron source emits electrons at separate and alternating periods of time. For example,electron sources 18 and 20 may be thermionic emitters connected in series withpower supply 34 which provides an alternating current to the electron sources. With such an arrangement the electron sources will alternately emit electrons into theionization region 10 and extract electrons therefrom, alternately acting as a cathode and an anode. It will be clear, thatpower supply 34 may be any appropriately controlled pulse, square wave or the like source which periodically energizes the electron sources. The frequency of energization should be selected so that electrons emitted by a source have sufficient time to traverse a major or sufficient portion of the ionization region to ensure collision with an atom of depositant material without permitting any of the depositant ions to be attracted to the energized electron source. Thus, when the electrons travel intoionization region 10, as shown byarrows 36, and ionize an atom of depositant material, the depositant ion may have a path such as shown byline 38 which is generally sinusoidal in shape as the extraction voltage pulls the ion fromregion 10. It has been found that the frequency of electron source energization may be varied from about 40 Hz. to about 10,000 Hz. With a frequency greater than 10,000 Hz., the electrons may not traverse a sufficient portion ofregion 10 whereas at less than 40 Hz., the ions may reach an electron source before the bias changes. With such arrangement and a source energization frequency of about 60 Hz., for copper depositions, the extraction voltage may vary from about a 30 to l30 volts DC with an acceleration voltage of between about 25 to about 200 volts DC. Other depositant materials will require approximately the same extraction and acceleration voltages. With greater acceleration voltages, such as for copper of about 250 volts or more, a greater amount of substrate will be sputtered ofi than depositant material deposited so as to provide a cleaning of the substrate. The depositant can be all or partly a gas. For example, aluminum can be evaporated while the appropriate partial pressure of oxygen is being maintained and aluminum oxide be formed at the substrate. Likewise, an aluminum film can be deposited, then bombarded with oxygen to build an electrode covered with aluminum oxide insulation.
The ion-beam deposition system of FIG. 1 may be operated by evacuating, at least partially,bell jar 12 and then heating or otherwise energizing thedepositant material source 16 to supply depositant material atoms toionization region 10. lf the absolute pressure in the bell jar is above l torr, there will be significant amounts of residual-as well as that which may be intentionally introduced ambient gas entering the ionization region and being deposited as impurities.Electron sources 18 and 20 may thereafter be energized bypower supply 34 in the appropriate manner described above to alternately inject electrons into ionization region and ionize the atoms of depositant material. in this FIGURE, it may be noted that the current frompower supply 34 provides heating forelectron sources 18 and as well as electron acceleration voltage. These two functions may be provided by separate power supplies. These ions may then be extracted or withdrawn fromionization region 10 bygrid 32 and accelerated againstsubstrate 22 bygrid 30. Since the extraction voltage does not have to pull the ions away from and overcome the electric field produced by the energized electron sources which are varying in polarity, the extraction and acceleration voltages may be kept at a low level. lt will be clear that an initial acceleration voltage may be selected which may accelerate depositant ions with sufiicient energy to cleansubstrate 22. The acceleration voltage may then be decreased to form the desired deposit.
This configuration, having at least two electron sources which are reversed periodically, may neutralize the field produced by the ions and prevent the electron sources from extracting ions to provide a relatively low net charge in the ionization region and prevent space charge limitations. The present system may produce ion beams of from about 10 to 500 milliamperes intensity to provide deposition rates from about 5 to 250 angstroms per second. Due to the cleanliness of the substrate as a result of ion beam cleaning and from the vacuum environment and ion deposition, this system provides well formed, and highly adhesive deposition films. The cleaning agent can be the same as the depositant thus assuring high purity. Further, the substrate temperature may be kept at a relatively low tem erature withoutdecreasing beam current.
It may be desrra le in some applications to provide a greater percentage of ions to atoms in the depositing film. This may be accomplished, by utilizing some form of ion beam deflection as the ions are extracted fromionization region 10. Such an ion-beam deflection may be achieved with a magnetic field applied parallel to the electric field betweenelectron sources 18 and 20, or by placing the extraction grid at an angle other then with respect to the initial path of atoms fromsource 16, as shown by the embodiment shown in FIG. 2. The ion beam extracted from theionization region 10, may be collimated and focused by suitable biasedcollimating electrodes 40.
The electrical leads forelectron sources 18 and 20 may inherently generate certain stray magnetic fields which may effect some form of magnetic magnification of electron paths, enhancing ionization in the systems of FIG. 1 and FIG. 2. it may be desirable in certain applications to increase this magnification to increase the percentage of ionization of the depositant material atoms. This may be accomplished by applying an alternating magnetic field perpendicular to the initial path of the depositant material atoms provided bysource 16 and perpendicular to the electric field of the electron sources, as shown by the dottedlines 42 outlining a magnetic coil. The magnetic field, for greatest extraction efficiency, may have to alternate in phase with the electric field of the electron sources.
lclaim:
1. A system for depositing ions on a substrate from an evacuated ionization region comprising means for providing deposition atoms to said ionization region, first and second means for injectionelectrons into said ionization region for ionizing said deposition atoms, means for periodically and individually energizing said first and second injecting means, and means for extracting ions from said ionization region and accelerating them to said substrate.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein said first and second means are positioned at spaced-apart locations about said ionization region.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein said first and second means are electron emissive cathodes.
4. The system of claim 1 wherein said deposition atom providing means is an evaporation source.
5. The system of claim 1, including means for forming said ions into a beam.
6. The system of claim 1 wherein part or all of said deposition atom providing means is a gas.
7. The system of claim 1, in combination with charge neutralization means at the substrate.
8. The system of claim 1 including means for producing a magnetic field for improving ionization efficiency by increasing electron path length.

Claims (7)

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Cited By (37)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPS4879736A (en)*1972-01-271973-10-25
JPS5036382A (en)*1973-08-041975-04-05
US3913520A (en)*1972-08-141975-10-21Precision Thin Film CorpHigh vacuum deposition apparatus
US3974059A (en)*1974-10-031976-08-10Yoichi MurayamaHigh vacuum ion plating device
US3988564A (en)*1972-07-171976-10-26Hughes Aircraft CompanyIon beam micromachining method
US4082636A (en)*1975-01-131978-04-04Sharp Kabushiki KaishaIon plating method
US4102021A (en)*1975-10-061978-07-25Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.Method for making capacitors with plated terminals
US4161418A (en)*1975-06-271979-07-17Futaba Denshi Kogyo K. K.Ionized-cluster-beam deposition process for fabricating p-n junction semiconductor layers
US4187124A (en)*1977-03-181980-02-05Agence Nationale De Valorisation De La Recherche (Anvar)Process for doping semiconductors
US4197814A (en)*1977-02-121980-04-15Futaba Denshi Kogyo K.K.Apparatus for forming compound semiconductor thin-films
EP0029747A1 (en)*1979-11-271981-06-03Konica CorporationAn apparatus for vacuum deposition and a method for forming a thin film by the use thereof
US4286545A (en)*1977-03-101981-09-01Futaba Denshi Kogyo K.K.Apparatus for vapor depositing a stoichiometric compound
US4424104A (en)1983-05-121984-01-03International Business Machines CorporationSingle axis combined ion and vapor source
FR2578270A1 (en)*1985-03-011986-09-05Balzers Hochvakuum PROCESS FOR REACTIVE VAPORIZATION OF OXIDE, NITRIDE, OXYNITRIDE AND CARBIDE LAYERS.
US4687939A (en)*1983-11-071987-08-18Hitachi, Ltd.Method and apparatus for forming film by ion beam
GB2205860A (en)*1987-06-121988-12-21Ricoh KkApparatus for forming a thin film
US4902572A (en)*1988-04-191990-02-20The Boeing CompanyFilm deposition system
DE3790317C2 (en)*1986-06-181990-06-07Ricoh Co., Ltd., Tokio/Tokyo, Jp
US4960072A (en)*1987-08-051990-10-02Ricoh Company, Ltd.Apparatus for forming a thin film
US4982696A (en)*1988-01-081991-01-08Ricoh Company, Ltd.Apparatus for forming thin film
US4987857A (en)*1988-06-211991-01-29Anelva CorporationVacuum deposition apparatus with dust collector electrode
US5031408A (en)*1988-04-191991-07-16The Boeing CompanyFilm deposition system
US5133849A (en)*1988-12-121992-07-28Ricoh Company, Ltd.Thin film forming apparatus
US5374456A (en)*1992-12-231994-12-20Hughes Aircraft CompanySurface potential control in plasma processing of materials
US5427671A (en)*1989-09-261995-06-27Applied Vision LimitedIon vapor deposition apparatus and method
US5427668A (en)*1989-10-251995-06-27Ricoh Company, Ltd.Thin film deposition system
US5455061A (en)*1993-08-271995-10-03Hughes Aircraft CompanyNondestructive determination of plasma processing treatment characteristics
US5458754A (en)*1991-04-221995-10-17Multi-Arc Scientific CoatingsPlasma enhancement apparatus and method for physical vapor deposition
US6039849A (en)*1997-10-282000-03-21Motorola, Inc.Method for the manufacture of electronic components
US6306175B1 (en)*1984-02-282001-10-23Aea Technology PlcTitanium alloy hip prosthesis
US6402904B1 (en)2001-03-162002-06-114 Wave, Inc.System and method for performing sputter deposition using independent ion and electron sources and a target biased with an a-symmetric bi-polar DC pulse signal
US6435131B1 (en)*1998-06-252002-08-20Tokyo Electron LimitedIon flow forming method and apparatus
US6679976B2 (en)2001-03-162004-01-204Wave, Inc.System and method for performing sputter deposition with multiple targets using independent ion and electron sources and independent target biasing with DC pulse signals
US6752912B1 (en)1996-04-122004-06-22Micron Technology, Inc.Laser selection of ions for sputter deposition of titanium containing films
US6774050B2 (en)2001-02-232004-08-10Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20130008776A1 (en)*2010-03-122013-01-10Showa Denko K.K.Method of forming carbon film, and method of manufacturing magnetic recording medium
US20210238730A1 (en)*2020-01-312021-08-05Kennametal Inc.Evaporation Boat

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Cited By (57)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPS4879736A (en)*1972-01-271973-10-25
US3988564A (en)*1972-07-171976-10-26Hughes Aircraft CompanyIon beam micromachining method
US3913520A (en)*1972-08-141975-10-21Precision Thin Film CorpHigh vacuum deposition apparatus
JPS5036382A (en)*1973-08-041975-04-05
US3974059A (en)*1974-10-031976-08-10Yoichi MurayamaHigh vacuum ion plating device
US4082636A (en)*1975-01-131978-04-04Sharp Kabushiki KaishaIon plating method
US4161418A (en)*1975-06-271979-07-17Futaba Denshi Kogyo K. K.Ionized-cluster-beam deposition process for fabricating p-n junction semiconductor layers
US4102021A (en)*1975-10-061978-07-25Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.Method for making capacitors with plated terminals
US4197814A (en)*1977-02-121980-04-15Futaba Denshi Kogyo K.K.Apparatus for forming compound semiconductor thin-films
US4286545A (en)*1977-03-101981-09-01Futaba Denshi Kogyo K.K.Apparatus for vapor depositing a stoichiometric compound
US4187124A (en)*1977-03-181980-02-05Agence Nationale De Valorisation De La Recherche (Anvar)Process for doping semiconductors
EP0029747A1 (en)*1979-11-271981-06-03Konica CorporationAn apparatus for vacuum deposition and a method for forming a thin film by the use thereof
EP0134399A3 (en)*1983-05-121986-10-29International Business Machines CorporationSingle axis combined ion and vapour source
US4424104A (en)1983-05-121984-01-03International Business Machines CorporationSingle axis combined ion and vapor source
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US6306175B1 (en)*1984-02-282001-10-23Aea Technology PlcTitanium alloy hip prosthesis
FR2578270A1 (en)*1985-03-011986-09-05Balzers Hochvakuum PROCESS FOR REACTIVE VAPORIZATION OF OXIDE, NITRIDE, OXYNITRIDE AND CARBIDE LAYERS.
DE3790317C2 (en)*1986-06-181990-06-07Ricoh Co., Ltd., Tokio/Tokyo, Jp
GB2205860A (en)*1987-06-121988-12-21Ricoh KkApparatus for forming a thin film
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US4876984A (en)*1987-06-121989-10-31Ricoh Company, Ltd.Apparatus for forming a thin film
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US4982696A (en)*1988-01-081991-01-08Ricoh Company, Ltd.Apparatus for forming thin film
US4902572A (en)*1988-04-191990-02-20The Boeing CompanyFilm deposition system
US5031408A (en)*1988-04-191991-07-16The Boeing CompanyFilm deposition system
US4987857A (en)*1988-06-211991-01-29Anelva CorporationVacuum deposition apparatus with dust collector electrode
US5133849A (en)*1988-12-121992-07-28Ricoh Company, Ltd.Thin film forming apparatus
US5427671A (en)*1989-09-261995-06-27Applied Vision LimitedIon vapor deposition apparatus and method
US5427668A (en)*1989-10-251995-06-27Ricoh Company, Ltd.Thin film deposition system
US5458754A (en)*1991-04-221995-10-17Multi-Arc Scientific CoatingsPlasma enhancement apparatus and method for physical vapor deposition
US6139964A (en)*1991-04-222000-10-31Multi-Arc Inc.Plasma enhancement apparatus and method for physical vapor deposition
US5374456A (en)*1992-12-231994-12-20Hughes Aircraft CompanySurface potential control in plasma processing of materials
US5455061A (en)*1993-08-271995-10-03Hughes Aircraft CompanyNondestructive determination of plasma processing treatment characteristics
US20040216993A1 (en)*1996-04-122004-11-04Sandhu Gurtej S.Laser selection of ions for sputter deposition of titanium containing films
US7011733B2 (en)1996-04-122006-03-14Micron Technology, Inc.Method and apparatus for depositing films
US6752912B1 (en)1996-04-122004-06-22Micron Technology, Inc.Laser selection of ions for sputter deposition of titanium containing films
US6827824B1 (en)*1996-04-122004-12-07Micron Technology, Inc.Enhanced collimated deposition
US6039849A (en)*1997-10-282000-03-21Motorola, Inc.Method for the manufacture of electronic components
US6435131B1 (en)*1998-06-252002-08-20Tokyo Electron LimitedIon flow forming method and apparatus
US7276729B2 (en)2001-02-232007-10-02Micron Technology, Inc.Electronic systems having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US7157733B2 (en)2001-02-232007-01-02Micron Technolgy, Inc.Floating-gate field-effect transistors having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US6774050B2 (en)2001-02-232004-08-10Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US6858865B2 (en)2001-02-232005-02-22Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20060001082A1 (en)*2001-02-232006-01-05Micron Technology, Inc.Floating-gate field-effect transistors having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20060001079A1 (en)*2001-02-232006-01-05Micron Technology, Inc.Electronic systems having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20060006497A1 (en)*2001-02-232006-01-12Micron Technology Inc.Capacitors having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20060011970A1 (en)*2001-02-232006-01-19Micron Technology, Inc.Field-effect transistors having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US7750344B2 (en)2001-02-232010-07-06Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20040178439A1 (en)*2001-02-232004-09-16Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US7161174B2 (en)2001-02-232007-01-09Micron Technolgy, Inc.Field-effect transistors having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US20080152891A1 (en)*2001-02-232008-06-26Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US7339191B2 (en)2001-02-232008-03-04Micron Technology, Inc.Capacitors having doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US7361928B2 (en)2001-02-232008-04-22Micron Technology, Inc.Doped aluminum oxide dielectrics
US6402904B1 (en)2001-03-162002-06-114 Wave, Inc.System and method for performing sputter deposition using independent ion and electron sources and a target biased with an a-symmetric bi-polar DC pulse signal
US6679976B2 (en)2001-03-162004-01-204Wave, Inc.System and method for performing sputter deposition with multiple targets using independent ion and electron sources and independent target biasing with DC pulse signals
US20130008776A1 (en)*2010-03-122013-01-10Showa Denko K.K.Method of forming carbon film, and method of manufacturing magnetic recording medium
US20210238730A1 (en)*2020-01-312021-08-05Kennametal Inc.Evaporation Boat

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