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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A plasma reactor comprising:
a vacuum chamber having an at least partially insulating upper portion;
an RF power source having an RF power terminal and a return terminal
connected to an RF ground;
an RF inductor coil wound around said insulating upper portion, said RF
inductor coil comprising plural coil sections each connected across said
RF power terminal and said RF ground, each one of said coil sections being
wrapped around said insulating upper portion, at least a pair of said coil
sections being connected at respective ends thereof through a common tap
point to said RF power terminal and each coil section of said pair being
wound in opposite rotational directions;
means for supplying a gas into said chamber;
a wafer pedestal in said chamber for supporting a wafer to be processing
inside said chamber.
2. The reactor of claim 1 wherein said insulating upper portion comprises a
top cylindrical side wall portion, said chamber further comprising a lower
conductive cylindrical side wall portion.
3. The reactor of claim 2 further comprising a ceiling overlying said top
cylindrical side wall portion, said ceiling having a conductive center
portion and an insulating annular portion adjacent said cylindrical side
wall and surrounding said conductive center portion.
4. The reactor of claim 3 wherein said respective ends of said coil
sections are adjacent respective ones of said conductive lower side wall
portion, and wherein said conductive center portion of said ceiling and
said lower conductive portion of said side wall are connected to said RF
ground.
5. The reactor of claim 1 wherein said insulating upper portion comprises
at least a first portion of a dome top of said chamber.
6. The reactor of claim 5 wherein said dome top comprises a second portion
which is a conductive center section at an apex of said dome top and an
insulating annulus surrounding said conductive center section, said RF
inductor being wound only around said first portion of said dome top.
7. The reactor of claim 6 wherein said respective ends of said coil
sections are adjacent respective ones of said conductive lower side wall
portion and said second portion of said dome top, and wherein said
conductive center section of said dome top and said lower conductive
portion of said side wall are connected to said RF ground.
8. The reactor of claim 5 wherein said upper portion comprises the entire
dome top and said RF inductor coil is wound around the entirety of said
dome top.
9. The reactor of claim 1 wherein said RF inductor coil comprises a
helically wound conductor having a pair of ends and a middle, said coil
being divided into said two sections at said middle, and wherein said
middle comprises said first terminals and said pair of ends comprises said
second terminals.
10. The reactor of claim 9 wherein said helically wound conductor is wound
in a cylinder shape and wherein said two sections are mirror coils.
11. The reactor of claim 1 wherein said insulating upper portion comprises
a ceramic material.
12. The reactor of claim 11 wherein said ceramic material comprises
aluminum oxide.
13. The reactor of claim 1 further comprising a third coil section
connected at one end thereof to said RF ground at a second common tap
point with an end of one of said pair of coil sections, said third coil
section and said one of said pair of coil sections being wound in opposite
directions.
14. The reactor of claim 1 wherein said plural coil sections comprise pairs
of coil sections, a respective coil section being within two of said pairs
of coil sections, each pair of coil sections having a common tap to one
end of each coil section in the pair of coil sections, coil sections
within each of pair being wound in opposite directions, the common taps of
alternate ones of said pairs being connected to said RF power terminal and
the common taps of remaining ones of said pairs being connected to said RF
ground.
15. A plasma reactor comprising:
a vacuum chamber having a containment wall;
means for introducing a gas into said vacuum chamber;
an RF source;
an RF coil wound around a first portion of said containment wall and
comprising plural coil sections, at least two of said plural coil sections
being wound in opposite directions and having facing ends connected at a
first common tap to said RF source and their other ends connected to
ground.
16. The reactor of claim 15 further comprising a third coil section
connected at one end thereof to ground at a second common tap point with
an end of one of said pair of coil sections, said third coil section and
said one of said pair of coil sections being wound in opposite directions.
17. The reactor of claim 15 wherein said plural coil sections comprise
pairs of coil sections, a respective coil section being within two of said
pairs of coil sections, each pair of coil sections having a common tap to
one end of each coil section in the pair of coil sections, coil sections
within each of pair being wound in opposite directions, the common taps of
alternate ones of said pairs being connected to said RF source terminal
and the common taps of remaining ones of said pairs being connected to
ground.
18. The plasma reactor of claim 15 wherein there are two coil sections and
said coil is connected to said RF source in a mirror configuration.
19. The plasma reactor of claim 15 wherein said first portion of said
containment wall comprises a cylindrical side wall having a conductive
section thereof below said coil and a lid above said coil, said lid having
a conductive portion thereof spaced apart from said cylindrical side wall,
a remaining portion of said lid between said conductive portion and said
side wall being insulative.
20. The plasma reactor of claim 19 wherein said conductive portion of said
lid and said conductive section of said side wall are both connected to an
RF return node of said RF source.
21. The plasma reactor of claim 20 wherein said RF return node is a ground
node.
22. The plasma reactor of claim 15 wherein said first portion of said
containment wall comprises a dome-shaped lid, and another portion of said
containment wall comprises a conductive side wall.
23. The plasma reactor of claim 22 wherein said coil is wound as a conical
helix conforming with said dome-shaped lid, and wherein said coil being
connected in a mirror configuration to said RF source.
24. The plasma reactor of claim 23 wherein an upper one of said sections
has an end at the apex of said dome-shaped lid, said end being connected
to an RF return node of said RF source.
25. The plasma reactor of claim 22 wherein said dome-shaped lid is
comprised of insulative material.
26. The reactor of claim 24 wherein each section has a pair of ends, one
end being connected to said RF source and the other end connected to an RF
return node of said RF source.
27. The reactor of claim 26 wherein there are two of said sections, and
said RF coil comprises a helically wound conductor having a pair of ends
and a middle, said coil being divided into said two sections at said
middle, and wherein said middle is connected by a conductor to said RF
source and wherein said pair of ends are both connected to an RF return
node of said RF source.
28. A plasma reactor, comprising:
a vacuum chamber shell comprising two conductive shell sections and an
insulating shell section between said two conductive shell sections, said
two conductive shell sections being connected to a return conductive path;
means for introducing a processing gas into said vacuum chamber;
an RF coil antenna wound around said insulating shell section and having at
least two coil ends adjacent respective ones of said two conductive shell
sections, said two coil ends being connected to said return conductive
path so as to be at the same electrical potential as said two conductive
shell sections; and
an RF power source having a power terminal connected to said RF coil
antenna at a point intermediate said two coil ends and an RF return
terminal connected to said return conductive path;
wherein said RF coil antenna is wound in a first direction from one of said
two coil ends to said point intermediate said two coil ends and is wound
in an opposite direction from the other of said two coil ends to said
point intermediate said two coil ends.
29. The reactor of claim 28 wherein said return path is RF ground.
30. A plasma reactor, comprising:
a vacuum chamber shell comprising a conductive shell section and an
insulating shell section adjacent said conductive shell section, said
conductive shell section being connected to a return conductive path;
means for introducing a processing gas into said chamber;
an RF coil antenna wound around said insulating shell section and having
two coil ends, one of said two coil ends being adjacent said conductive
shell section, said two coil ends being connected to said return
conductive path so that said one coil end is at the same electrical
potential as said conductive shell section; and
an RF power source having a power terminal connected to said RF coil
antenna at a point intermediate said two coil ends and an RF return
terminal connected to said return conductive path;
wherein said RF coil antenna is wound in a first direction from one of said
two coil ends to said point intermediate said two coil ends and is wound
in an opposite direction from the other of said two coil ends to said
point intermediate said two coil ends.
31. The reactor of claim 30 wherein said return path is RF ground. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Technical Field
The invention is related to plasma reactors for processing semiconductor
wafers of the type having a vacuum chamber, an inductive RF coil wound
around the upper portion of the chamber and a wafer pedestal which may be
capacitively RF powered.
2. Background Art
An inductively coupled RF plasma reactor for processing semiconductor
wafers generally includes a vacuum chamber, an inductive RF coil wound
around the upper portion of the chamber, a gas supply inlet for furnishing
gas to the chamber interior and a wafer pedestal which may be capacitively
RF powered. One example is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,458 to Ogle.
The upper portion of the chamber including the chamber top has a certain
area made of insulator material so that RF power from the RF coil can
inductively couple into the plasma inside the chamber. The upper portion
of the vacuum chamber may be a cylinder while the top may be a flat disk.
The cylinder is an insulator with the inductive RF coil wound around it.
The flat top of the chamber may be a conductor.
FIG. 1A illustrates a top portion of a plasma reactor of the type disclosed
in European Patent Document No. 0 520 519 A1 and in European Patent
Document No. 0 552 491 A1, the disclosures of which are incorporated
herein by reference. The plasma reactor of FIG. 1A has a generally
cylindrical vacuum chamber 10, a gas inlet 11 on top of the chamber 10 for
supplying a gas into the chamber interior from which a plasma is to be
ignited, a cylindrical RF coil 12 wound around the exterior of the
cylindrical chamber 10, a grounded top conducting lid 14 immediately above
the coil 12 and a grounded side wall 16 immediately below the coil 12. The
cylindrical RF coil 12 provides RF energy to generate a high density
plasma inside the chamber 10 by inductive coupling while the conductive
lid 14 is grounded to assure a grounding path for bias RF power (17)
applied to a pedestal 18 supporting a semiconductor wafer 20 at the bottom
of the chamber 10. One end 12a of the cylindrical coil 12 (e.g., the end
nearest the lid) is "hot" because it is connected to the output of an RF
source 22, while the opposite end is grounded. In FIG. 6 and FIG. 8 of
European Patent Document No. 0 552 491, the coil may be a single section
tapped near its center to the RF source.
FIG. 1B illustrates a recent variation from the apparatus of FIG. 1A in
which the ceiling 14 is an insulator and both the ceiling 14 and the RF
coil 12 have a dome shape, the RF coil 12 being wound in a conical helix
to conform with the ceiling 14, as shown in FIG. 1C.
One problem with such a plasma reactor is that the close proximity of the
grounded lid 14 to the "hot" end of the cylindrical coil 12 of FIG. 1A or
conical helix coil 12 of FIG. 1B permits significant dissipation of the RF
power from the coil 12 to the grounded lid 14. Alternatively, if the
bottom end of the coil 12 is "hot" and the top end is grounded, then RF
power is dissipated from the coil 12 to the grounded side wall 16. As a
result, the required RF power level for the cylindrical coil 12 is on the
order of 2 to 3 watts, which is comparatively high. Because of the need to
ground the lid 14 above the coil 12 and the side wall 16 below the coil
12, such RF power dissipation from the coil 12 has seemed to be
unavoidable.
The problem with the inductive RF coil having one end grounded and one end
RF powered is that the RF peak-to-peak potential within the coil is very
high and this causes strong capacitive coupling of RF power into the
plasma. The high electric potential also causes a significant sputtering
of chamber interior surfaces. Such sputtering is undesireable because it
produces contamination harmful to the processing of the wafer.
The RF potential within the coil also affects capacitive coupling of RF
power from the coil to the wafer pedestal through the semiconductor wafer
being processed. A high RF potential may cause a high plasma potential so
as to increase the rate of physical sputtering of the wafer being
processed. It is desired to control the sputtering rate of the wafer being
processed by the RF bias power applied to the wafer pedestal. However,
such control is distorted to a certain extent by the high capacitive
coupling from the RF coil. As employed herein, the term sputtering of the
wafer refers to the removal of material from the wafer through the kinetic
energy of heavy ions in the plasma colliding with the material being
removed. This is different from the removal of material from the wafer by
etching. Etching involves a chemical reaction between the material being
removed and chemical species in the plasma and is not primarily dependent
upon kinetic energy of ions or radicals in the plasma. Sputtering can have
beneficial uses in an etch process. For example, in etching a metal such
as aluminum, alloy impurities in the aluminum (such as copper) etch very
slowly relative to the aluminum and are best removed at the same rate as
the aluminum by sputtering. This requires that the RF potential of the
wafer pedestal be set to a level such that the sputtering rate of the
copper impurity is about the same as the ethc rate of the aluminum, in
this example.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Capacitive coupling from the RF coil and RF power dissipation are
advantageously reduced in the present invention by employing plural coil
sections, with each coil section being connected across an RF source and
being arranged so that current flow in adjacent coil sections creates
magnetic fields having the same direction. Preferably, this is
accomplished by winding adjacent coil sections in opposing directions
while tapping the adjacent coil sections to a common point which is either
the RF source or ground. Capacitive coupling and RF power dissipation is
further reduced by employing a top lid having an outer insulating annulus
and an inner conducting disk portion, the conducting disk portion being
displaced or spaced apart from the coil by the width of the annulus. This
displacement significantly reduces the RF power dissipation or coupling
from the top winding of the coil to the lid.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1A is a simplified drawing of a portion of the plasma reactor of the
prior art.
FIG. 1B is a simplified drawing of a portion of a plasma reactor in
accordance with a recent development having a dome ceiling and conically
helical RF coil on the ceiling.
FIG. 1C illustrates the RF coil of FIG. 1B.
FIG. 2A is a simplified drawing of a portion of a plasma reactor embodying
the present invention.
FIG. 2B illustrates an embodiment corresponding to FIG. 2A but having a
dome-shaped lid and RF coil wound thereabout.
FIG. 2C illustrates the RF coil of FIG. 2B.
FIG. 2D illustrates a variation of the embodiment of FIG. 2B
FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram of a mirror coil employed in the plasma reactor
of FIG. 2A.
FIG. 4 is a detailed drawing of a preferred implementation of a conducting
lid embodying one aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of a three-section coil in accordance with
another embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 6A is a graph illustrating the time domain waveform of the RF signal
on the conventional RF coil of FIG. 1C and the induced capacitive RF
current on the wafer pedestal prior to plasma ignition.
FIG. 6B is a graph illustrating the time domain waveform of the RF signal
on the mirror RF coil of FIG. 2C and the induced capacitive RF current on
the wafer pedestal prior to plasma ignition.
FIG. 7A is a graph illustrating the time domain waveform of the RF signal
on the conventional RF coil of FIG. 1C and the induced RF current on the
wafer pedestal following plasma ignition.
FIG. 7B is a graph illustrating the time domain waveform of the RF signal
on the mirror RF coil of FIG. 2B and the induced RF current on the wafer
pedestal following plasma ignition.
FIG. 8 is a graph comparing the ion current density obtained with
conventional RF coil of FIG. 1C with the ion current density obtained with
the mirror RF coil of FIG. 2C as a function of RF power on the coil.
FIG. 9 is a graph comparing oxide sputtering rates obtained with the
conventional RF coil of FIG. 1C with the oxide sputtering rates obtained
with the mirror RF coil of FIG. 2C as a function of RF power on the coil
in an Ar plasma at 600 watts RF bias power on the wafer pedestal.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 2A, RF power dissipation is advantageously reduced by a
top lid 24 having an outer insulating annulus 26 and an inner conducting
disk portion 28, the conducting disk portion 28 being displaced or spaced
apart from the coil 12 by the width W of the annulus 26. This displacement
reduces the RF power dissipation or coupling from the top winding of the
coil 12 to the lid 24, particularly where the top end 12a of the coil is
connected to the RF source 22.
RF power dissipation is further reduced by grounding the top and bottom
ends 12a, 12b of the coil 12 and connecting the RF power source to the
middle 12c of the coil in a mirror configuration, as indicated in FIG. 2A
and as shown more clearly in the circuit diagram of FIG. 3. In this way,
the "hot" portion of the coil 12 is neither adjacent the grounded
conductive portion 28 of the lid 24 nor the grounded lower-most portion of
the side wall 16, so that RF power dissipation is reduced accordingly.
FIG. 2B illustrates how the concept of FIG. 2A is applied to the
dome-ceiling plasma reactor of FIG. 1B. As in FIG. 1B, the ceiling 14 is
an insulator. As in the embodiment of FIG. 2A, in FIG. 2B the RF power is
applied to the middle winding of the coil 12, while the two ends are
grounded, as illustrated schematically in FIG. 2C. In many cases, this
feature tends to advantageously reduce capacitive coupling to the
conductive cylindrical side wall 16. Moreover, in many cases grounding the
apex of the dome-shaped RF coil 12 of FIG. 2B in the manner illustrated
tends to reduce capacitive coupling of the electric field between the coil
and the wafer, thereby advantageously increasing inductive coupling. FIG.
2D illustrates how the embodiment of FIG. 2B may be modified by replacing
the center of the dome 14 with the flat conductive ceiling 28 of FIG. 2A,
the coil 12 having an opening therein over the center so that no coil
windings overlie the conductive ceiling 28.
In a preferred implementation of the embodiment of FIG. 2A, the coil 12 has
five windings and the power source 22 applies an RF signal of 2.0 MHz to
the middle winding 12c of the coil 12, as disclosed in the
above-referenced European Patent Document. Furthermore, all of the
operating parameters are as disclosed in detail in the above-referenced
European Patent Document and need not be reiterated herein.
In a preferred implementation, the plasma reactor of FIG. 2A processes
8-inch diameter semiconductor wafers, the cylindrical reactor chamber 10
has a diameter of about 14 inches, the conductive disk portion 28 has a
diameter of about 8 inches so that the width W of the insulating annulus
26 is about 6 inches. The insulating annulus 26 is preferably made of a
ceramic such as aluminum oxide or quartz while the conductive disk portion
28 and the conductive side walls 16 are made of anodized aluminum. The
coil 12 is wound around an insulating cylindrical side wall portion 30
disposed between the lid 24 and the conductive lower portion of the side
wall 16. The vertical height of the insulating cylindrical side wall
portion 30 is about 3.75 inches. The insulating side wall portion is
preferably made of aluminum oxide or quartz.
FIG. 4 illustrates a preferred design of the lid 24 of FIG. 2A. The gas
inlet 11 extends through an axial hole in the center of the conductive
disk portion 28 of the lid into a gas distribution manifold of which the
conductive disk portion 28 is the ceiling. The conductive disk portion 28
is seated on an annular ridge of the insulating annulus 26.
While FIG. 3 illustrates an embodiment in which the coil 12 constitutes two
groups of coils connected in parallel to the RF source 22, RF power can be
delivered to n groups of inductive coils, where n is an integer greater
than 1. Each group of coils has a certain number of turns, which number
may not be the same from group to group. For example, FIG. 5 illustrates a
coil for n=3 to be used in place of the coil 12 of FIG. 1A. An advantage
of having more than one group of coils in the coil 12 is that capacitive
coupling to the plasma is significantly reduced for a given applied RF
power level as compared to a single inductive coil configuration. For
example, the single inductive coil configuration (corresponding to FIG.
1A) with seven coil turns was observed to have a voltage drop across the
coil of 6 kV RMS for an applied power level of 2 kW, with the capacitor
C.sub.1 having 2000 picoFarads capacitance and the capacitor C.sub.2
having 275 picoFarads capacitance. In contrast, at the same applied RF
power level (2 kW), the mirror coil of FIGS. 2 and 3 (n=2) with three coil
turns in each of the two groups exhibited a voltage drop of only 3 kV RMS
and 2 kV RMS, respectively.
As stated above with reference to FIG. 3, the RF inductive coil 12 is
preferably separated into n parallel plural coil sections, where n is an
integer greater than 1 (e.g., 2, 3, 4, . . . etc.) as illustrated in FIGS.
2C, 3 and 5. If the RF coil 12 has a cylindrical shape, the n coil
sections are mirror images of one another. In all cases it is preferable
that the n coil sections are wound such that current in all sections
rotates in the same direction so as to produce magnetic fields having the
same direction so as to reinforce each other in inductively coupling RF
power to the plasma. Preferably, this is accomplished whenever adjacent
coils are connected to a common tap point (i.e., the RF source) by winding
adjacent coil sections in opposite directions, as in FIGS. 2C, 3 and 5.
Referring to FIG. 3 for example, current flow through the upper coil
section from the common tap point 12c to the coil end 12a is upward while
current flow is downward through the lower coil section from the common
tap point 12c to coil end 12b. However, rotation of the current through
the coil loops is in the same rotational direction in both sections
because the two coil sections are wound in opposite directions. Thus, the
magnetic fields produced by both coil sections have the same polarity and
reinforce each other.
Referring to FIG. 5 in which there are three coil sections labelled "A",
"B" and "C" for the case n=3, the upper two coil sections "A" and "B"
correspond to the two coil sections of FIG. 3, consisting of coiled
conductors wound in opposite rotational directions. The lower coil section
in FIG. 5 labelled "C" adjacent the coil section "B" is wound in the
rotational direction of coil section "A" and is connected between the
grounded lower end of coil section "B" and the common tap between coil
sections "A" and "B" to which the RF source is connected.
In general, for n>2, the plural coil sections are grouped by pairs of coil
sections, each coil section being within two adjacent pairs of coil
sections, each pair of coil sections having a common tap to one end of
each coil section in the pair, coil sections within each of pair being
wound in opposite directions, the common taps of alternate ones of the
pairs being connected to the RF power terminal and the common taps of
remaining ones of the pairs being connected to RF ground. Thus, for
example, in FIG. 5, the coil sections labelled "A" and "B" are one pair
having a common tap connected to the RF source, the coil sections labelled
"B" and "C" are a second pair having a common tap connected to RF ground,
the coil sections in each pair being wound in opposite rotational
directions.
FIGS. 6A and 6B indicate the induced AC voltage (waveform "A" ) and current
(waveform "B" ) on the cathode or wafer pedestal in the absence of a
plasma by the conventional and mirror coils, respectively, under the
following conditions: chamber pressure is pumped down to the desired or
baseline operating pressure, there is no gas flow and there is no plasma.
The AC current induced on the wafer pedestal (an indicia of capacitive
coupling) by the mirror coil (FIG. 6B) is lower than the AC current
induced by the conventional coil (FIG. 6A). However, the absolute value is
too small to measure.
FIGS. 7A and 7B indicate the AC voltage (waveform "A" ) and current
(waveform "B" ) induced on the wafer pedestal by a conventional coil and
the mirror coil, respectively, with Argon gas present in the vacuum
chamber and the plasma ignited. The AC current induced on the wafer
pedestal by the mirror coil is about 15% less than that induced by the
conventional coil, indicating less capacitive coupling with the mirror
coil. This is a significant advantage because less capacitive coupling
from the mirror coil means that more RF energy is being coupled
inductively to generate a plasma with greater density, and the user is
better able to control or reduce the ion energy or sputtering rate by
varying RF power on the the wafer pedestal. The AC current measured during
such tests may not necessarily arise from capacitive coupling alone, but
may arise from a mixture of both capacitive and inductive coupling.
FIG. 8 compares the ion current densities with respect to the RF power
obtained from a conventional RF coil with that obtained from a mirror
coil. The curve labelled "A" and having diamond markers represents
measurements at the edge of a conventional coil. The curve labelled "B"
and having black solid square markers represents measurements in the
center of the mirror coil. The curve labelled "C" and having triangle
markers represents measurements at the edge of the conventional coil. The
curve labelled "D" and having white square markers represents measurements
at the edge of the mirror coil. There is no noticeable difference in these
measurements between the mirror coil and the conventional coil, due to
large random variations. Both the conventional coil and the mirror coil
are of cylindrical shapes in this comparison.
FIG. 9 compares the oxide sputtering rate in an Argon plasma as a function
of RF power obtained from a conventional RF coil with that obtained from a
mirror coil. The curves labelled "A" and "C" with diamond and triangle
markers respectively represent measurements from two different tests of
the mirror coil. The curve labelled "B" with the square markers represents
measurements on a conventional coil. As in the comparison of FIG. 8, there
is no noticeable difference due to large random variations. In the test of
FIG. 9, a 600 Watt RF bias signal was applied to the wafer pedestal. The
sputtering rate predominantly depends upon the RF bias power applied to
the wafer pedestal, not the RF power capacitively coupled from the RF
coil. Such capacitive coupling should be significantly reduced in the
mirror coil, a significant advantage as explained above.
The foregoing comparisons involved only the mirror coil embodiment of the
invention, in which n=2. However, it should be noted that for all other
embodiments of the invention, in which n>2, these advantages generally are
more pronounced because there is an even greater division of the potential
in the coil.
Another advantage realized in the present invention relates to the
sputtering of materials from the chamber interior surfaces. It is very
common to operate the source RF power at a very high level (e.g., 2-3 kW
with 5 kV to 6 kV peak-to-peak voltage). At such high voltage levels, the
plasma tends to sputter the chamber materials at significant sputtering
rates. However, the mirror coil or the plural section coil reduces the
peak-to-peak voltage. This reduces the chamber material sputtering rate,
thus reducing the rate of contamination of the wafer due to emanation of
particles from the sputtering of the chamber wall. This also minimizes
device damage on the wafer being processed resulting from such a high RF
potential.
While the invention has been described in detail by specific reference to
preferred embodiments, it is understood that variations and modifications
thereof may be made without departing from the true spirit and scope of
the invention.
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