Large-Area Sputtering Targets

23 Sep.,2024

 

Large-Area Sputtering Targets

Our sputtering targets meet production requirements for uniformity, reproducibility and homogeneity in glass, web, electronic, semiconductor, photovoltaic and display coatings. We offer a wide variety of precious and non-precious metal targets and customize precision alloy compositions to ensure thin film coatings with consistent phase content and refined grain size.

If you are looking for more details, kindly visit Acetron.

EXCEPTIONAL SPUTTERING TARGET ADVANTAGES

Materion's deep experience and extensive material control result in:

  • Unique designs and forms to reduce cost and increase uptime
  • Size and design customization up to 13.2 ft length (4 meters)
  • Fine-grained targets delivering uniform thin film coating
  • Ceramic and inorganic targets with customized chemistries
  • High-purity source materials with superior surface cleanliness

SPUTTERING TARGET TYPES

We offer specialty targets that address the mass production challenges of thin film coating of large surface areas for residential or architectural glass.

  • Large-Area Sputtering Targets are custom designed for optimal large area thin film coating coverage,
  • ME Grade® Sputtering Targets are magnetically enhanced to resolve challenges with ferromagnetic materials design,
  • Rotatable Sputtering Targets provide higher material utilization using cylindrical targets,
  • Proprietary CORA® material

MORE ON CORA

Our unique CORA material is a corrosion-resistant silver alloy sputtering target material used in the manufacture of OLED flat-panel screens, video and automotive displays, and transflective displays. This durable material comes in a range of target sizes with small grain, enhancing luminance and longevity of screen displays, delivering highly uniform film properties over large form factors, and increasing yield.

LEARN MORE

Please download our sputtering targets brochure to learn more and access greater technical detail.

Want more information on metal sputtering target? Feel free to contact us.

Frequently Asked Questions - Sputtering is a very flexible ...

The life of a sputter target is typically quantified in terms of units of power and time, like kilowatt/hours. For a target being sputtered at 500 watts for a total duty cycle of 100 hours that&#;s 50 kilowatt/hours. Target life is also a function of the sputter yield of the material or how many target atoms are ejected for each gas ion (typically argon) that strikes the surface. For example when an argon ion with a mass of 39.948, hits a light material, like carbon, with an atomic mass of 12.01, about 3 carbon atoms are ejected. For materials like platinum with an atomic mass of 195.09, nearly 5 argon ions have to strike the target to get one platinum atom out (Ref 1).

Other factors that affect sputter yield include the bias voltage used to accelerate the argon ion to the target surface and the incident angle of the collision. In addition, there are big differences in sputter yield for metals verses oxides. Typically oxides will last many more kilowatt/hours than metals like aluminum.

One of our resident thin film deposition experts, Rob Belan, recommends that a target be replaced when the trench depth of the race track is ¾ of the total target thickness. For a ¼&#; thick target there will be 0.062&#; of material remaining at the bottom of the trench. He adds that if you are particularly careful you may be able to sputter the trench to a thickness of 0.031&#;, but beyond that you are risking a complete burn through.

A handy online calculator for sputter yield can be found at TU Wein&#;s Institute fur Angewandte Physik. I&#;m not sure how accurate it is, but it does list out several single element metals and their yields:

https://www.iap.tuwien.ac.at/www/surface/sputteryield

For a list of sputter yields using other ions, such as xenon and neon, there is an expansive data base on the web site of the National Physical Laboratory. Their data base also includes sputter yields at various powers (Ref 2).

So to determine when it is time to change out a sputter target you will need to have a depth gauge, either digital or dial. Check the depth of the trench in the race track after every deposition until you get a feel for the number of kilowatt/hours it takes to thin the target out to 25% of its original thickness (Ref 3). For those looking for an in-situ, real time method for measuring target thickness during sputtering, check out the publication from Alex Leybovich of TOSOH SMD who used ultrasonic time of flight measurements to monitor the health of sputter targets and target bonding during thin film depositions (Ref 4).

References:

1. Argonne National Laboratory, &#;Noble Gas Sputtering Calculations using TRIM,&#; https://www.osti.gov/biblio/
2. National Physical Laboratory of the UK, http://www.npl.co.uk/science-technology/surface-and-nanoanalysis/services/sputter-yield-values
3. MSC Direct, https://www.mscdirect.com/browse/Measuring-Inspecting/Dimensional-Measuring-Tools/Depth-Gages/?navid=&cid=ppc-bing-New%20-%20Measuring%20%26%20Inspecting%20-%20Product%20-%20PPC%20-%20Exact_I4PUCfCI_depth%20gauge_be__c_&mkwid=I4PUCfCI|dc&pcrid=&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=New%20-%20Measuring%20%26%20Inspecting%20-%20Product%20-%20PPC%20-%20Exact&utm_term=depth%20gauge&utm_content=Depth%20Gages
4. In-situ real time sputtering source health monitoring using ultrasonics, Alex Leybovich, TOSOH SMD, Grove City, OH, , https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S?via%3Dihub

Category: Deposition Equipment

Sub-Category: Sputtering Targets

Related Topics: Sputtering, Process

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