A gasless ion plating process wherein plating material is melted, vaporized, and then subjected to an ionization environment in a low pressure chamber with a "virtual cathode" consisting of a plasma of ionized atoms of evaporant material created by evaporating in an rf field. It is a gasless ion plating process wherein the system ambient pressure prior to plating material evaporation may be much lower than that required to sustain a glow discharge, however, with vapor pressure of evaporant material added to the environment base pressure being such as to result in a plasma of ionized atoms of the plating material developing as the vaporized material approaches the rf cathode.
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1. A process for ion plating a substrate supported within a chamber with a plating material and in the absence of any inert gas inputted to said chamber, comprising the steps of: evacuating said chamber, vaporizing plating material in the evacuated chamber, developing a direct current negative bias on said substrate, and applying a radio frequency field from a first radio frequency source to the vaporized plating material within said chamber.
25. A process for ion plating a substrate supported within a chamber with a plating material comprising the steps of: evacuating said chamber; vaporizing plating material in the evacuated chamber at a pressure prior to evaporation lower than necessary to sustain a glow discharge, effecting a dc negative bias on said substrate, and applying a radio frequency field at the substrate to the vaporized plating material immediately adjacent the substrate within said chamber.
26. A process for plating a substrate supported within a chamber with a plating material comprising the steps of: evacuating said chamber, vaporizing said plating material in the evacuated chamber, developing a dc negative bias on said substrate, forming and maintaining an ionized plasma from the vaporized plating material in the absence of any inert gas inputted to said chamber; and applying a radio frequency field within said chamber to ion plate said material from said plasma onto said substrate.
28. Apparatus for plating a substrate with a plating material, including: a chamber adapted to hold said substrate and said plating material; means for evacuating said chamber; means for vaporizing said plating material in the evacuated chamber; means for applying radio frequency power to the vaporized plating material to form and maintain an ionized plasma therefrom in the absence of any inert gas inputted to said chamber; a radio frequency bias source means adapted to be connected to said substrate; and means for applying a dc negative bias to said substrate.
17. Apparatus for plating a substrate with a plating material including a chamber adapted to hold said substrate and said plating material, means for evacuating said chamber, means for vaporizing said plating material in the evacuated chamber, rf source means connected within the chamber to apply radio frequency signal power at said substrate creating an rf field at said substrate, said rf field creating means to ionize the plating material forming a plasma substantially surrounding the substrate, and external source means for inducing a D.C. negative bias on the substrate relative to the rest of the chamber.
16. A process for ion plating a substrate within a chamber with a plating material source inside of said chamber comprising the steps of evacuating said chamber, vaporizing said plating material, effecting a D.C. negative electrical potential to the substrate relative to the source of plating material and other portions of the chamber by applying a D.C. bias to the substrate, applying an rf signal to the substrate creating an rf field at the substrate wherein the rf field creates an ionized plasma from the vaporized plating material in the immediate vicinity of the substrate with the ionized plating material thus accelerated onto the substrate surface as a result of the negative electrical potential, for particular advantage in plating a conductive substrate.
2. The ion plating process of
3. The ion plating process of
source to said substrate. 4. The process of claim 3 1 wherein said radio frequency field applied within said chamber is at a frequency within the range of approximately 10 to 800 kilohertz, and said further radio frequency signal applied to the substrate is in the range of approximately 2 to 40 megahertz. 5. The process of claim 1, wherein the substrate is to be cleaned prior to plating, further comprising the preliminary steps of: evacuating said chamber; introducing an inert gas into said chamber; and applying a radio frequency field to an area within said chamber. 6. The process of claim 1, wherein the step of vaporizing is a result of the step of applying the radio frequency field. . A process for plating a substrate supported within a chamber with a plating material comprising the steps of: evacuating said chamber; vaporizing said plating material in the evacuated chamber; developing a direct current negative bias on said substrate; forming and maintaining an ionized plasma from the vaporized plating material in the absence of any inert gas inputted to said chamber; and applying a radio frequency field within said chamber to ion plate said material from said plasma onto said substrate. 8. The process of
9. Apparatus for plating a conductive substrate with a plating material, including: a chamber adapted to hold said substrate and said plating material; means for evacuating said chamber; means for vaporizing said plating material in the evacuated chamber; means for applying radio frequency power to the vaporized plating material to form and maintain an ionized plasma therefrom in the absence of any inert gas inputted to said chamber; a radio frequency bias source means connected to said substrate; and means for applying a direct current negative bias to said substrate.
10. The apparatus of
11. The apparatus of
12. The apparatus of
13. The apparatus of
14. The apparatus of
15. The apparatus of
18. The apparatus of
19. The apparatus of
20. The apparatus of
21. The apparatus of
22. The apparatus of
23. The apparatus of
27. The process of
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This invention relates in general to high particulate energy level ion plating deposition of plating material, and in particular, to gasless ion plating. Various high-rate ion plating sources advantageously suited to applicant's gasless ion plating process are disclosed in applicant's co-pending application entitled, "High Rate Ion Plating Source," Application Ser. No. 551,703, filed Feb. 21, 1975, , now U.S. Pat. No. 4,016,389. It is expressly understood that any other source may be utilized without departing from the principles of this invention. Feedthrough ring 11, along with bell jar 15 and base 16 supporting feedthrough ring 11, together, provide a closed, controlled-environment, enclosure. Substrate items 17, to be ion plated, are suspended by clamps 18 from the mounting arm 19 of mounting post 20, anchored in base 16. Evacuation line 21, with valve 22, is connected to opening 23 in base 16 for enclosure by an evacuation pump (not shown), connected through line 21, with the controlled environment bell jar enclosure. A gas supply line 24 with a metering control valve 25 is connected through opening 26 in base 16 for feeding a gas from a single gas source (not shown), or selected gases from a plurality of gas sources that valve-control feed the line 24. Radio frequency power supply 27 feeds power through hollow, tubular, copper lines 28 and 29, and on through conduits 12 and 13, to ion source 10. As noted above, the vaporizing source 10, shown as an RF source in FIGS. 1 and 2, may be other known vaporizing sources without departing from the principles of this invention. For example, conventional resistance heat element sources including filament devices and boat devices could be ulitized.
In operation, the system represented in FIG. 1 is first evacuated through evacuation line 21. Ratio frequency power is supplied to ion source 10 from supply 27 to create a plasma of evaporated and ionized deposition material, as described in the aforementioned application. If substrate 17 is an insulator, the well known DC self-bias effect that occurs when an insulator is placed in a radio frequency field, causes a negative self-bias to occur on the surface of the substrate 17. When plating a conductive substrate, it is necessary to induce a bias on the substrate from an external source. This is accomplished as shown in FIG. 2, where radio frequency power supply 30 is connected to substrate 31 through capacitor 32, and DC supply 33 provides a negative bias to substrate 31 through RF choke coil 34. In a typical plating operation, radio frequency power supply 27 was operated at a frequency of 450 kilohertz, and radio frequency power supply 30 supplied on RF signal of 13.5 megahertz. These frequencies are only illustrative, and may be adjustably varied to apply to specific applications for example, power supply 27 can be operated at a range of frequencies of approximately 10 to 800 kilohertz while power supply 30 may be operated in a range of frequencies of approximately 2-40 megahertz. As shown in FIG. 2, ion source 10 vaporizes plating material that then forms an ionized plasma 35, due to the action of the radio frequency field. Plasma 35, with its uniform density of ions and accompanying dark space, tends to follow the geometry of a negatively charged substrate 31, forming a "virtual cathode" for sputtering. The quality of the plasma allows for full, three-dimensional, coverage for even the most irregular surfaces--including the inside of small-diameter holes.
Classical ion plating requires that an inert gas (usually Argon) be bled into the chamber to maintain the plasma. Using a high rate ion source, such as manufactured by Endurex Corporation, Dallas, Tex., and described in the aforementioned co-pending patent application, the plasma is made up of the evaporant, itself, and no gas needs to be bled into the system in such a high rate system, with the vaporizing means being an RF source, such a high rate source could vaporize the plating material while simultaneously ionizing the evaporant. With this system, approximately 75% of the evaporant is ionized. With the system shown in FIG. 2, the radio frequency and direct current bias on substrate 31 helps shape the plasma "virtual" cathode in optimizing the deposition of metal plating materials and dielectric materials. The dark space is formed, substantially as in radio frequency sputtering, except that primary ions of the coating material, with high sticking probability--instead of Argon-sputtering ions--are accelerated across the dark space.
If it is desired to clean the substrate prior to plating, Argon gas may be admitted into the chamber through gas supply line 24, a radio frequency field applied to the appropriate area in the chamber as in typical sputter cleaning operations, and back sputtering can then be performed. Further, other gases could be admitted for controlled thermochemical, metalurgical, and/or physical process purposes, in intermediate plating process steps prior to, between, or after, gasless ion plating, in various compound ion plating processes.
With the above-described system, a wide variety of materials can be plated, including even paper, plastic, and textiles; and the materials may be either conductive or non-conductive. To prevent damage to temperature-sensitive substrates, a heat shield may be placed between the high temperature ion source and the substrate. The ionized plating material plasma moves around the shield to plate on the substrate.
Whereas this invention is herein illustrated and described with respect to several embodiments hereof, it should be realized that various changes may be made without departing from essential contributions to the art made by the teachings hereof.
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Jul 11 1983 | Illinois Tool Works Inc | White Engineering Corporation | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST | 004178 | /0499 |
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