location: Current position: Home >> Scientific Research >> Paper Publications

Electron bounce resonance heating in dual-frequency capacitively coupled oxygen discharges

Hits:

Indexed by:期刊论文

Date of Publication:2013-04-01

Journal:PLASMA SOURCES SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Included Journals:SCIE、EI、Scopus

Volume:22

Issue:2

ISSN No.:0963-0252

Abstract:The electron bounce resonance heating (BRH) in dual-frequency capacitively coupled plasmas operated in oxygen is studied by different experimental methods and a particle-in-cell/Monte Carlo collision (PIC/MCC) simulation, and compared with the electropositive argon discharge. In comparison with argon, the experimental results show that in an oxygen discharge the resonance peaks in positive-ion density and light intensity tend to occur at larger electrode gaps. Moreover, at electrode gaps L > 2.5 cm, the positive-ion (and electron) density and the light emission drop monotonically in the oxygen discharge upon increasing L, whereas they rise (after an initial drop) in the argon case. At resonance gap the electronegativity reaches its maximum due to the BRH. All these experimental observations are explained by PIC/MCC simulations, which show that in the oxygen discharge the bulk electric field becomes quite strong and is out of phase with the sheath field. Therefore, it retards the resonance electrons when traversing the bulk, resulting in a suppressed BRH. Both experiment and simulation results show that this effect becomes more pronounced at lower high-frequency power, when the discharge mode changes from electropositive to electronegative. In a pure oxygen discharge, the BRH is suppressed with increasing pressure and almost diminishes at 12 Pa. Finally, the driving frequency significantly affects the BRH, because it determines the phase relation between bulk electric field and sheath electric field.

Pre One:The effects of process conditions on the plasma characteristic in radio-frequency capacitively coupled SiH4/NH3/N-2 plasmas: Two-dimensional simulations

Next One:Modulation of continuous ion beams with low drift velocity by induced wakefield in background plasmas