APPARATUS AND PROCESS FOR HIGH RATE DEPOSITION OF RUTILE TITANIUM DIOXIDE
CLAIM OF PRIORITY
The present application claims the benefit of the filing date of U.S. Patent
Application No. 60/508,871 filed October 7, 2003, U.S. Patent Application No.
60/508,877 filed October 7, 2003, and U.S. Patent Application No. 60/512,002 filed
October 17, 2003. Each of the above-identified applications is incorporated herein by
reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Multilayer optical coatings typically consist of alternating layers of materials
having high and low indices of refraction. In general it is advantageous to form a
multilayer coating from high and low index material where the ratio of the high index to
the low index is as large as possible. A multilayer coating formed from materials having
a larger index ratio may be formed with fewer layers to achieve the same optical
performance as a coating formed from materials having a lower index ratio.
Additionally, a multilayer coating having superior optical performance can be achieved
using an equal, or fewer, number of layers by replacing one high index material with
another high index material having a larger index. The economics of an optical coating
process will be determined by the number of layers required to provide a desired optical
result, the rate at which such layers can be deposited, and the surface area over which
those deposition rates can be achieved. Fewer layers, and therefore a thinner coating,
will also be beneficial due to such characteristics as lower stress and/or scatter compared
to thicker coatings.
Metal oxides have found wide use in optical coating applications because they are
durable and generally have good transmission in the visible spectrum. Titanium dioxide
(Ti02) has long been recognized as a potentially valuable high index material for optical
coating applications because it is durable, visually transparent, and has a higher index
than any other suitable metal oxide. However, the use of titanium dioxide has been
severely limited due to several manufacturing difficulties. The foremost difficulty results
from the fact that titanium dioxide has three naturally occurring crystalline phases: rutile,
anatase, and brookite. Under certain conditions it can also be deposited in a non-
crystalline, amorphous form. Of these various phases, the rutile phase has the highest,
and therefore most desirable, refractive index. Rutile titanium dioxide is birefringent,
with an average index of 2.75 at 550 nm and is the most thermodynamically stable phase.
A further problem exists in that even when rutile titanium dioxide is deposited, it is often
absorbing due to difficulties in oxidizing the film unless the deposition rate is so slow as
to be economically impractical.
Although the rutile phase is the most thermodynamically stable, it requires very
high energies to form rutile titanium dioxide directly during growth of the thin film. The
energy required can be supplied by the deposition process, by heating of the substrate, or
both. The phase diagram of deposited titanium dioxide as a function of substrate
temperature and deposition process has been published and is shown in Figure 1. With
reference to Figure 1, it is apparent that low energy deposition techniques require an
unpractically brigh substrate temperatures to achieve the deposition of rutile titanium
dioxide. Nearly all prior art methods for deposition of thin films of titanium dioxide
yield either amorphous, anatase, or a mix of anatase and rutile films. These results are
less desirable than obtaining titanium dioxide in substantially all rutile phase because the
refractive index of the anatase phase is substantially lower (n= 2.45 @ 550 nm) than that
of the rutile phase. Heating of the anatase or amorphous phases to temperatures above
approximately 500°C causes a phase change to rutile, however the phase change is often
accompanied by crystal growth that results in undesirable scatter properties in the film.
Deposition of mixed rutile and anatase films is particularly undesirable in that the index
of such mixtures is difficult to predict and control, leading to poor optical performance in
the coating.
Previous attempts to deposit rutile titanium dioxide have utilized techniques such
as heating the substrates to high temperatures, use of ion beam sputtering, or RF
sputtering. Heating the substrates to the temperature required to form rutile titanium
dioxide is often impractical in manufacturing, and in many cases the heat will physically
damage the substrates. RF sputtering and ion beam sputtering allow the formation of
films composed substantially of rutile titanium dioxide at temperatures less than 200°C,
however, the deposition rate is slow and thus economically impractical and, in the case of
ion beam sputtering, the area coated is small and thus economically impractical.
For these reasons use of titanium dioxide in optical coatings has been mostly
limited to deposition of the lower index anatase phase and applications where the
temperature at whic the film must perform is low.
The present invention in one aspect provides for the deposition of thin films of
titanium dioxide that are substantially composed of rutile titanium dioxide on one or
more substrates at higher rates, lower absorption, and lower temperatures than have been
heretofore possible. The coating process and system may provides for the deposition of
titanium dioxide in successive monolayers from a target operating primarily in the
metallic mode. The term "monolayer" as used herein means a layer of material that is no
more than one atom in thickness. Depositing a monolayer does not mean that the entire
surface on which the monolayer is deposited are covered by atoms of the deposited
material, but only that the material deposited is no more than one atom in thickness.
Each newly deposited monolayer is fully oxidized under conditions resulting in the
formation of rutile titanium dioxide before the next monolayer is deposited over the
previous layer. The deposition process is performed at moderate temperatures and at
rates that are significantly faster than those of other coating techniques.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to obviate many of the above
problems in the prior art and to provide a novel apparatus and process for high rate
deposition of thin films of rutile titanium dioxide. These and many other objects and
advantages of the present invention will be readily apparent to one skilled in the art to
which the invention pertains from a perusal of the claims, the appended drawings, and the
following detailed description of various embodiments.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figure 1 is a phase diagram for thin films of vacuum deposited titanium dioxide
taken from P. Lobl, Thin Solid Films 251, 72-79 (1994).
Figure 2 is a schematic representation of a coating system according to one aspect
of the present invention.
Figure 3 is an illustration of the measured compared to theoretical transmittance
vs. wavelength of a thin film formed according to one aspect of the present invention.
Figure 4 is an illustration of the measured compared to theoretical transmittance
vs. wavelength of a thin film formed according to another aspect of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION With reference to the drawings, like numerals represent like components
throughout the several drawings.
The present invention is directed to systems and processes for forming thin films
of titanium dioxide formed in substantially all rutile phase. In one aspect, the invention is
directed to reactive sputter coating systems and processes for forming thin films of rutile
titanium dioxide. The system includes a sputtering chamber having one or more coating
stations and a means for mounting and moving one or more substrates through the
coating stations. The system and process may include a batch coating process wherein
the mounting and moving means comprises a rotatable drum, table, disk, or other
transporting device of suitable geometry. A reactive coating system and process. suitable
for forming thin films of rutile titanium dioxide is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,849,162
to Bartolomei et.al., the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The sputtering chamber includes one or more coating stations. At least one
sputtering target is positioned in the coating station. In one aspect, the target comprises a
magnetron sputtering device. The target is operated at a power sufficient to create a
reactive atmosphere in the coating station and to plasma sputter titanium or an oxide of
titanium onto the substrates that are moved through the coating station on the mounting
and moving means.
A plasma generating device is also positioned in the coating station adjacent the
target. In one aspect, the plasma generating device comprises a microwave generator.
The plasma generator is operated at a power level for generating a plasma in the coating
station that interdiffuses with the plasma generated by the target to increase the area,
density, and reactivity of the reactive atmosphere in the coating station.
In one aspect, the present invention provides direct deposition of rutile titanium
dioxide films at relatively low substrate temperatures by providing energy to the growing
film in several forms. The energy is provided by a combination of the magnetron target
plasma and the plasma generated by the plasma generating device. The present invention
forms thin films of rutile titanium dioxide films that are essentially stochiometric as
formed. This is accomplished by introduction of oxygen into the adjacent plasma, and by
relatively rapid translation of the substrates into and out of close proximity to the target
surface in the coating station. On each successive pass by the target a monolayer of
titanium is deposited and then completely oxidized at energies sufficient to form rutile
titanium dioxide. This oxidation of the film is accomplished before the substrate passes
by the target once again and acquires a fresh layer of titanium metal.
In one embodiment, the adjacent plasma is of sufficient intensity to provide
significant quantities of monatomic oxygen. Exposing the deposited titanium to
monatomic oxygen permits the complete oxidation of the titanium being deposited
without having to operate the target(s) in a poisoned mode and suffer the resulting large
decrease in deposition rate. Previous attempts to deposit titanium dioxide at high rates
suffered from this inability to completely oxidize the film, with the result that the
deposited films were unacceptably absorbing. Without the adjacent plasma, the oxygen
available to react with the freshly deposited titanium metal on the substrate surface is
mainly diatomic in nature. To form titanium dioxide by reacting diatomic oxygen and
titanium requires a high activation energy. Due to the high activation energy, the
titanium is not completely oxidized.
In one aspect of the present invention, the plasma generating device provides a
plasma containing monatomic oxygen which reacts much more easily with the titanium
metal. Thus it is possible to completely oxidize the film and obviate the disadvantages of
forming absorbing films.
The provision of monatomic oxygen to the growing film is important for the rapid
and complete oxidation of the titanium atoms on the substrate surface, but it also has
another "benefit because it provides more energy to the growing film. This increased
energy is provided by the heat of reaction of the monatomic oxygen with the titanium
atoms, as compared to the lower heat of reaction that would be provided by reaction of
the titanium atom with diatomic, molecular oxygen. Reaction of a diatomic oxygen
molecule with a titanium atom requires at least formally that the oxygen molecule first be
split into monatomic oxygen. This is a highly endothermic reaction, and the necessary
energy for splitting the oxygen molecule is subtracted from the energy released by
reaction of the oxygen atom and the titanium atom, giving a lower net energy release for
the reaction of diatomic oxygen with titanium as compared to the reaction of monatomic
oxygen atoms with titanium.
It is often desirable to operate the titanium target(s) in a substantially metallic
mode so that material sputtered from the target consists primarily of titanium atoms. The
oxygen is introduced into the adjacent plasma to provide activated oxygen species that
fully oxidize the deposited titanium atoms. The energy released on oxidation of the
titanium atoms contributes to the energy necessary to from the titanium dioxide in the
rutile phase. Methods for control of the target oxidation state while maintaining a high
sputtering rate are disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,849,162.
In many situations it may be desirable to provide at least one additional coating
station equipped with targets that permit sputtering of materials other than titanium. By
alternating use of the coating stations, the present invention provides for the formation of
multilayer coatings in which at least one of the layers is composed of substantially rutile
titanium dioxide. It may also be desirable to provide more than one coating station
capable of sputtering titanium in order to increase the overall deposition rate of rutile
titanium dioxide on the substrates.
In one aspect of the present invention, balanced magnetrons are operated from an
a.c. power supply. The use of an a.c. power supply aids in the formation of rutile
titanium dioxide. In an a.c. sputtering system the power switches back and forth between
the two targets, with each target alternately acting as the cathode and then the anode in
the course of one cycle of power. At the frequencies used, the plasma decays
significantly when the power is switched between the two targets (a time on the order of a
few tens of microseconds), meaning that the plasma must be restruck over the target that
is operating as the cathode. This higher energy needed to restrike the plasma over the
target results in a higher electron temperature for the sputtering plasma, resulting in a
higher sheath voltage around the substrate as it passes through the plasma. This in turn
causes a higher energy ion bombardment of the substrate. This higher energy
bombardment facilitates both the oxidation of the titanium atoms deposited on the
substrate and the formation of the rutile titanium dioxide.
Other a.c. powered configurations and other power supplies may also be used to
provide the higher electron temperature in the plasma to aid the formation of rutile
titanium dioxide. Unbalanced a.c. magnetrons, as well as a pulsed d.c. magnetron, also
require restriking of the plasma over the target and thus provide the benefit of higher
electron temperatures in the plasma. The a.c. configurations also have the advantage that
each target functions alternately as the anode and then the cathode so that the targets are
kept clean of oxide buildup on their surface and the anode is never lost. In pulsed d.c.
systems, only one target is present and it is always the cathode, making it easier for
wandering anode problems to occur in the chamber. Other power supplies and target
configurations may be used, although with some loss of rate and film quality.
It will often be advantageous, in order to provide coating of many substrates
within one operation, to provide a system with relatively long sputtering targets, an
elongated plasma generator, and a substrate holder capable of holding a large number of
substrates.
It may also be desirable to provide a method for secondary movement of the
substrate(s) with respect to the transporting device to improve uniformity of deposition
on the substrate(s). For example, the substrate could be rotated about its center point,
translated across some aspect of the transporting device, or some combination of these
without departing from the current invention. U.S. Patent No. 6,485,646 discloses a
coating system wherein a secondary movement is provided to the substrates to improve
uniformity of the coating on the substrates and among an array of substrates.
The present invention provides a system and process for forming thin films of
rutile titanium dioxide with low absorption, at high rates, and low temperatures, the
combination of which has heretofore been unrealized using reactive sputtering systems.
Unlike ion beam sputtering, this process can be carried out on a relatively large
throughput of substrates. The combination of high deposition rates and multiple
substrates makes the current invention of great economic advantage in the manufacture of
articles with rutile titanium dioxide coatings, such as multilayer optical coatings. It also
makes titanium dioxide a usable coating material in applications where it would
previously have not been feasible.
Figure 2 is a schematic illustration of a reactive coating system according to one
aspect of the present invention. With reference to Figure 2, the coating system 100
includes a chamber 101 having two coating stations 103 and 105. The titanium cathode
pair 102 is positioned in coating station 103 and is powered from the a.c. power supply
106. The titanium cathode pair 104 is positioned in coating station 105 and is powered
by a.c. power supply 108. The a.c. power supplies may be operated at any suitable
frequency, but generally between 10 kHz and 100 kHz. The plasma generating device
110 is positioned in coating station 103 adjacent the cathode pair 102. The plasma
generating device 112 is positioned in coating station 105 adjacent the cathode pair 104.
The system may be operated by operating the targets and plasma generating devices in
one coating station or in both coating stations simultaneously. The drum 114 provides
the means for mounting and moving one or more substrates through the coating stations.
Oxygen is inlet into the chamber at the same port as the plasma generating devices
110, 112. This configuration may also provide for the secondary rotation of the
substrates, which rotation rate is independent of the drum rotation rate.
Example:
A coating system configured as shown in Figure 2 was used to form (i) an IRR
(Infrared Red Reflector) coating and (ii) an eleven layer SWP (short wave pass) coating.
The a.c. power supplies 106 and 108 were operated at 65 kHz and 40 kHz respectively.
The measured results for these two coatings, as compared to theoretical predictions is
shown in Figures 3 and 4 respectively. The theoretical curves were calculated assuming
the use of rutile titanium dioxide with an index of 2.7 @ 550 nm. The measured results
show coatings having rutile titanium dioxide with low absorption were formed using the
system and process shown in Figure 2. Measured rates show that the titanium dioxide
was deposited at a rate of 10 nm/min using one a.c. cathode pair, and at as rate of 20
nm min if both titanium cathode pairs were operated simultaneously. The coatings
exhibited an absorption with a k value of less than 10 x 10"4 after baking the substrates at
about 500°C for about one hour.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described, it is to
be understood that the embodiments described are illustrative only and that the scope of
the invention is to be defined solely by the appended claims when accorded a full range
of equivalence, many variations and modifications naturally occurring to those of skill in
the art from a perusal hereof.