[labnetwork] N2 pump purge source of chamber contamination?
Robert M. Hamilton
bob at eecs.berkeley.edu
Tue Jan 29 11:53:27 EST 2013
Vito Logiudice,
The UC Berkeley Marvell NanoLab supports a CVD diamond tool
made by sp3. It is CVD and not PECVD; however, I'll take a
stab at a way of ruling out your pump-stack as a source of
back-diffused N2.
It is unlikely N2 could back diffuse through a turbo-pumped
system from its foreline roughing pump. By chance, does this
turbopump use N2 as a bearing-purge, another source of N2?
If so, is the flow for this purge under control?
One way to rule out N2 from the pump stack would be to
substitute Ar as the pump-purge gas and do a run. If your
runs are long and a cylinder of Ar does not contain enough
gas (~6500 standard liters/cylinder) to support a full run
consider rental of a liquid Ar Dewar. Depending on the size
of your dry pump it likely uses 35-50 slpm of N2 purge and
the turbo bearing purge would be much less than the mech
pumps N2 purge gas consumption.
An RGA would be a terrific tool to review effects. Appended
is a graph from Edwards on the RGA analysis of the ratio of
residual gases from their turbos. Given the base pressure of
turbos and the throughput of your process gas the N2 partial
pressure should be nil:
* Edwards STP magnetically levitated turbomolecular pumps
Regards,
Bob Hamilton
Bob Hamilton
Marvel NanoLab
University of CA at Berkeley4
Rm 520 Sutardja Dai Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-1754
bob at eecs.berkeley.edu (e-mail preferred)
510-809-8600 510-325-7557 (mobile - emergencies)
On 1/28/2013 2:23 PM, Vito Logiudice wrote:
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> We are depositing single crystal diamond via PECVD in a
> newly purchased tool dedicated to this process. Initial
> deposition runs have revealed the presence of film defects
> caused by stray nitrogen. The system and process gas lines
> have been helium leak-tested. The load-locked process
> chamber is pumped down by a turbo pump backed by a
> nitrogen-purged dry pump (the process makes use of methane
> and hydrogen). We're wondering if the N2 purge on the
> roughing pump might somehow be contributing to the problem.
>
> I'd appreciate hearing the community's thoughts on the
> possibility of nitrogen back flow from an N2-purged
> roughing pump back to the process chamber.
>
> Many thanks,
> Vito
> --
>
> Vito Logiudice M.A.Sc., P.Eng.
>
> Director of Operations, Quantum NanoFab
>
> University of Waterloo
>
> 200 University Avenue West
>
> Waterloo, ON Canada N2L 3G1
>
> Tel: 1-519-888-4567 ext. 38703
>
> Email: vlogiudi at uwaterloo.ca <mailto:vlogiudi at uwaterloo.ca>
>
> Website: https://qncfab.uwaterloo.ca/
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> labnetwork mailing list
> labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu
> https://www-mtl.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo.cgi/labnetwork
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://mtl.mit.edu/pipermail/labnetwork/attachments/20130129/97eac935/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: stp3.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 6242 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://mtl.mit.edu/pipermail/labnetwork/attachments/20130129/97eac935/attachment.jpg>
More information about the labnetwork
mailing list