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Science and technology of plasma activated direct wafer bonding

Posted on:1999-02-24Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of California, DavisCandidate:Roberds, Brian EdwardFull Text:PDF
GTID:1461390014973282Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation studied the kinetics of silicon direct wafer bonding with emphasis on low temperature bonding mechanisms. The project goals were to understand the topological requirements for initial bonding, develop a tensile test to measure the bond strength as a function of time and temperature and, using the kinetic information obtained, develop lower temperature methods of bonding. A reproducible surface metrology metric for bonding was best described by power spectral density derived from atomic force microscopy measurements. From the tensile strength kinetics study it was found that low annealing temperatures could be used to obtain strong bonds, but at the expense of longer annealing times. Three models were developed to describe the kinetics. A diffusion controlled model and a reaction rate controlled model were developed for the higher temperature regimes (T {dollar}>{dollar} 600{dollar}spcirc{dollar}C), and an electric field assisted oxidation model was proposed for the low temperature range. An in situ oxygen plasma treatment was used to further enhance the field-controlled mechanism which resulted in dramatic increases in the low temperature bonding kinetics. Multiple internal transmission Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (MIT-FTIR) was used to monitor species evolution at the bonded interface and a capacitance-voltage (CV) study was undertaken to investigate charge distribution and surface states resulting from plasma activation. A short, less than a minute, plasma exposure prior to contacting the wafers was found to obtain very strong bonds for hydrophobic silicon wafers at very low temperatures (100{dollar}spcirc{dollar}C). This novel bonding method may enable new technologies involving heterogeneous material systems or bonding partially fabricated devices to become realities.
Keywords/Search Tags:Bonding, Low temperature, Plasma, Kinetics
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