Abstract

Abstract Hydrogenated amorphous carbon (a-C:H) films are deposited from methane–argon and acetylene–argon gas mixtures in a microwave electron cyclotron resonance plasma reactor. The films deposited with the two different gas mixtures under similar input parameter conditions have substantially different properties, including deposition rate, mass density, optical absorption coefficient, refractive index, optical bandgap and hydrogen content. The deposition parameters varied include rf-induced dc substrate bias voltage (0 to −60 V), pressure (1–5 mTorr) and argon/hydrocarbon gas flow ratio (0–1.0). The discharge properties of the two different gas mixtures, including electron temperature, ion saturation current, and residual gas composition of the exit gas flow, are measured to help explain the different deposition results from the two different gas mixtures. The use of lower pressures is found to be critical for obtaining denser, lower hydrogen content films from acetylene. For the methane-deposited films the addition of argon to the discharge increased the film's mass density and lowered the hydrogen content. In both methane- and acetylene-based deposition processes the rf-induced bias is also a critical determining factor of film properties.

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