Abstract
Matching of power delivery to nonlinear loads in plasma processing is a continuing challenge. Plasma reactors used in microelectronics fabrication are increasingly multi-frequency and/or pulsed, producing a non-linear and, in many cases, non-steady state electrical termination that can complicate efficient power coupling to the plasma. This is particularly the case for pulsed inductively coupled plasmas where the impedance of the plasma can significantly change during the start-up-transient and undergo an E–H (capacitive-to-inductive) transition. In this paper, we discuss the results from a computational investigation of the dynamics of power matching to pulsed inductively coupled plasmas (Ar/Cl2 mixtures of tens of mTorr pressure) using fixed component impedance matching networks and their consequences on plasma properties. In this investigation, we used set-point matching where the components of the matching network provide a best-case impedance match (relative to the characteristic impedance of the power supply) at a chosen time during the pulsed cycle. Matching impedance early during the pulse enables power to feed the E-mode, thereby emphasizing capacitive coupling and large excursions in the plasma potential. This early power coupling enables a more rapid ramp-up in plasma density while being mismatched during the H-mode later in the pulse. The early match also produces more energetic ion bombardment of surfaces. Matching late in the pulse diminishes power dissipated in the E-mode at the cost of also reducing the rate of increase in plasma density.
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