| Literature DB >> 29189721 |
Erik Brachmann1, Marietta Seifert2, Steffen Oswald3, Siegfried B Menzel4, Thomas Gemming5.
Abstract
A highly efficient and reproducible cleaning procedure of piezoelectric substrates is essential in surface acoustic waves (SAW) technology to fabricate high-quality SAW devices, especially for new applications such SAW sensors wherein new materials for piezoelectric substrates and interdigital transducers are used. Therefore, the development and critical evaluation of cleaning procedures for each material system that is under consideration becomes crucial. Contaminants like particles or the presence of organic/inorganic material on the substrate can dramatically influence and alter the properties of the thin film substrate composite, such as wettability, film adhesion, film texture, and so on. In this article, focus is given to different cleaning processes like SC-1 and SC-2, UV-ozone treatment, as well as cleaning by first-contact polymer Opticlean, which are applied for removal of contaminants from the piezoelectric substrate Ca 3 TaGa 3 Si 2 O 14 . By means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, the presence of the most critical contaminants such as carbon, sodium, and iron removed through different cleaning procedures were studied and significant differences were observed between the outcomes of these procedures. Based on these results, a two-step cleaning process, combining SC-1 at a reduced temperature at 30 ∘ C instead of 80 ∘ C and a subsequent UV-ozone cleaning directly prior to deposition of the metallization, is suggested to achieve the lowest residual contamination level.Entities:
Keywords: CTGS; RCA clean; UV-ozone cleaning; XPS; cleaning procedures; surface contamination
Year: 2017 PMID: 29189721 PMCID: PMC5744308 DOI: 10.3390/ma10121373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Mean value of carbon concentration from residual hydrocarbon surface contamination after the respective cleaning procedure measured with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) (Al-source with neutralizer) on the CaTaGaSiO (CTGS) surface and on silicon reference. The red dashed line shows the mean carbon value of the unclean CTGS reference samples of about 17 at % C. The light red stripe indicates the corresponding standard deviation of 2.0 at %.
Figure 2Mean value of sodium concentration after the respective cleaning procedure measured with XPS (Al-source with neutralizer) on the CTGS surface and on Si reference. The red dashed line represents the mean sodium values of the unclean CTGS reference samples of about 0.14 at %. The light red stripe indicates the corresponding standard deviation of 0.04 at %. The inset shows the normalized Na1s spectra of one set of samples. The black dotted line marks the theoretical position of the Na1s peak.
Figure 3Mean value of iron concentration after the respective cleaning procedure measured with XPS (Al-source with neutralizer) on the CTGS surface. The red dashed line represents the mean iron values of the uncleaned CTGS reference samples of about 0.38 at %. The light red stripe indicates the corresponding standard deviation of 0.015 at %. For the Si reference, no Fe contamination was detected. The inset shows the normalized Fe2p spectra of one set of samples. The black dotted line marks the theoretical position of the Fe2p peak.
Figure 4Carbon concentration on the CTGS surface measured for one set of samples directly after the respective cleaning procedure and after 4 weeks of storage under ambient air. Measured with XPS (Al source with neutralizer).
Figure 5Normalized XPS signals of the elements which form the CTGS substrate (Ca, Ta, Ga, Si, O) and of carbon contamination measured after the various cleaning procedures. The dotted vertical lines serve as guide to visualize the similarity between the measured peaks.