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Chemical vapor deposition

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DC plasma (violet) enhances the growth of carbon nanotubes in this laboratory-scale PECVD apparatus.
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DC plasma (violet) enhances the growth of carbon nanotubes in this laboratory-scale PECVD apparatus.

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) is a chemical process often used in the semiconductor industry for the deposition of thin films of various materials. In a typical CVD process the substrate is exposed to one or more volatile precursors, which react and/or decompose on the substrate surface to produce the desired deposit. Frequently, volatile byproducts are also produced, which are removed by gas flow through the reaction chamber.

CVD is widely used in the semiconductor industry, as part of the semiconductor device fabrication process, to deposit various films including: polycrystalline, amorphous, and epitaxial silicon, carbon fiber, filaments, carbon nanotubes, SiO2, silicon germanium, tungsten, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, titanium nitride, and various high-k dielectrics. The CVD process is also used to produce synthetic diamonds.

A number of forms of CVD are in wide use and are frequently referenced in the literature.

Silicon or silicon germanium

Common use in industry is the growth of additional layers of doped silicon on the polished sides of prime silicon wafers, before they are processed into semiconductor devices. This is typical of the power devices, such as those used in pacemakers, vending machine controllers, automobile computers, etc.

Commonly, this is accomplished by either single or batch wafer processing using CVD in an epitaxial reactor, which heats the wafers, etches the exposed face with hydrogen chloride gas, and then grows the epitaxial layers by flowing a gas mixture that contains silicon and a dopant over the wafer which is so hot that it glows. The gaseous molecules deposit on the face, if done properly, and extend the crystalline structure.

Manufacturing issues include control of the amount and uniformity of the deposition's resistivity and thickness, the cleanliness and purity of the surface and the chamber atmosphere, the prevention of the typically much more highly doped substrate wafer's diffusion of dopant to the new layers, imperfections of the growth process, and protecting the surfaces during the manufacture and handling.

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