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1.
The laser-induced backside wet etching (LIBWE) is an advanced laser processing method used for structuring transparent materials. LIBWE with nanosecond laser pulses has been successfully demonstrated for various materials, e.g. oxides (fused silica, sapphire) or fluorides (CaF2, MgF2), and applied for the fabrication of microstructures. In the present study, LIBWE of fused silica with mode-locked picosecond (tp = 10 ps) lasers at UV wavelengths (λ1 = 355 nm and λ2 = 266 nm) using a (pyrene) toluene solution was demonstrated for the first time. The influence of the experimental parameters, such as laser fluence, pulse number, and absorbing liquid, on the etch rate and the resulting surface morphology were investigated. The etch rate grew linearly with the laser fluence in the low and in the high fluence range with different slopes. Incubation at low pulse numbers as well as a nearly constant etch rate after a specific pulse number for example were observed. Additionally, the etch rate depended on the absorbing liquid used; whereas the higher absorption of the admixture of pyrene in the used toluene enhances the etch rate and decreases the threshold fluence. With a λ1 = 266 nm laser set-up, an exceptionally smooth surface in the etch pits was achieved. For both wavelengths (λ1 = 266 nm and λ2 = 355 nm), LIPSS (laser-induced periodic surface structures) formation was observed, especially at laser fluences near the thresholds of 170 and 120 mJ/cm2, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
The laser-induced backside etching of fused silica with gallium as highly absorbing backside absorber using pulsed infrared Nd:YAG laser radiation is demonstrated for the first time. The influence of the laser fluence, the pulse number, and the pulse length on the etch rate and the etched surface topography was studied. The comparable high threshold fluences of about 3 and 7 J/cm2 for 18 and 73 ns pulses, respectively, are caused by the high reflectivity of the fused silica-gallium interface and the high thermal conductivity of gallium. For the 18 and 73 ns long pulses the etch rate rises almost linearly with the laser fluence and reaches a value of 350 and 300 nm/pulse at a laser fluence of about 12 and 28 J/cm2, respectively. Incubation processes are almost absent because etching is already observed with the first laser pulse at all etch conditions and the etch rate is constant up to 30 pulses.The etched grooves are Gaussian-curved and show well-defined edges and a smooth bottom. The roughness measured by interference microscopy was 1.5 nm rms at an etch depth of 0.6 μm. The laser-induced backside etching with gallium is a promising approach for the industrial application of the backside etching technique with IR Nd:YAG laser.  相似文献   

3.
Laser-induced backside wet etching (LIBWE) is a promising process for microstructuring of rigid chemical resistant and inert transparent materials. LIBWE with nanosecond laser pulses has been successfully demonstrated in a number of studies. LIBWE in a time scale of femtosecond and picosecond pulse durations has been investigated only in a few studies and just on fused silica. In the present study LIBWE of fluorides (CaF2, MgF2) and sapphire with a mode-locked picosecond (t p=10 ps) laser at a UV wavelength of λ=355 nm using toluene as absorbing liquid has been demonstrated. The influence of the laser fluence and the pulse number on the etching rate and the achieved surface morphology was investigated. The etching rate grows linearly with the laser fluence in the low and high-fluence ranges with different slopes. The achieved etching rates for CaF2 and for sapphire were in the same range. Contrary to CaF2 and sapphire the etching rates of MgF2 were one magnitude less. For backside etching on sapphire at high fluences smooth surfaces and at low fluences ripples pattern were found, whereas fluoride surfaces showed a trend towards crack formation.  相似文献   

4.
Spectroscopic measurements in the UV/VIS region show reduced transmission through laser-induced backside wet etching (LIBWE) of fused silica. Absorption coefficients of up to 105 cm−1 were calculated from the transmission measurements for a solid surface layer of about 50 nm. The temperatures near the interface caused by laser pulse absorption, which were analytically calculated using a new thermal model considering interface and liquid volume absorption, can reach 104 K at typical laser fluences. The high absorption coefficients and the extreme temperatures give evidence for an ablation-like process that is involved in the LIBWE process causing the etching of the modified near-surface region. The confinement of the ablation/etching process to the modified near-surface material region can account for the low etch rates observed in comparison to front-side ablation.  相似文献   

5.
Laser-induced backside etching of fused silica with gallium as highly absorbing liquid is demonstrated using pulsed infrared laser radiation. The influences of the laser fluence, the pulse number, and the pulse length on the etch rate and the etched surface topography were studied and the results are compared with these of excimer laser etching. The high reflectivity of the fused silica-gallium interface at IR wavelengths results in the measured high threshold fluences for etching of about 3 J/cm2 and 7 J/cm2 for 18 ns and 73 ns pulses, respectively. For both pulse lengths the etch rate rises almost linearly with laser fluence and reaches a value of 350 and 300 nm/pulse at a laser fluence of about 12 and 28 J/cm2, respectively. The etching process is almost free from incubation processes because etching with the first laser pulse and a constant etch rate were observed. The etched surfaces are well-defined with clear edges and a Gaussian-curved, smooth bottom. A roughness of about 1.5 nm rms was measured by AFM at an etch depth of 0.95 μm. The normalization of the etch rates with respect to the reflectivity and the pulse length results in similar etch rates and threshold fluence for the different pulse widths and wavelengths. It is concluded that etching is a thermal process including the laser heating, the materials melting, and the materials etching by mechanical forces. The backside etching of fused silica with IR-Nd:YAG laser can be a promising approach for the industrial usage of the backside etching of a wide range of materials. PACS 81.65.C; 81.05.J; 79.20.D; 61.80.B; 42.55.L  相似文献   

6.
Laser induced backside dry etching of transparent materials   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
  相似文献   

7.
The indirect laser processing approach (LIBWE) laser-induced backside wet etching allows defined microstructuring of transparent materials at low laser fluences with high quality. The optical and the thermal properties of the solid/liquid interface determine the temperatures and therefore the etching mechanism in conjunction with the dynamic processes at the interface due to the fast heating/cooling rates. The exploration of organic liquid solvents and solutions such as 0.5 M pyrene/toluene results in low etch rates (∼20 nm/pulse). By means of liquid metals as absorber here, demonstrated for gallium (Ga), etch rates up to 600 nm/pulse can be achieved. Regardless of the high etch rates a still smooth surface similar to etching with organic liquid solutions can be observed. A comparative study of the two kinds of absorbing liquids, organic and metallic, investigates the etch rates regarding the fluence and pulse quantity. Thereby, the effect of incubation processes as result of surface modification on the etching is discussed. In contrast to pyrene/toluene solution the metallic absorber cannot decompose and consequently no decomposition products can alter the solid/liquid interface to enhance the absorption for the laser radiation. Hence, incubation can be neglected in the case of the silica/gallium interface so that this system is a suitable model to investigate the primary processes of LIBWE. To prove the proposed thermal etch mechanism an analytical temperature model based on a solution of the heat equation is derived for laser absorption at the silica/gallium interface.  相似文献   

8.
A new method for laser etching of transparent materials with a low etch rate and a very good surface quality is demonstrated. It is based on the pulsed UV-laser backside irradiation of a transparent material that is covered with an adsorbed toluene layer. This layer absorbs the laser radiation causing the etching of the solid. The threshold fluence for etching of fused silica amounts to 0.7 J/cm2. The constant etch rate of about 1.3 nm/pulse that has been observed in a fluence interval from 2 to 5 J/cm2 is evidence of a saturated process. The limited thickness of the adsorbed layer causes the low etch rates and the rate saturation. The etched surface structures have well defined edges and low surface roughness values of down to 0.4 nm rms. PACS 81.65.Cf; 81.05.Kf; 79.20.Ds; 61.80.Ba; 42.55.Lt  相似文献   

9.
The laser-induced back-side wet etching of fused silica with aqueous solutions of pyranine (8-hydroxy-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulfonic acid trisodium salt) is reported. KrF and XeF excimer lasers were employed as light sources. Well-defined line-and-space and grid micropatterns, free of debris and microcracks, were obtained. Compared with other organic solutions, the aqueous pyranine etching medium etches more slowly but produces a higher quality etched surface. With the KrF laser, the etch rate ranged from 0.02 to 0.12 nm pulse-1, depending on the dye concentration and the fluence of the laser. The etch rate decreased dramatically when the XeF laser was employed, which was partially attributed to the lower absorption efficiency of the aqueous pyranine solution at the XeF laser wavelength. Received: 20 November 2001 / Accepted: 21 November 2001 / Published online: 2 May 2002  相似文献   

10.
The laser-induced backside dry etching (LIBDE) investigated in this study makes use of a thin metal film deposited at the backside of a transparent sample to achieve etching of the sample surface. For the time-resolved measurements at LIBDE fused silica samples coated with 125 nm tin were used and the reflected and the transmitted laser intensities were recorded with a temporal resolution of about 1 ns during the etching with a ∼30 ns KrF excimer laser pulse. The laser beam absorption as well as characteristic changes of the reflection of the target surface was calculated in dependence on the laser fluence in the range of 250-2500 mJ/cm2 and the pulse number from the temporal variations of the reflection and the transmission. The decrease of the time of a characteristic drop in the reflectivity, which can be explained by the ablation of the metal film, correlates with the developed thermal model. However, the very high absorption after the film ablation probably results in very high temperatures near the surface and presumably in the formation of an absorbing plasma. This plasma may contribute to the etching and the surface modification of the substrate. After the first pulse a remaining absorption of the sample was measured that can be discussed by the redeposition of portions of the ablated metal film or can come from the surface modification in the fused silica sample. These near-surface modifications permit laser etching with the second laser pulse, too.  相似文献   

11.
Laser induced backside dry etching method (LIBDE) was developed - analogously to the well-known laser induced backside wet etching (LIBWE) technique - for the micromachining of transparent materials. In this procedure, the absorbing liquid applied during LIBWE was replaced with solid metal layers. Fused silica plates were used as transparent targets. These were coated with 15-120 nm thick layers of different metals (silver, aluminium and copper). The absorbing films were irradiated by a nanosecond KrF excimer laser beam through the quartz plate. The applied fluence was varied in the 150-2000 mJ/cm2 range, while the irradiated area was between 0.35 and 3.6 mm2. At fluences above the threshold values, it was found that the metal layers were removed from the irradiated spots and the fused silica was etched at the same time. In our experiments, we investigated the dependence of the main parameters (etch rate and threshold) of LIBDE on the absorption of the different metal layers (silver, copper, aluminium), on the size of the irradiated area, on the film thickness and on the number of processing laser pulses.  相似文献   

12.
This paper describes the effect of the SF6 gas residence time on the morphology of silicon (1 0 0) samples etched in a reactive ion etching system. Profilometry and atomic force microscopy techniques were used to characterize the etching process focusing attention on the evolution of the surface morphology. Under the condition of variable pressure and gas flow rate, the decrease of the residence time leads to an increase of the silicon etch rate concomitantly with an increase of the surface roughness. Contrary fact is observed when the gas flow is fixed and the pressure is varied. Here, the increasing of residence time leads to a constant increase of silicon etch rate with small variations in final surface roughness. To better understanding this resident time effect, mass spectrometry analyses were realized during the discharge for both gas flow conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Laser-induced backside dry etching (LIBDE) is a promising technique for micro- and nanomachining of transparent materials. Although several experiments have already proved the suitability and effectiveness of the technique, there are several open questions concerning the etching mechanism and the concomitant processes. In this paper time-resolved light transmission investigations of etching process of fused silica are presented. 125 nm thick silver coating was irradiated through the carrying 1 mm thick fused silica plate by single pulses of a nanosecond KrF excimer laser. The applied fluences were 0.38, 0.71 and 1 J/cm2. During the etching process the irradiated spots were illuminated by an electronically delayed nitrogen laser pumped dye laser. The delay between the pump and probe pulses was varied in the range of 0 ns and 20 μs. It was found that the transmitted probe beam intensity strongly depends on the applied delays and fluences. Scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry of the etched surface showed the existence of silver droplets and fragments on the illuminated surfaces and silver atoms built into the treated surface layer influencing the transmission behavior of the studied samples.  相似文献   

14.
We propose a reactive ion etching (RIE) process of an L10-FePt film which is expected as one of the promising materials for the perpendicular magnetic recording media. The etching was carried out using an inductively coupled plasma (ICP) RIE system and an etching gas combination of CH4/O2/NH3 was employed. The L10-FePt films were deposited on (1 0 0)-oriented MgO substrates using a magnetron sputtering system. The etching masks of Ti were patterned on the FePt films lithographically. The etch rates of ∼16 and ∼0 nm/min were obtained for the FePt film and the Ti mask, respectively. The atomic force microscopy (AFM) analyses provided the average roughness (Ra) value of 0.95 nm for the etched FePt surface, that is, a very flat etched surface was obtained. Those results show that the highly selective RIE process of L10-FePt was successfully realized in the present study.  相似文献   

15.
为了研究静/动态刻蚀过程中熔石英表面质量和抗激光损伤性能的演变规律,优化化学刻蚀工艺,使用HF酸缓冲液对熔石英分别进行了不同时间的静/动态刻蚀处理。实验表明,由于兆声场辅助搅拌作用,熔石英动态刻蚀的刻蚀速率快于静态刻蚀。动态刻蚀后熔石英表面均方根(RMS)粗糙度和反射面形分别为 < 1 nm和0.46λ,其3倍频透射率先小幅增加后保持稳定,相比初始表面增加约0.1%。而静态刻蚀使得表面RMS粗糙度和反射面形分别增加至~5 nm和0.82λ,其3倍频透射率先基本不变后下降,相比初始表面下降约0.4%。二者损伤阈值呈现明显不同变化规律:静态刻蚀使熔石英损伤阈值先小幅增加约30%后逐渐降低,动态刻蚀使熔石英损伤阈值增加近一倍后保持相对稳定。结果表明,动态刻蚀后熔石英光学元件性能明显优于静态刻蚀。  相似文献   

16.
Laser-induced backside wet etching of fused silica using a solution of pyrene dissolved in halogenated and non-halogenated solvents is presented. A significant influence of the solvent used on the etch rate and the etched surface appearance was ascertained. The etching of uniform and smooth surfaces with rates of ∼0.1 nm/pulse for laser fluences below 500 mJ/cm2 is observed only for halogenated solvents. Furthermore, reduced threshold fluences, only small incubation effects, and a constant etch rate in dependence on the pulse number were found. The experimental data suggest an additional etch process at low laser fluences characterized by the very low etch rate and the smooth etching observed only with halogen-containing solvents. The generation of halogen radicals/compounds close to the heated surface due to the decomposition of the solvent causing the attack of the surface seems the most probable mechanism. PACS 81.65.Cf; 81.05.Kf; 79.20.Ds; 61.80.Ba; 42.55.Lt; 68.45.Da  相似文献   

17.
The effectiveness of the laser induced backside wet etching (LIBWE) of fused silica produced by subpicosecond (600 fs) and nanosecond (30 ns) KrF excimer laser pulses (248 nm) was studied. Fused silica plates were the transparent targets, and naphthalene-methyl-methacrylate (c = 0.85, 1.71 M) and pyrene-acetone (c = 0.4 M) solutions were used as liquid absorbents. We did not observe etching using 600 fs laser pulses, in contrast with the experiments at 30 ns, where etched holes were found. The threshold fluences of the LIBWE at nanosecond pulses were found to be in the range of 360-450 mJ cm−2 depending on the liquid absorbers and their concentrations. On the basis of the earlier results the LIBWE procedure can be explain by the thermal heating of the quartz target and the high-pressure bubble formation in the liquid. According to the theories, these bubbles hit and damage the fused silica surface. The pressure on the irradiated quartz can be derived from the snapshots of the originating and expanding bubbles recorded by fast photographic setup. We found that the bubble pressure at 460 mJ cm−2 fluence value was independent of the pulse duration (600 fs and 30 ns) using pyrene-acetone solution, while using naphthalene-methyl-methacrylate solutions this pressure was 4, 5 times higher at 30 ns pulses than it was at 600 fs pulses. According to the earlier studies, this result refers to that the pressure should be sufficiently high to remove a thin layer from the quartz surface using pyrene-acetone solution. These facts show that the thermal and chemical phenomena in addition to the mechanical effects also play important role in the LIBWE procedure.  相似文献   

18.
ICP power/RF power, operating pressure, and Cl2/BCl3 gas mixing ratio are altered to investigate the effect of input process parameters on the etch characteristics of GaN films. The etch selectivity of GaN over SiO2 and photoresist is studied. Although higher ICP/RF power can obtain higher GaN/photoresist etch selectivity, it can result in faceting of sidewall and weird sidewall profile due to photoresist mask erosion. Etch rates of GaN and SiO2 decrease with the increase of operating pressure, and etch selectivity of GaN over SiO2 increases with the increasing operating pressure at fixed ICP/RF power and mixture component. The highest etch selectivity of GaN over SiO2 is 7.92, and an almost vertical etch profile having an etch rate of GaN close to 845.3 nm/min can be achieved. The surface morphology and root-mean-square roughness of the etched GaN under different etching conditions are evaluated by atomic force microscopy. The plasma-induced damage of GaN is analyzed using photoluminescence (PL) measurements. The optimized etching process, used for mesa formation during the LED fabrication, is presented. The periodic pattern can be transferred into GaN using a combination of Cl2/BCl3 plasma chemistry and hard mask SiO2. Patterning of the sapphire substrate for fabricating LED with improved extraction efficiency is also possible using the same plasma chemistry.  相似文献   

19.
We characterized the surface defects in a-plane GaN, grown onto r-plane sapphire using a defect-selective etching (DSE) method. The surface morphology of etching pits in a-plane GaN was investigated by using different combination ratios of H3PO4 and H2SO4 etching media. Different local etching rates between smooth and defect-related surfaces caused variation of the etch pits made by a 1:3 ratio of H3PO4/H2SO4 etching solution. Analysis results of surface morphology and composition after etching by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) demonstrated that wet chemical etching conditions could show the differences in surface morphology and chemical bonding on the a-plane GaN surface. The etch pits density (EPD) was determined as 3.1 × 108 cm−2 by atom force microscopy (AFM).  相似文献   

20.
Laser-induced backside wet etching of fused-silica plates using an aqueous solution of naphthalene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid trisodium salt (Np(SO3Na)3) is reported. A KrF excimer laser was employed as a light source. The etch rate varied greatly with the concentration of the solution and the laser fluence. For lower concentration solutions, the etch rate increased linearly with laser fluence. For highly concentrated solutions, however, the etch rate increased abruptly at higher fluence. Well-defined line-and-space and grid micropatterns were fabricated using a low etch rate. The etched surface was as flat as the surface of the virgin plates and the etched pattern was free of debris and microcracks. The formation and propagation of shockwaves and bubbles in the solution during the etch process were monitored. High pressure, as well as the high temperature generated by the photothermal process, plays a key role in the etching process. Received: 8 April 2002 / Accepted: 12 April 2002 / Published online: 19 July 2002  相似文献   

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