Molecular Dynamics Study on the Role of Ar Ions in the Sputter Deposition of Al Thin Films
Tobias Gergs, Thomas Mussenbrock, Jan Trieschmann

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to investigate how Ar ions influence the sputter deposition process and properties of Al thin films, revealing the significant role of implanted Ar in surface stress and morphology.
Contribution
It compares the effects of Ar atoms in Al film deposition with and without considering implanted Ar, highlighting their impact on film stress and surface characteristics.
Findings
Implanted Ar forms outgassing clusters at energies above 100 eV.
Ar ions significantly influence surface stress and sputtering dynamics.
Neglecting Ar atoms alters the understanding of thin film properties.
Abstract
Molecular dynamics simulations are often used to study sputtering and thin film growth. Compressive stresses in these thin films are generally assumed to be caused by a combination of forward sputtered (peened) built-in particles and entrapped working gas atoms. While the former are assumed to hold a predominant role, the effect of the latter on the interaction dynamics as well as thin film properties are scarcely clarified (concurrent or causative). The inherent overlay of the ion bombardment induced processes render an isolation of their contribution impracticable. In this work, this issue is addressed by comparing the results of two case studies on the sputter deposition of Al thin films in Ar working gas. In the first run Ar atoms are fully retained. In the second run they are artificially neglected, as implanted Ar atoms are assumed to outgas anyhow and not alter the ongoing…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMetal and Thin Film Mechanics · Ion-surface interactions and analysis · Copper Interconnects and Reliability
