Frontiers in Physics (Oct 2022)

Characterization of amorphous carbon films from 5 nm to 200 nm on single-side polished a-plane sapphire substrates by spectroscopic ellipsometry

  • Ziqing Li,
  • Ziqing Li,
  • Ziqing Li,
  • Changcai Cui,
  • Changcai Cui,
  • Xiaolong Zhou,
  • Subiao Bian,
  • Subiao Bian,
  • Subiao Bian,
  • Oriol Arteaga,
  • Oriol Arteaga,
  • Xipeng Xu,
  • Xipeng Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2022.968101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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In this work, a series of amorphous carbon films were deposited on a-plane sapphire substrates by magnetron sputtering with deposition time from 15 min to 8 h, in order to investigate the thickness and optical properties in the process of growth in a non-destructive way. They were characterized by using Mueller matrix spectroscopic ellipsometry together with topography profilometry and Raman spectroscopy. Two models of a Bruggeman effective medium approximation model and a single Cody-Lorentz oscillator model have been proposed to fit films thickness and optical constants from Ultraviolet (UV) to visible (210 nm–800 nm), and Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) has been used to verify the proposed model for thickness fitting results. The optical constants of the amorphous carbon film have been determined by fitting together all measurements in samples deposited for 2 h or more, with the film thickness being the only sample-independent parameter. The results show that the thickness from 5 nm to 200 nm can be characterized in a nondestructive way although there is a relatively large thickness error compared with the Transmission Electron Microscope results for thin films (d < 20 nm) when the deposition time is less than 2 h because of the nonuniform deposition in the beginning. The relative error between the TEM and Spectroscopic Ellipsometry results can be reduced to 1% after 4 h sample. That means spectroscopic ellipsometry can still provide an indicator for the trend of thickness growth.

Keywords