50th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 53, Number 14
Monday–Friday, November 17–21, 2008;
Dallas, Texas
Session TI1: Low Temperature Plasmas and Technology
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Room: Landmark A
Chair: Igor Kaganovich, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.DPP.TI1.1
Abstract: TI1.00001 : Permanent-magnet helicon sources and arrays: a new type of RF plasma
9:30 AM–10:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Francis F. Chen
(UCLA)
Among radiofrequency (rf) plasma sources used for materials
processing in industry, helicon sources are well known for their
high density but seldom used because they require a large dc
magnetic field, making the source larger, heavier, more complex,
and costlier than other available sources. Placing the plasma
inside an annular permanent magnet (PM) does not work because the
field lines carry the plasma into the wall before it can be
ejected towards a substrate. However, a ring magnet has a
stagnation point below which the field is weaker but almost
straight. Use of a ``low-field peak'' partly compensates for the
weak field by spacing a back plate so that the reflected wave
constructively interferes. Strong PM helicon discharges
were produced in a proof-of principle experiment.\footnote{F.F.
Chen and H. Torreblanca, Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 49, A81
(2007).}
The discharge tube was optimized using the HELIC
code,\footnote{D. Arnush, Phys. Plasmas 7, 3042 (2000).}
resulting in 2'' diam by 2'' high, with a three-turn m = 0
antenna at the bottom end. The NeFeB magnet is 3'' ID x 5'' OD by
1'' high. To cover large substrates, an 8-tube array was
constructed with 7'' between tubes. Array sources have three
problems: 1) the power must be distributed equally, 2) all tubes
cannot be the same distance from the matching circuit, and 3) the
transmission lines have to handle the voltage at startup and the
current in CW operation. These have been solved in the Medusa 2
experiment which is in a ``sweet spot'' in which the small
antennas have the right inductance for the rf system. With 3kW
total @ 13.56 MHz, at 7'' below the sources, the density
is $\sim $5 x 10$^{11}$ cm$^{-3}$ at 1.3 eV in 15 mTorr of argon,
uniform to 3{\%} over the area covered by the tubes. Possible
applications are to optical coating, roll-to-roll web processing,
flexible and OLED displays, solar cells, and ``smart windows''
with organic solar cells.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.DPP.TI1.1