67th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 59, Number 16
Sunday–Friday, November 2–7, 2014;
Raleigh, North Carolina
Session KW3: Electron-Molecule Collisions and Related Processes I
1:30 PM–3:00 PM,
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Room: State D
Chair: Leigh Hargreaves, California State University, Fullerton
Abstract ID: BAPS.2014.GEC.KW3.1
Abstract: KW3.00001 : Electron attachment to fluorocarbon radicals
1:30 PM–2:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Nicholas Shuman
(Air Force Research Laboratory)
Most plasma environments contain populations of short-lived species such as
radicals, the chemistry of which can have significant effects on the overall
chemistry of the system. However, few experimental measurements of the
kinetics of electron attachment to radicals exist due to the inherent
difficulties of working with transient species. Calculations from first
principles have been attempted, but are arduous and, because electron
attachment is so sensitive to the specifics of the potential surface, their
accuracy has not been established. Electron attachment to small fluorocarbon
radicals is particularly important, as the data are needed for predictive
modeling of plasma etching of semiconductor materials, a key process in the
industrial fabrication of microelectronics.
We have recently developed a novel flowing afterglow technique to measure
several types of otherwise difficult to study plasma processes, including
thermal electron attachment to radicals. Variable Electron and Neutral
Density Attachment Mass Spectrometry (VENDAMS) exploits dissociative
electron attachment in a weakly ionized plasma as a radical source. Here, we
apply VENDAMS to a series of halofluorocarbon precursors in order to measure
the kinetics of thermal electron attachment to fluorocarbon radicals.
Results are presented for CF$_{\mathrm{2}}$, CF$_{\mathrm{3}}$,
C$_{\mathrm{2}}$F$_{\mathrm{5}}$, C$_{\mathrm{2}}$F$_{\mathrm{3}}$,
1-C$_{\mathrm{3}}$F$_{\mathrm{7}}$, 2-C$_{\mathrm{3}}$F$_{\mathrm{7}}$, and
C$_{\mathrm{3}}$F$_{\mathrm{5}}$ from 300 K to 900 K. Both the magnitude and
the temperature dependences of rate coefficients as well as product
branching between associative and dissociative attachment are highly system
specific; however, thermal attachment to all species is inefficient, never
exceeding 5{\%} of the collision rate.
The data are analyzed using a recently developed kinetic modeling approach,
which uses extended Vogt-Wannier theory as a starting point, accounts for
dynamic effects such as coupling between the electron and nuclear motions
through empirically validated functional forms, and finally uses statistical
theory to determine the fate of the highly excited anion intermediate formed
during attachment. The kinetic modeling, along with complimentary data from
electron beam measurements, is used to extrapolate the electron attachment
rate coefficients to temperature and pressure regimes inaccessible to the
experiment, including to non-thermal plasma conditions most relevant to
plasma etching.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2014.GEC.KW3.1