The Plasma Physics of Processing Discharges

Abstract

Plasma processing has grown into a tremendously important industrial capability over the last 20 years, and has done so with virtually no input from traditional plasma physicists. Plasma processing is important in such areas as nanocircuit fabrication, diamond thin film deposition, superconducting film deposition, and nanocube production and deposition. Undoubtedly there are other users in the laboratory also. There are plasma modeling efforts going on in the major industrial users, and university plasma physicists are beginning to set up programs. This memo attempts to set out in fairly simple form as much of the basic theory of processing discharges as is possible given constraints of reasonable length and simplicity. One thing about plasma processing is that it is very much an interdisciplinary area involving (at least) plasma physics, surface physics, atomic and molecular physics, and chemistry. This memo involves mainly the plasma physics; it touches on the atomic physics and chemistry for fairly simple plasmas, and it regards surfaces as passive objects that absorb whatever is incident and (mostly) do not emit anything. Better plasma processing models must ultimately treat the surface as an active substance which itself affects the plasma.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 28, 1992
Accession Number
ADA247560

Entities

People

  • Wallace M. Manheimer

Organizations

  • United States Naval Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Charged Particles
  • Chemical Reactions
  • Chemistry
  • Collisions
  • Convection
  • Current Density
  • Electric Fields
  • Electromagnetic Fields
  • Electromagnetic Radiation
  • Electron Density
  • Electron Energy
  • Electrons
  • Energy Transfer
  • Kinetic Theory
  • Magnetic Fields
  • Materials
  • Particle Flux

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Academic Conference Management
  • Pulsed Power and Plasma Physics.
  • Systems Analysis and Design