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Download RA19 - Laser Lift-Off Techniques
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Optec Laser Micromachining - Technote RA19 www.optec.be Laser Lift-Off Techniques The term ‘Lift-Off’ has been applied to a wide variety of processes where layers are removed or transferred by interaction at the substrate/layer interface. In some cases that interaction involves a laser; an early example was the transfer of thin metallic films from one substrate to another by back irradiation of the first ; the most general and obvious requirement is that the first substrate be transparent to the laser beam. LLO today generally refers to the removal of the sapphire support on which GaN layers have been epitaxially grown for the rapidly expanding LED sector. Even very brief heating of the interface to >1000°C results in decomposition of the GaN into Ga,- a low melting point metal, and nitrogen which remains trapped at the interface. Early studies suggested heating of the part to above the m.p. of the Ga, but this is rarely necessary, though heating of the part during processing may be beneficial(see below). 1 2 GaN layer > sapphire > 3 GaN Ga N2 transfer substrate contact heterostructure 4 > > Ga remelt & debond > irradiate with short > pulse KrF excimer Beam patterning for direct generation of mesa-like structures > > Requirements of LLO • • • • • • > The LLO process is relatively insensitive to wavelength; it requires only that the sapphire be transparent and the GaN opaque,- i.e. absorbing. There are reports of successful LLO from 193nm to 1064nm. Excessive heating has to be avoided of the back-bond (usually has to be limited to 200-300°C) which is only a few µm from the lift-off interface. This in turn means that the pulse must be of short duration and correspondingly high peak energy density. However the above sharp transients imply a high temperature gradient, which can cause damage in the GaN bulk, complicated by the fact that the back-bond interface is rarely planar. Theoretical temperature simulations have been done; the problem is essentially one dimensional and the temporal profile of the laser pulse can be handled using Duhamel’s theorem, but the temperature dependent properties, and above all the abrupt singularity when lift-off occurs make this an intractable problem, so that required energy density is largely phenomenological. LLO is essentially a one-shot process. The threshold is very sharp, but because excessive heating has to be avoided, the process window, in terms of energy density, is rather narrow, and for this reason requires a large area, uniform intensity flat-top beam Lateral temperature gradients are to be avoided, and this also favours a large area flat top beam. For the above reasons, excimer laser with a short pulse, large area beam at low rep. rate, is a natural choice, with 248nm being the most common wavelength in use:• • • • • • • Required e.d. is in the range 0.4-0.8J/cm², it depends mainly on pulse duration, a little on sample composition. A 30ns duration needs >600mJ/cm² Parts are often warped, requiring efficient holding, and in larger wafer sizes where warp may exceed optical DOF, some means of part mapping or autofocus may be necessary. To minimize damage due to transients and temperature gradients, some workers have used background heating, though it is not universal Single device area is typically in the range 0.3-2mm, thus requiring on-target energies on the order of 1-30mJ The lower end of the device size range can be accessible to small compact lasers, with the advantage of shorter pulse duration. For devices of 1mm and above, a larger laser is required, but which may also allow processing of groups of 3,16,25 etc. device-sized areas at one time. LLO samples may be pre-or post etched; either way, accurate registration of the sharp spot edges with the etch or intended etch area is required, indicating high spec; X,Y stages. For efficient processing of wafers, firing on-the-fly with correct pulse synchronization is required. Optec LLO systems use large or small lasers, and offer high homogeneity beam, precision positioning, point to point, on-the-fly & raster modes, running under ProcessPower software Typical homogenized beam profile. ProcessPower for LLO R&D LLO system, in end test Optec; see also LAP2000 DataSheet.