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Toward Real Time Monitoring of Wafer Temperature in Plasma Chamber through Surface Acoustic Wave Resonator and Mu-Negative Metamaterial Antenna
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Publication Year
2021-09-15
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Citation
IEEE Sensors Journal, Vol.21, pp.19863-19871
Keyword
Antennaplasma reactorreflection profileSAWtemperature sensorwafer surface temperature
Mesh Keyword
Driving frequenciesEmbedded interfaceFabricated sensorsMeasurement systemPassivation layerReal time monitoringSurface acoustic wave resonatorsSurface acoustic waves
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
InstrumentationElectrical and Electronic Engineering
Abstract
Surface acoustic wave (SAW)-based temperature sensors and wireless sensing systems were developed for real-time monitoring of the wafer surface temperature in a plasma chamber. A one-port SAW resonator was used for the temperature sensor because of its unique capabilities of 3less (wireless, batteryless, and chipless (no embedded interface electronics)). Three SAW sensors with different resonant frequencies of 380, 445, 475MHz were employed to distinguish individual sensor from the whole sensor units and prevent electromagnetic (EM) interference caused by a plasma driving frequency of 15.6 MHz in the plasma reactor. The changes of the reflection peaks in the measurement system were compared in three different cases. When the SAW sensor was connected to the antenna, the reflection peak corresponding to SAW resonant frequency was clearly observed in the reflection profile. When heat was applied to the SAW sensor by shining an infrared heater, only the reflection peak corresponding to the SAW resonant frequency was largely downshifted while the background reflection profile remained the same. High sensitivity and linearity were observed from the three sensors. The sensitivity increased on the same wafer surface as the center frequency of the sensor increased. A negligible change in the sensor resonance peak was observed when a plasma radiation was continuously illuminated on the sensor surface, indicating that the fabricated sensor with a Si3N4 passivation layer protects well against energetic X-ray and EM radiations. The sensor resonance peaks were not changed by a plasma driving frequency of 15.6 MHz that was applied between top and bottom plates.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32154
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/jsen.2021.3098785
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Type
Article
Funding
Manuscript received May 25, 2021; revised July 14, 2021; accepted July 18, 2021. Date of publication July 21, 2021; date of current version September 15, 2021. This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea under Grant 2019R1F1A1041432. The associate editor coordinating the review of this article and approving it for publication was Dr. Joseph Shor. (Corresponding author: Keekeun Lee.) The authors are with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Ajou University, Suwon 16499, South Korea (e-mail: keekeun@ajou.ac.kr). Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/JSEN.2021.3098785
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Park, Ikmo 박익모
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
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