Millisecond Flash Lamp Curing for Porosity Generation in Thin Films


Millisecond Flash Lamp Curing for Porosity Generation in Thin Films

Attallah, A. G.; Prucnal, S.; Butterling, M.; Hirschmann, E.; Koehler, N.; Schulz, S. E.; Wagner, A.; Liedke, M. O.

Flash lamp annealing (FLA) with millisecond pulse duration is reported as a novel curing method for pore precursors degradation in thin films. A case study on the curing of dielectric thin films is presented. FLA-cured films are being investigated by means of positron annihilation spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy in order to quantify the nm-scale porosity and post-treatment chemistry, respectively. Results from positron annihilation reveal the onset of formation of porous voids inside the samples at 6 ms flash treatment time. Moreover, parameter adjustment (flash duration and energy density) allows for identifying the optimum conditions of effective curing. Within such a systematic investigation, positron results indicate that FLA is able to decompose the porogen (pore precursors) and to generate interconnected (open porosity) or isolated pore networks with self-sealed pores in a controllable way. Furthermore, FTIR results demonstrate the structural evolution after FLA, that help for setting the optimal annealing conditions whereby only a residual amount of porogen remains and at the same time a well-densified matrix, and a hydrophobic porous structures are created. Raman spectroscopy suggests that the curing-induced self-sealing layer developed at the film surface is a graphene oxide-like layer, which could serve as the outside sealing of the pore network from intrusions.

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  • P-ELBE

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