process and processing
steps are quite similar to that of
the semiconductor industry. Deposition,
photolithography and etching steps
are common to both industries. The
key differences are that the TFT is
built on a glass substrate instead
of a silicon wafer. In addition, the
TFT requires a processing temperature
ranging from approximately 300 to
500?? compared to about 1,000??required
for semiconductor fabrication..
1. PECVD (Plasma Enhanced Chemical
Vapor Deposition) Process
Before gas enters the chamber, the state of the vacuum is maintained and the glass plate is heated to a specific temperature. When gas flows into the chamber, the RF voltage is applied from electrodes inside the chamber, which transform gas into a plasma state. From this plasma, precursors are formed and deposited on the glass substrate.
2. Sputtering Process
Sputtering is the process wherein the gas ion, which is the high energy inside the plasma created by RF power or DC power collides with the target surface, resulting in the deposition of the target material on the plate. Generally, the target materials are mounted on the negative electrode surface. Then, the sputtered target materials are deposited on the plate, which is put on the positive electrode. For sputtering, inactive gases are used, such as helium and argon, so that deposition material chemistry is not affected.
3. Photolithography Process
Photolithography is the transfer of
a pattern from the photo mask onto
a substrate. The photolithography
process begins when the substrate
is coated with an extremely thin liquid
film of photosensitive material, called
photoresis. The light then exposes
the photoresist, some of which is
destroyed when exposed to the light.
The unnecessary portion of the material
is then cleaned from the surface through
another process, leaving an extremely
fine pattern behind. Another layer
of the photoresist is then deposited
to the substrate, exposed, cleaned,
until all the layers have
been printed or imaged onto the surface.
The photolithography process is a
critical step within the LCD manufacturing
process because panel quality depends
on the entire pattern formation. As
such, it is extremely sensitive to
particles and other forms of contamination.
Thus, this process requires a special
clean environment, commonly referred
to as a clean room, and precise control
of equipment, chemicals and materials.
In the future, this will prove increasingly
important as advanced displays that
offer greater functionality and higher
performance will require increasingly
complex and stringent manufacturing
capabilities.
4. Dry etch Process
The dry etch process uses reactive
species, such as atoms or radicals
from the gas plasma, to etch away
a portion of the object material.
When these species react with the
material located on the plate, the
open region of material transforms
into a volatile state and is removed
from the matrix. In this process,
the reaction velocity is fast and
fine patterns can be formed uniformly.
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