• Title/Summary/Keyword: LCVD

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Laser-induced chemical vapor deposition of micro patterns for TFT-LCD circuit repair (레이저 국소증착을 이용한 TFT-LCD 회로수정 패턴제조)

  • Park Jong-Bok;Jeong Sungho;Kim Chang-Jae;Park Sang-Hyuck;Shin Pyung-Eun;Kang Hyoung-Shik
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Precision Engineering Conference
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    • 2005.06a
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    • pp.657-662
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    • 2005
  • In this study, the deposition of micrometer-scale metallic interconnects on LCD glass for the repair of open-circuit type defects is investigated. Although there had been a few studies Since 1980 s for the deposition of metallic interconnects by laser-induced chemical vapor deposition, those studies mostly used continuous wave lasers. In this work, a third harmonic Nd:YLF laser (351nm) of high repetition rates, up to 10 KHz, was used as the illumination source and $W(CO)_6$ was selected as the precursor. General characteristics of the metal deposit (tungsten) such as height, width, morphology as well as electrical properties were examined for various process conditions. Height of the deposited tungsten lines ranged from 35 to 500 nm depending on laser power and scan speed while the width was controlled between $3\~50{\mu}$ using a slit placed in the beam path. The resistivity of the deposited tungsten lines was measured to be below 1 $O\cdot{\mu}m$, which is an acceptable value according to the manufacturing standard. The tungsten lines produced at high scan speed had good surface morphology with little particles around the patterns. Experimental results demonstrated that it is likely that the deposit forms through a hybrid process, namely through the combination of photolytic and pyrolytic mechanisms.

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Growth Characteristics of Micro Carbon Structures Fabricated by Laser-Assisted Chemical Vapor Deposition (레이저 국소증착법에 의한 탄소 미세 구조물의 제조시 성장특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Jin-Beom;Lee, Seon-Gyu;Lee, Jong-Hyeon;Jeong, Seong-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.19 no.7
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    • pp.106-115
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    • 2002
  • Growth characteristics of micro carbon structures fabricated by laser-assisted chemical vapor deposition are studied. Argon ion laser and ethylene were used as the energy source and reaction gas, respectively, to grow micro carbon rod through pyrolytic decomposition of the reaction gas. Experiments were performed at various conditions to investigate the influence of process parameters on growth characteristics such as the diameter or growth rate of the micro carbon rod with respect to reaction gas pressure and incident laser power. Reaction gas pressure in experiments ranges from 200 to 600Torr and the incident laser power from 0.3 to 3.8W. For these conditions, the diameter of the rod increases linearly with respect to the laser power but is almost independent of the reaction gas pressure. Growth rate of the rod changes little with gas pressure when the laser power remains below IW. For a constant reaction gas pressure, the growth rate increase with Increasing laser power, but the rate of increase decreases gradually, implying that the chemical vapor deposition condition changes from a kinetically-limited regime to a mass-transport-limited regime. When the carbon rod was grown at near threshold laser power, a very smooth surface is obtained on the rod. By continuously moving the focusing lens in the direction of growth, a micro carbon rod with a diameter of 287${\mu}{\textrm}{m}$ and aspect ratio of 100 was fabricated..