Hello Chris,
The problem which you are facing is quite common. From my experience i can
tell that for isotropic etching of silicon xenon diflouride acts very
good. Its a very good etchant and you can use in the form of gas or plasma
also. The mixture which you are using is HF/Nitric acid and acetic acid
does not give a smooth surface finish. I have worked with these and i
found that these mixtures give a very rough surface finish with increase
in concentration of HF. If you have the facility to do etching with xenon
diflouride i think that would work out best. If you have any further
questions please contact me.
Have a nice day
baloo
On Wed, 11 Mar 1998, Chris Turner wrote:
> Hello,
>
> We are producing a micro-chemical reactor module that requires
> isotropic etching of 100 micron wide channels in silicon.
>
> We do this using a standard HF/Nitric/Acetic acid mixture with a
> silicon nitride masking layer. This results in several of the channels
> etching differently to the rest. The different channels are slightly
> wider by about 5-10 microns and have a much rougher, almost
> crystalline, surface finish. There are 120 channels on a wafer and
> between 1 and 20 per cent can be different. This effect runs the whole
> length of the channel, but neighbouring channels can be unaffected.
>
> Has anyone seen this sort of thing before and if so is there a way of
> preventing it?
>
> Any help gratefully received.
>
> Thanks
>
> Chris Turner
> Senior Research Engineer
>
> =========================
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>
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>
>
>
Balaji Panchapakesan
Department of Mechanical Engineering
University of Maryland, College Park MD20740
Email:[email protected]