Atom Probe
What Is HFS (High-Frequency Sputtering)?
HFS (High-Frequency Sputtering) is a thin-film deposition process—commonly referring to RF (radio-frequency) sputtering—used to deposit metals, oxides, nitrides, and other functional coatings onto substrates. In RF sputtering, a high-frequency power source sustains a plasma that ejects atoms from a target material; those atoms then deposit as a thin film on the substrate. RF sputtering is widely used because it can deposit insulating (non-conductive) materials more effectively than DC sputtering (project-dependent).
On an analysis-services website, an “HFS” page is typically positioned as a process-support and characterization offering: verifying film thickness, composition, uniformity, defects, and adhesion-related risks using multi-technique metrology.
Key advantages (process perspective)
Deposits a wide range of functional films, including many insulating materials (project-dependent)
Good control of film thickness and uniformity (tool/process dependent)
Compatible with many substrates and device stacks (project-dependent)
Where HFS Films Are Used
RF/HF-sputtered films are widely used in:
Semiconductors & electronics: barrier layers, dielectrics, conductive films (project-dependent)
Optics & photonics: reflective/anti-reflective and functional stacks (project-dependent)
Hard coatings & wear surfaces: protective layers, tribological coatings (project-dependent)
Sensors & MEMS: functional thin films and electrodes (project-dependent)
Energy materials: battery-related coatings and functional layers (project-dependent)
Typical Questions We Help Answer
Did the film meet target thickness and uniformity?
Is the film composition/stoichiometry consistent with the target material and process recipe?
Are there particles, pinholes, or nodules that could cause yield loss?
Is there interdiffusion or an unexpected interface layer after anneal or aging?
Why did adhesion change after a tool, target, gas, or supplier change?
What differs between a passing and failing wafer/coupon?
What You Receive
Measurement outputs (maps/profiles) with scale bars and parameters
Results tables with units, settings, and QC notes
Comparison overlays (reference vs suspect) where applicable
Clear conclusions: what changed, impact risk, and recommended next steps
Sample Submission Guidelines
Please provide
Film material and substrate type (if known)
Target thickness/stack design and key risks (particles, adhesion, diffusion)
Process history (power, gas, target, anneal steps—high level is fine)
Sample form: wafer/coupon, size, and ROI markings
Reference/control sample whenever possible
Packaging tips
Use wafer carriers or rigid holders; avoid surface rubbing
Handle with gloves; protect from particles and fingerprints
Label orientation and ROIs (photos help)
FAQs
Is HFS the same as RF sputtering?
Often yes in practical usage—“high-frequency” sputtering commonly refers to RF-powered sputtering. Exact terminology can vary by organization.
Can you prove thickness without a step?
If there’s no step edge, we may recommend ellipsometry or XRR depending on film/substrate. For some stacks, cross-section imaging may be needed (project-dependent).
Do you support multilayer stacks?
Yes (project-dependent). We can combine thickness + composition + depth methods to verify stacks and interfaces.
Can you help with adhesion failures?
Yes. Adhesion issues often involve surface contamination or interfacial layers; we typically use cross-sections plus surface chemistry to isolate the driver (project-dependent).
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