Patents by Inventor Curtis Warren Bailey

Curtis Warren Bailey has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20230002891
    Abstract: Forming a protective coating ex situ in an atomic layer deposition process to coat one or more chamber components subsequently installed in a reaction chamber provides a number of benefits over more conventional coating methods such as in situ deposition of an undercoat. In certain cases the protective coating may have a particular composition such as aluminum oxide, aluminum fluoride, aluminum nitride, yttrium oxide, and/or yttrium fluoride. The protective coating may help reduce contamination on wafers processed using the coated chamber component. Further, the protective coating may act to stabilize the processing conditions within the reaction chamber, thereby achieving very stable/uniform processing results over the course of processing many batches of wafers, and minimizing radical loss. Also described are a number of techniques that may be used to restore the protective coating after the coated chamber component is used to process semiconductor wafers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 7, 2022
    Publication date: January 5, 2023
    Inventors: Damodar Rajaram SHANBHAG, Guangbi YUAN, Thadeous BAMFORD, Curtis Warren BAILEY, Tony KAUSHAL, Krishna BIRRU, William SCHLOSSER, Bo GONG, Huatan QIU, Fengyuan LAI, Leonard Wai Fung KHO, Anand CHANDRASHEKAR, Andrew H. BRENINGER, Chen-Hua HSU, Geoffrey HOHN, Gang LIU, Rohit KHARE
  • Publication number: 20220275504
    Abstract: Forming a protective coating ex situ in an atomic layer deposition process to coat one or more chamber components subsequently installed in a reaction chamber provides a number of benefits over more conventional coating methods such as in situ deposition of an undercoat. In certain cases the protective coating may have a particular composition such as aluminum oxide, aluminum fluoride, aluminum nitride, yttrium oxide, and/or yttrium fluoride. The protective coating may help reduce contamination on wafers processed using the coated chamber component. Further, the protective coating may act to stabilize the processing conditions within the reaction chamber, thereby achieving very stable/uniform processing results over the course of processing many batches of wafers, and minimizing radical loss. Also described are a number of techniques that may be used to restore the protective coating after the coated chamber component is used to process semiconductor wafers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 16, 2022
    Publication date: September 1, 2022
    Inventors: Damodar Rajaram SHANBHAG, Guangbi YUAN, Thadeous BAMFORD, Curtis Warren BAILEY, Tony KAUSHAL, Krishna BIRRU, William SCHLOSSER, Bo GONG, Huatan QIU, Fengyuan LAI, Leonard Wai Fung KHO, Anand CHANDRASHEKAR, Andrew H. BRENINGER, Chen-Hua HSU, Geoffrey HOHN, Gang LIU, Rohit KHARE
  • Patent number: 11365479
    Abstract: Forming a protective coating ex situ in an atomic layer deposition process to coat one or more chamber components subsequently installed in a reaction chamber provides a number of benefits over more conventional coating methods such as in situ deposition of an undercoat. In certain cases the protective coating may have a particular composition such as aluminum oxide, aluminum fluoride, aluminum nitride, yttrium oxide, and/or yttrium fluoride. The protective coating may help reduce contamination on wafers processed using the coated chamber component. Further, the protective coating may act to stabilize the processing conditions within the reaction chamber, thereby achieving very stable/uniform processing results over the course of processing many batches of wafers, and minimizing radical loss. Also described are a number of techniques that may be used to restore the protective coating after the coated chamber component is used to process semiconductor wafers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 22, 2020
    Date of Patent: June 21, 2022
    Assignee: Lam Research Corporation
    Inventors: Damodar Shanbhag, Guangbi Yuan, Thadeous Bamford, Curtis Warren Bailey, Tony Kaushal, Krishna Birru, William Schlosser, Bo Gong, Huatan Qiu, Fengyuan Lai, Leonard Wai Fung Kho, Anand Chandrashekar, Andrew H. Breninger, Chen-Hua Hsu, Geoffrey Hohn, Gang Liu, Rohit Khare
  • Publication number: 20200347497
    Abstract: Forming a protective coating ex situ in an atomic layer deposition process to coat one or more chamber components subsequently installed in a reaction chamber provides a number of benefits over more conventional coating methods such as in situ deposition of an undercoat. In certain cases the protective coating may have a particular composition such as aluminum oxide, aluminum fluoride, aluminum nitride, yttrium oxide, and/or yttrium fluoride. The protective coating may help reduce contamination on wafers processed using the coated chamber component. Further, the protective coating may act to stabilize the processing conditions within the reaction chamber, thereby achieving very stable/uniform processing results over the course of processing many batches of wafers, and minimizing radical loss. Also described are a number of techniques that may be used to restore the protective coating after the coated chamber component is used to process semiconductor wafers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 22, 2020
    Publication date: November 5, 2020
    Inventors: Damodar Shanbhag, Guangbi Yuan, Thadeous Bamford, Curtis Warren Bailey, Tony Kaushal, Krishna Birru, William Schlosser, Bo Gong, Huatan Qiu, Fengyuan Lai, Leonard Wai Fung Kho, Anand Chandrashekar, Andrew H. Breninger, Chen-Hua Hsu, Geoffrey Hohn, Gang Liu, Rohit Khare
  • Patent number: 10760158
    Abstract: Forming a protective coating ex situ in an atomic layer deposition process to coat one or more chamber components subsequently installed in a reaction chamber provides a number of benefits over more conventional coating methods such as in situ deposition of an undercoat. In certain cases the protective coating may have a particular composition such as aluminum oxide, aluminum fluoride, aluminum nitride, yttrium oxide, and/or yttrium fluoride. The protective coating may help reduce contamination on wafers processed using the coated chamber component. Further, the protective coating may act to stabilize the processing conditions within the reaction chamber, thereby achieving very stable/uniform processing results over the course of processing many batches of wafers, and minimizing radical loss. Also described are a number of techniques that may be used to restore the protective coating after the coated chamber component is used to process semiconductor wafers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 16, 2018
    Date of Patent: September 1, 2020
    Assignee: Lam Research Corporation
    Inventors: Damodar Shanbhag, Guangbi Yuan, Thadeous Bamford, Curtis Warren Bailey, Tony Kaushal, Krishna Birru, William Schlosser, Bo Gong, Fengyuan Lai, Leonard Wai Fung Kho, Anand Chandrashekar, Andrew H. Breninger, Chen-Hua Hsu, Geoffrey Hohn, Gang Liu, Rohit Khare, Huatan Qiu
  • Publication number: 20190185999
    Abstract: Forming a protective coating ex situ in an atomic layer deposition process to coat one or more chamber components subsequently installed in a reaction chamber provides a number of benefits over more conventional coating methods such as in situ deposition of an undercoat. In certain cases the protective coating may have a particular composition such as aluminum oxide, aluminum fluoride, aluminum nitride, yttrium oxide, and/or yttrium fluoride. The protective coating may help reduce contamination on wafers processed using the coated chamber component. Further, the protective coating may act to stabilize the processing conditions within the reaction chamber, thereby achieving very stable/uniform processing results over the course of processing many batches of wafers, and minimizing radical loss. Also described are a number of techniques that may be used to restore the protective coating after the coated chamber component is used to process semiconductor wafers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 16, 2018
    Publication date: June 20, 2019
    Inventors: Damodar Shanbhag, Guangbi Yuan, Thadeous Bamford, Curtis Warren Bailey, Tony Kaushal, Krishna Birru, William Schlosser, Bo Gong, Huatan Qiu, Fengyuan Lai, Leonard Wai Fung Kho, Anand Chandrashekar, Andrew H. Breninger, Chen-Hua Hsu, Geoffrey Hohn, Gang Liu, Rohit Khare