Patents by Inventor Mark Fodor

Mark Fodor 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: 20080152838
    Abstract: Embodiments in accordance with the present invention relate to various techniques which may be employed alone or in combination, to reduce or eliminate the deposition of material on the bevel of a semiconductor workpiece. In one approach, a shadow ring overlies the edge of the substrate to impede the flow of gases to bevel regions. The geometric feature at the edge of the shadow ring directs the flow of gases toward the wafer in order to maintain thickness uniformity across the wafer while shadowing the edge. In another approach, a substrate heater/support is configured to flow purge gases to the edge of a substrate being supported. These purge gases prevent process gases from reaching the substrate edge and depositing material on bevel regions.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 23, 2007
    Publication date: June 26, 2008
    Applicant: APPLIED MATERIALS, INC.
    Inventors: SOOVO SEN, MARK A. FODOR, VISWESWAREN SIVARAMAKRISHNAN, JUNTING LIU
  • Patent number: 7354288
    Abstract: A substrate support comprises a ceramic disc with an electrode that is chargeable through an electrode terminal. An electrical connector connects an external power source to the electrode terminal. The electrical connector has a pair of opposing pincer arms, a groove sized to fit around the electrode terminal, and a pair of through holes to receive a tightening assembly capable of tightening the opposing pincer arms about the electrode terminal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 3, 2005
    Date of Patent: April 8, 2008
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Kazutoshi Maehara, Visweswaren Sivaramakrishnan, Kentaro Wada, Mark A. Fodor, Andrzei Kaszuba
  • Publication number: 20060272774
    Abstract: A substrate support comprises a ceramic disc with an electrode that is chargeable through an electrode terminal. An electrical connector connects an external power source to the electrode terminal. The electrical connector has a pair of opposing pincer arms, a groove sized to fit around the electrode terminal, and a pair of through holes to receive a tightening assembly capable of tightening the opposing pincer arms about the electrode terminal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 3, 2005
    Publication date: December 7, 2006
    Inventors: Kazutoshi Maehara, Visweswaren Sivaramakrishnan, Kentaro Wada, Mark Fodor, Andrzei Kaszuba
  • Patent number: 7024105
    Abstract: A substrate heater assembly for supporting a substrate of a predetermined standardized diameter during processing is provided. In one embodiment, the substrate heater assembly includes a body having an upper surface, a lower surface and an embedded heating element. A substrate support surface is formed in the upper surface of the body and defines a portion of a substrate receiving pocket. An annular wall is oriented perpendicular to the upper surface and has a length of at least one half a thickness of the substrate. The wall bounds an outer perimeter of the substrate receiving pocket and has a diameter less than about 0.5 mm greater than the predetermined substrate diameter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 10, 2003
    Date of Patent: April 4, 2006
    Assignee: Applied Materials Inc.
    Inventors: Mark A. Fodor, Sophia M. Velastegui, Soovo Sen, Visweswaren Sivaramakrishnan, Peter Wai-Man Lee, Mario David Silvetti
  • Publication number: 20050196971
    Abstract: Embodiments in accordance with the present invention relate to various techniques which may be employed alone or in combination, to reduce or eliminate the deposition of material on the bevel of a semiconductor workpiece. In one approach, a shadow ring overlies the edge of the substrate to impede the flow of gases to bevel regions. The geometric feature at the edge of the shadow ring directs the flow of gases toward the wafer in order to maintain thickness uniformity across the wafer while shadowing the edge. In another approach, a substrate heater/support is configured to flow purge gases to the edge of a substrate being supported. These purge gases prevent process gases from reaching the substrate edge and depositing material on bevel regions.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 26, 2005
    Publication date: September 8, 2005
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Soovo Sen, Mark Fodor, Visweswaren Sivaramakrishnan, Junting Liu
  • Publication number: 20050150452
    Abstract: The present invention provides a process kit for a semiconductor processing chamber. The processing chamber is a vacuum processing chamber that includes a chamber body defining an interior processing region. The processing region receives a substrate for processing, and also supports equipment pieces of the process kit. The process kit includes a pumping liner configured to be placed within the processing region of the processing chamber, and a C-channel liner configured to be placed along an outer diameter of the pumping liner. The pumping liner and the C-channel liner have novel interlocking features designed to inhibit parasitic pumping of processing or cleaning gases from the processing region. The invention further provides a semiconductor processing chamber having an improved process kit, such as the kit described. In one arrangement, the chamber is a tandem processing chamber.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 14, 2004
    Publication date: July 14, 2005
    Inventors: Soovo Sen, Mark Fodor, Martin Seamons, Priya Kulkarni, Visweswaren Sivaramakrishnan, Sudha Rathi, Tsutomu Shimayama, Thomas Nowak, Wendy Yeh
  • Publication number: 20050078953
    Abstract: A substrate heater assembly for supporting a substrate of a predetermined standardized diameter during processing is provided. In one embodiment, the substrate heater assembly includes a body having an upper surface, a lower surface and an embedded heating element. A substrate support surface is formed in the upper surface of the body and defines a portion of a substrate receiving pocket. An annular wall is oriented perpendicular to the upper surface and has a length of at least one half a thickness of the substrate. The wall bounds an outer perimeter of the substrate receiving pocket and has a diameter less than about 0.5 mm greater than the predetermined substrate diameter.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 10, 2003
    Publication date: April 14, 2005
    Inventors: Mark Fodor, Sophia Velastegui, Soovo Sen, Visweswaren Sivaramakrishnan, Peter Lee, Mario Silvetti
  • Patent number: 6689930
    Abstract: An apparatus for preventing particulate matter and residue build-up within a vacuum exhaust line of a semiconductor processing device. The apparatus uses RF energy to form excite the constituents of particulate matter exhausted from a semiconductor processing chamber into a plasma state such that the constituents react to form gaseous products that may be pumped through the vacuum line. The apparatus may include a collection chamber structured and arranged to collect particulate matter flowing through the apparatus and inhibiting egress of the particulate matter from the apparatus. The apparatus may further include an electrostatic collector to enhance particle collection in the collection chamber and to further inhibit egress of the particulate matter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 10, 2004
    Assignee: Applied Materials Inc.
    Inventors: Ben Pang, David Cheung, William N. Taylor, Jr., Sebastion Raoux, Mark Fodor
  • Patent number: 6680420
    Abstract: An apparatus for preventing particulate matter and residue build-up within a vacuum exhaust line of a semiconductor processing device. The apparatus uses RF energy to excite the constituents of particulate matter exhausted from a semiconductor processing chamber into a plasma state such that the constituents react to form gaseous products that may be pumped through the vacuum line. The apparatus may include a collection chamber structured and arranged to collect particulate matter flowing through the apparatus and inhibiting egress of the particulate matter from the apparatus. The apparatus may further include an electrostatic collector to enhance particle collection in the collection chamber and to further inhibit egress of the particulate matter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 4, 2000
    Date of Patent: January 20, 2004
    Assignee: Applied Materials Inc.
    Inventors: Ben Pang, David Cheung, William N. Taylor, Jr., Sebastien Raoux, Mark Fodor
  • Patent number: 6517913
    Abstract: An apparatus for converting PFC gases exhausted from semiconductor processing equipment to less harmful, non-PFC gases. One embodiment of the apparatus includes a silicon filter and a plasma generation system. The plasma generation system forms a plasma from the effluent PFC gases. Constituents from the plasma react with silicon and/or oxygen in the filter and convert the effluent PFC gases to less harmful, non-PFC gaseous products and byproducts. Another embodiment includes a plasma generation system and a particle trapping and collection system. The particle trapping and collection system traps silicon containing residue from deposition processes that produces such residue, and the plasma generation system forms a plasma from the effluent PFC gases. Constituents from the plasma react with the collected residue to convert the effluent PFC gases to less harmful, non-PFC gaseous products and byproducts.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 3, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 11, 2003
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: David Cheung, Sebastien Raoux, Judy H. Huang, William N. Taylor, Jr., Mark Fodor, Kevin Fairbairn
  • Patent number: 6506994
    Abstract: A heating chamber assembly for heating or maintaining the temperature of at least one wafer, employs thick film heater plates stacked at an appropriate distance to form a slot between each pair of adjacent heater plate surfaces. The heating chamber assembly may be employed adjacent one or more processing chambers to form a preheat station separate from the processing chambers, or may be incorporated in the load lock of one or more such processing chambers. The thick film heater plates are more efficient and have a better response time than conventional heat plates. A chamber surrounding the stack of heater plates is pressure sealable and nay include a purge gas inlet for supply purge gas thereto under pressure. A door to the chamber opens to allow wafers to be inserted or removed and forms a pressure seal upon closing. The slots in the stack are alignable with the door for loading and unloading of wafers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 15, 2001
    Date of Patent: January 14, 2003
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Yen-Kun Victor Wang, Mark Fodor, Chen-An Chen, Himanshu Pokharna, Son T. Nguyen, Kelly Fong, Inna Shmurun
  • Publication number: 20020190051
    Abstract: A heating chamber assembly for heating or maintaining the temperature of at least one wafer, employs thick film heater plates stacked at an appropriate distance to form a slot between each pair of adjacent heater plate surfaces. The heating chamber assembly may be employed adjacent one or more processing chambers to form a preheat station separate from the processing chambers, or may be incorporated in the load lock of one or more such processing chambers. The thick film heater plates are more efficient and have a better response time than conventional heat plates. A chamber surrounding the stack of heater plates is pressure sealable and may include a purge gas inlet for supply purge gas thereto under pressure. A door to the chamber opens to allow wafers to be inserted or removed and forms a pressure seal upon closing. The slots in the stack are alignable with the door for loading and unloading of wafers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 15, 2001
    Publication date: December 19, 2002
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Yen-Kun Victor Wang, Mark Fodor, Chen-An Chen, Himanshu Pokharna, Son T. Nguyen, Kelly Fong, Inna Shmurun
  • Patent number: 6358573
    Abstract: A substrate processing system that includes a ceramic substrate holder having an RF electrode embedded within the substrate holder and a gas inlet manifold spaced apart from the substrate holder. The gas inlet manifold supplies one or more process gases through multiple conical holes to a reaction zone of a substrate processing chamber within the processing system and also acts as a second RF electrode. Each conical hole has an outlet that opens into the reaction zone and an inlet spaced apart from the outlet that is smaller in diameter than said outlet. A mixed frequency RF power supply is connected to the substrate processing system with a high frequency RF power source connected to the gas inlet manifold electrode and a low frequency RF power source connected to the substrate holder electrode. An RF filter and matching network decouples the high frequency waveform from the low frequency waveform.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 2, 2000
    Date of Patent: March 19, 2002
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Sébastien Raoux, Mandar Mudholkar, William N. Taylor, Mark Fodor, Judy Huang, David Silvetti, David Cheung, Kevin Fairbairn
  • Patent number: 6354241
    Abstract: An apparatus and method for preventing particulate matter and residue build-up within a vacuum exhaust line of a semiconductor-processing device. The apparatus includes a vessel chamber having an inlet, an outlet and a fluid conduit between the two that fluidly couples the outlet with the inlet. The fluid conduit includes first and second collection sections. The first collection section includes a first plurality of electrodes aligned parallel to a first plane and the second collection section includes a second plurality of electrodes aligned parallel to a second plane that is substantially perpendicular to the first plane. The electrodes are connected to a voltage differential to form an electrostatic particle collector that traps electrically charged particles and particulate matter flowing through the fluid conduit. Particles are collected on the electrodes within the fluid conduit during substrate processing operations such as CVD deposition steps.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 15, 1999
    Date of Patent: March 12, 2002
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Tsutomu Tanaka, Chau Nguyen, Hari Ponnekanti, Kevin Fairbairn, Sébastien Raoux, Mark Fodor
  • Publication number: 20010016674
    Abstract: An apparatus for preventing particulate matter and residue build-up within a vacuum exhaust line of a semiconductor processing device. The apparatus uses RF energy to form excite the constituents of particulate matter exhausted from a semiconductor processing chamber into a plasma state such that the constituents react to form gaseous products that may be pumped through the vacuum line. The apparatus may include a collection chamber structured and arranged to collect particulate matter flowing through the apparatus and inhibiting egress of the particulate matter from the apparatus. The apparatus may further include an electrostatic collector to enhance particle collection in the collection chamber and to further inhibit egress of the particulate matter.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 4, 2000
    Publication date: August 23, 2001
    Applicant: Applied Materials , Inc.
    Inventors: Ben Pang, David Cheung, William N. Taylor, Sebastien Raoux, Mark Fodor
  • Patent number: 6193802
    Abstract: An apparatus for minimizing deposition in an exhaust line of a substrate processing chamber. The apparatus includes first and second electrodes having opposing surfaces that define a fluid conduit between them. The fluid conduit includes an inlet, an outlet and a collection chamber between the inlet and the outlet. The apparatus is connected at its inlet to receive the exhaust of the substrate processing chamber. The collection chamber is structured and arranged to collect particulate matter flowing through the fluid conduit and to inhibit egress of the particulate matter from the collection chamber. A plasma generation system supplies power to the electrodes to form a plasma from etchant gases within the fluid conduit. Constituents from the plasma react with the particulate matter collected in the collection chamber to form gaseous products that may be pumped out of the fluid conduit.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 30, 1996
    Date of Patent: February 27, 2001
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Ben Pang, David Cheung, William N. Taylor, Jr., Sebastien Raoux, Mark Fodor
  • Patent number: 6194628
    Abstract: An apparatus for preventing particulate matter and residue build-up within a vacuum exhaust line of a semiconductor processing device. The apparatus uses RF energy to form excite the constituents of particulate matter exhausted from a semiconductor processing chamber into a plasma state such that the constituents react to form gaseous products that may be pumped through the vacuum line. The apparatus may include a collection chamber structured and arranged to collect particulate matter flowing through the apparatus and inhibiting egress of the particulate matter from the apparatus. The apparatus may further include an electrostatic collector to enhance particle collection in the collection chamber and to further inhibit egress of the particulate matter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 25, 1995
    Date of Patent: February 27, 2001
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Ben Pang, David Cheung, William N. Taylor, Jr., Sebastien Raoux, Mark Fodor
  • Patent number: 6187072
    Abstract: An apparatus for converting PFC gases exhausted from semiconductor processing equipment to less harmful, non-PFC gases. One embodiment of the apparatus includes a silicon filter and a plasma generation system. The plasma generation system forms a plasma from the effluent PFC gases. Constituents from the plasma react with silicon and/or oxygen in the filter and convert the effluent PFC gases to less harmful, non-PFC gaseous products and byproducts. Another embodiment includes a plasma generation system and a particle trapping and collection system. The particle trapping and collection system traps silicon containing residue from deposition processes that produces such residue, and the plasma generation system forms a plasma from the effluent PFC gases. Constituents from the plasma react with the collected residue to convert the effluent PFC gases to less harmful, non-PFC gaseous products and byproducts.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 30, 1996
    Date of Patent: February 13, 2001
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: David Cheung, Sebastien Raoux, Judy H. Huang, William N. Taylor, Jr., Mark Fodor, Kevin Fairbairn
  • Patent number: 6098568
    Abstract: A substrate processing system that includes a ceramic substrate holder having an RF electrode embedded within the substrate holder and a gas inlet manifold spaced apart from the substrate holder. The gas inlet manifold supplies one or more process gases through multiple conical holes to a reaction zone of a substrate processing chamber within the processing system and also acts as a second RF electrode. Each conical hole has an outlet that opens into the reaction zone and an inlet spaced apart from the outlet that is smaller in diameter than said outlet. A mixed frequency RF power supply is connected to the substrate processing system with a high frequency RF power source connected to the gas inlet manifold electrode and a low frequency RF power source connected to the substrate holder electrode. An RF filter and matching network decouples the high frequency waveform from the low frequency waveform.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 1, 1997
    Date of Patent: August 8, 2000
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Sebastien Raoux, Mandar Mudholkar, William N. Taylor, Mark Fodor, Judy Huang, David Silvetti, David Cheung, Kevin Fairbairn
  • Patent number: 5959409
    Abstract: Non-bonded ceramic protection is provided for metal surfaces in a plasma processing chamber, particularly heated metal electrode surfaces, in a plasma processing chamber, to prevent or inhibit attack of the heated metal surfaces by chemically aggressive species generated in the plasma during processing of materials, without bonding the ceramic material to the metal surface. In accordance with the invention the ceramic protection material comprises a thin cover material which is fitted closely, but not bonded, to the heated metal. This form of ceramic protection is particularly useful for protecting the surfaces of glow discharge electrodes and gas distribution apparatus in plasma process chambers used for processing semiconductor substrates to form integrated circuit structures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 13, 1997
    Date of Patent: September 28, 1999
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Charles N. Dornfest, John M. White, Craig A. Bercaw, Hiroyuki Steven Tomosawa, Mark A. Fodor