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Development of a Sensitive Electric Field Probe in Ar plasmas using Optically Trapped Fine Particles

POSTER

Abstract

For advanced plasma processing, understandings of plasma-surface interactions are prerequisite. To obtain information about it, we have used optically-trapped fine particles in plasmas using a laser-tweezer technique. Ar plasmas were generated between a powered ring-electrode at the bottom of the reactor at 100 Pa by applying 13.36 MHz voltage. PMMA particles (10 µm in diameter) were injected into the plasmas. Some particles were suspended at plasma/sheath boundary by the balance among gravity, ion drag, and electrostatic forces. To trap the particle, a laser ($\lambda =$ 1064 nm) was irradiated from the bottom using an objective lens. Because the trapped particle was negatively charged, it can be a probe of electric fields. The trapped particle was moved to the horizontal direction. The particle was well controlled for a certain distance. However, there was a limit for the area where the stable control was possible. The movable area became large when the trapping force was increased. These results can be explained as follows: the electrostatic force to the trapped particle was changed when the particle was moved from the initial position. The trapping was failed when the increase of the electrostatic force overwhelms the trapping force.

Authors

  • Kentaro Tomita

    Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Engineering Science, Kyushu University,

  • Sakyo Okunaga

    Graduate School of Information Science and Electrical Engineering, Kyushu University

  • Kunihiro Kamataki

    Kyushu University, Graduate School of Information Science and Electrical Engineering, Kyushu University

  • Naho Itagaki

    Kyushu University, Graduate School of Information Science and Electrical Engineering, Kyushu University

  • Kazunori Koga

    Kyushu University, National Institutes of Natural Science, Graduate School of Information Science and Electrical Engineering, Kyushu University, Kyushu University and National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Kyushu university

  • Masaharu Shiratani

    Kyushu University, Graduate School of Information Science and Electrical Engineering, Kyushu University, Kyushu university