학술논문

Effect of the Surface/Water Chemistry on the Creation of Watermarks
Document Type
Article
Source
Diffusion and Defect Data Part B: Solid State Phenomena; December 2012, Vol. 195 Issue: 1 p227-230, 4p
Subject
Language
ISSN
10120394
Abstract
Although evaporation as a pure bulk phase transformation is well understood, when one adds solutes to the liquid, or brings the liquid into contact with a substrate, we obtain a new and rich variety of possible behaviors that we can access experimentally to better understand the drying dynamics of residual water droplets. Evaporation of sessile droplets with a small contact angle (below 90°) is studied here extensively on silicon substrates. We focused our work on the origin of the creation of watermarks on silicon wafers. A thorough understanding of droplet evaporation is of vital importance for examining the drying rate, the flow patterns observed inside drying drops, and the residual deposits. The concentration of each potential dissolved species (e.g. silica or silicic acid) can also be predicted and confronted to their solubility. We developed a theoretical model to predict the evaporation rate and the behavior of submillimetric droplets taking into account the characteristics of the ambient and the substrate during the drying process. We discuss also the topology of watermarks on silicon wafers in the case of a predominant evaporation phenomenon.