Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.121, No.14, 2760-2772, 2017
Optical Emission from C-2(-) Anions in Microwave-Activated CH4/H-2 Plasmas for Chemical Vapor Deposition of Diamond
Visible emission from C-2(-)(B-2 Sigma(+)(u)) anions has been identified underlying the much stronger Swan band emission from neutral C-2(d(3)II(g)) radicals (henceforth C-2(-)* and C-2*, respectively) in MW-activated C/H/(Ar) plasmas operating under conditions appropriate for the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of diamond. Spatially resolved measurements of the C-2(-)* and C-2* emissions as functions of the C/H/(Ar) ratio in the input gas mixture, the total pressure, and the applied MW power, together with complementary 2-D(r, z) plasma modeling, identifies dissociative electron attachment (DEA) to C2H radicals in the hot plasma as the dominant source of the observed C-2(-)* emission. Modeling not only indicates substantially higher concentrations of C2H- anions (from analogous DEA to C2H2) in the near-substrate region but also suggests that the anion number densities will typically be 3-4 orders of magnitude lower than those of the electrons and partner cations, i.e., mainly C2H2+ and C2H3+. The identification of negatively charged carbon-containing species in diamond CVD plasmas offers a possible rationale for previous reports that nucleation densities and growth rates can be enhanced by applying a positive bias to the substrate.