Vacuum
Vacuum in PVD Processes: Purpose, Measurement, and Management
In the context of PVD processes, vacuum indicates the condition in which the pressure inside the deposition chamber is reduced to values much lower than atmospheric pressure. It is not an optional or secondary condition: vacuum is the fundamental physical prerequisite without which the process cannot occur.
Two main phases are distinguished: rough vacuum, achieved with rotary pumps, and high vacuum, reached with turbomolecular or cryogenic pumps. High vacuum levels, typically in the range of 10⁻⁵ – 10⁻⁶ mbar, are the ones relevant for PVD deposition.

The Purpose of Vacuum in PVD
Vacuum serves two fundamental and inseparable functions:
- Ensuring particle transport. By reducing the density of residual gases, the mean free path of the vaporized particles is increased, meaning the average distance they travel before colliding with another molecule. Under high vacuum conditions, this path is long enough to allow the deposited species to reach the substrate in a straight line, without scattering or loss of energy. At insufficient pressures, collisions with residual gases would degrade film uniformity and adhesion.
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Ensuring film purity. The atmosphere contains oxygen, nitrogen, water vapor, and other contaminants which, if present in the chamber during deposition, would react with the material being deposited, altering its chemical and physical properties. Vacuum creates a controlled environment where the film composition is determined exclusively by the materials and gases intentionally introduced, as occurs in reactive deposition.
Pumping Phases and Impact on Productivity
Reaching operational conditions occurs sequentially:
- First, rotary pumps bring the chamber to a rough vacuum.
- Then, turbomolecular pumps drive it down to the high vacuum required for the process.
Evacuation times, which depend on the chamber volume, the state of the internal surfaces, and the presence of outgassing materials, directly impact cycle productivity and its repeatability.
A chamber with contaminated surfaces or components that release gas (outgassing) will not reach target pressures within the expected timeframe, with direct effects on coating quality and process consistency between cycles. The management and maintenance of the pumping system are therefore an integral part of the treatment’s quality control.
Related items: Reactive deposition · Thermal evaporation · PVD target
Maximilian
Responsabile tecnico area PVD - LEM srl
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