Mainebiz

June 1, 2015

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/518148

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 15 of 51

V O L . X X I N O. X I J U N E 1 , 2 0 1 5 16 Most of the Soleras sputtering targets are rotary for high-end applications, but the com- pany does make fl at, or planar, targets for specifi c applications. In the overall market, planar technol- ogy is used more frequently, but because sputtering debris tends to fall back onto a fl at surface, rotary technology is starting to replace it in large, coated- glass production. Edel says about 20% of demand today is for the rotary sputtering targets that Bekaert devel- oped in the late 1990s. ose targets compose 98% of Soleras' business. To date, Soleras has produced more than 260,000 targets. Glass makers use the sputtering targets to coat their glass. During the coating process, argon gas is placed in a vacuum chamber and is ionized (gets a charge) so that magnetic fi elds can drive the argon atoms at high speed against the rotating sputtering target within a chamber. e argon atoms knock material loose from the sputtering target. is pro- cess occurs as a large piece of glass passes through the vacuum chamber. e loose material coats the glass. e glass coating is built up in layers by mov- ing the glass back and forth. "Our customers in the United States are primar- ily people who produce architectural glass…and sell that glass to window producers," says Edel. Cardinal Glass Industries and Guardian Industries are exam- ples of glass company customers, he says. "You tend to see broader demand in markets like Europe where the cost of energy is higher, and 1-800-447-4559 bathsavings.com » C O N T I N U E D F RO M P R E V I O U S PA G E Methods for depositing or 'sputtering' thin films S O U R C E : Soleras Advanced Coatings Sputtering, also called physical vapor deposition, is a process for laying down very thin coatings of materials, such as metals, evenly across a substrate, such as glass. The two main methods are either planar (left) or rotating targets. Planar is a more widely used and less costly technology typically employed now for coating smaller items like integrated circuits, while the new rotating, or rotary, technology costs more but leaves less post-production debris on the substrate, and thus is used in high-end glass and computer displays. Both technologies use a gas such as argon in a vacuum chamber. The gas is given a charge, or ionized, so a magnetic fi eld can drive the argon ions at high speed against the sputtering target. When the argon ions hit the sputtering target, they dislodge small metal particles that become a vaporized material that in turn coats the glass or other substrate. Soleras uses mostly the rotating method for glass customers who need to make typically very large and high-end architectural glass or computer displays. vaporized material planar target substrate rotating target vaporized material ionized gas substrate ionized gas film growth film growth

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Mainebiz - June 1, 2015