Abstract:
The magnetic tape recording head of the present invention is formed with magnetic poles that are comprised of a laminated NiFeN/FeN structure. The method for fabricating the magnetic poles utilizes an additive photolithographic technique including a bilayer liftoff resist. In this fabrication method magnetic pole trenches are formed in the bilayer liftoff resist such that an undercut exists in the liftoff layer. Thereafter, the laminated NiFeN/FeN structure is sputter deposited into the trench, followed by the wet chemical removal of the bilayer resist.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION  
       [0001]    This application is a divisional of and claims priority to copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/528,226 filed Mar. 17, 2000. 
     
    
     
       BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
         [0002]    1. Field of the Invention  
           [0003]    The present invention relates generally to magnetic tape recording head devices, and more particularly to a process for fabricating magnetic poles for such heads utilizing a bilayer photoresist where the pole pieces are fabricated utilizing a metal sputtering process to form a laminated NiFeN structure.  
           [0004]    2. Description of the Prior Art  
           [0005]    To improve the performance characteristics of magnetic tape recording systems, new materials for forming the shields and poles of magnetic read/write heads and new manufacturing processes are continually being developed. Such magnetic head materials must be particularly wear resistant, as compared to materials for other magnetic heads, in that physical contact between the magnetic tape and the magnetic head occurs during the read/write process. Therefore, many magnetic shield and pole forming materials utilized in manufacturing magnetic heads for hard disk drives are not suitable for use in magnetic tape head devices because the materials lack the required wear resistance properties necessary for magnetic tape heads.  
           [0006]    A material that is suitable for use in a magnetic tape head is a high magnetic moment laminate material consisting of alternating layers of nickel iron nitride (NiFeN), and iron nitride (FeN). This laminate material can be created utilizing an RF diode sputter deposition process, such as is described in “Magnetic Properties of FeAIN Films at Elevated Temperatures” by P. Zheng, J. A. Bain, and M. H. Kryder in J. Appl. Phys. 81 (8), Apr. 15, 1997. The present invention is a magnetic head for magnetic tape systems that is composed of the NiFeN/FeN laminate material and a method for manufacturing it.  
           [0007]    The manufacturing method of the present invention is an additive process. That is, generally, utilizing photolithographic techniques, a resist layer is formed on a substrate and holes or trenches of a desired shape are formed in the resist layer. A desired metal (or other material) layer is then deposited on top of a resist layer such that it fills the holes and trenches. Thereafter, the resist (along with the metalization layer on top of the resist) is next removed, such that the desired feature within the holes and trenches remains. This additive process is contrasted with a subtractive process which generally starts with the deposition of a metalization layer, followed by photolithographic steps which result in blocks of resist formed above areas of the metalization layer that are desired to be retained. Thereafter, the metalization layer is removed in all uncovered areas, leaving the portions of the metalization layer that are covered by the resist. The resist is then removed such that the desired metalization features remain. While the additive and subtractive processes generally described above may yield the same ultimate result, they are significantly different with regard to materials utilized, process parameters utilized and their suitability in the manufacturing of a particular device.  
           [0008]    With regard to the NiFeN/FeN laminate metalization layers utilized in the present invention, the use of a subtractive process is generally unsuitable for manufacturing purposes because of the large quantity of NiFeN/FeN that must be removed, and particularly because the removal of the NiFeN/FeN laminate layers in a subtraction process must be accomplished utilizing a dry etching process, such as an ion beam etching process, which can result in the redeposition of removed material and significant clean up problems that result therefrom, as is well known to those skilled in the art. Wet chemical etching of the NiFeN/FeN, an alternative subtractive process, is not practical for manufacturing because the NiFeN and FeN layers etch at different rates, leaving ragged, poorly defined edges in the final patterned structure. Therefore, the present invention utilizes an additive process and, significantly, it utilizes a bilayer liftoff resist, as is generally known to those skilled in the art, which enables the removal of the NiFeN/FeN laminate utilizing a chemical solvent, thereby avoiding any redeposition problems and creating a manufacturing process that is suitable for commercial product development. Such a bilayer liftoff process is generally taught in U.S. Pat. No. 5,532,109, entitled: Azo Dyes as Adhesion Promotion Additive in Polydimethylglutarimide, issued Jul. 2, 1996 and naming as inventors Mohammad T. Krounbi, Alfred Renaldo (an inventor hereof) and Dougas Werner, and assigned to International Business Machines Corporation, the assignee hereof.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [0009]    The magnetic tape recording head of the present invention is formed with magnetic poles that are comprised of a laminated NiFeN/FeN structure. The method for fabricating the magnetic poles utilizes an additive photolithographic technique including a bilayer liftoff resist. In this fabrication method magnetic pole trenches are formed in the bilayer liftoff resist such that an undercut exists in the liftoff layer. Thereafter, the NiFeN/FeN laminated structure is sputter deposited into the trench, followed by the wet chemical removal of the bilayer resist.  
           [0010]    It is an advantage of the magnetic tape recording head of the present invention that it is fabricated with a laminated NiFeN/FeN structure.  
           [0011]    It is another advantage of the magnetic tape recording head of the present invention that it is fabricated utilizing a bilayer photolithographic technique which reduces cleanup problems.  
           [0012]    It is a further advantage of the fabrication method of the present invention that it utilizes photolithographic fabrication technique including a bilayer liftoff resist.  
           [0013]    It is yet another advantage of the fabrication process of the present invention that the patterned structures of the sputter deposited NiFeN/FeN are well formed and free of distortion.  
           [0014]    It is yet a further advantage of the fabrication process of the present invention that it utilizes an additive photoresist process including a bilayer photoresist, wherein undercuts are formed in the liftoff layer, such that clean edges of the sputter deposited NiFeN/FeN poles are formed.  
           [0015]    These and other features and advantages of the present invention will no doubt become apparent to those skilled in the art upon review of the following detailed description which makes reference to the several figures of the drawings. 
       
    
    
     IN THE DRAWINGS  
       [0016]    FIGS.  1 - 4  are side cross-sectional views depicting a bilayer photoresist liftoff process of the present invention;  
         [0017]    [0017]FIGS. 5 and 6 are side cross-sectional views of the fabrication process of the present invention that are specifically related to the NiFeN/FeN laminated magnetic poles of the magnetic tape recording head of the present invention. 
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS  
       [0018]    FIGS.  1 - 4  are cross-sectional views generally depicting the bilayer liftoff process of the present invention for forming NiFeN/FeN high magnetic moment laminated structures. As depicted in FIG. 1, a bilayer resist  12  is formed on the upper surface  14  of a substrate  16 . The bilayer resist  12  includes a first layer  20 , termed a release layer, and a second, upper layer  24  that is composed of a suitable photoresist for use in photolithographic processing. The release layer  20  is preferably composed of Polydimethylglutarimide (PMGI), a polymer supplied by Microlithography Chemical Company (MCC) of Boston, Mass. While many photoresists may be effectively utilized as layer  24 , a preferred photoresist is a negative i-line resist (i-300) as is supplied by the Shipley Company of Marlboro, Mass.  
         [0019]    Thereafter, as depicted in FIG. 2, using well known photolithographic techniques, the device is baked, photoexposed, baked again and developed with a suitable developer that removes the unexposed photoresist in the photoresist layer  24 . The developer may also remove portions of the PMGI release layer  20 , or, alternatively the PMGI layer can be separately developed. Using either developing step the release layer  20  is developed to expose the substrate surface  14  through a hole or trench  28  that has been formed through the resist layer  24  and release layer  20 . A desirable undercutting  30  of the release layer  20  beneath the resist layer  24  occurs during the development of the release layer  20 . The undercut  30  is desirable because it causes the overhanging resist edge  34  to shield the outer portions  38  of the substrate surface  14  from unwanted deposition of the material that is next deposited.  
         [0020]    Thereafter, as depicted in FIG. 3, material (the NiFeN/FeN laminate) is deposited onto the structure such that portions  50  of the material are deposited on the upper surface of the resist layer  24  and portions  54  of the material are deposited into the hole or trench that has been photolithographically formed. Due to the resist overhang  34 , the material  54  that is deposited into the photolithographic trench forms relatively smooth edges  60 . Significantly, if the undercut  30  did not exist, then the walls  64  of the trench would extend in a relatively straight manner down to the substrate surface  14 , and deposited material would exist on those wall portions, just as deposited material  70  exists on the vertical walls  64  of the resist layer  24 . If such deposited material existed, it would be difficult to remove it, thereby complicating the manufacturing process. Therefore, the undercuts  30  beneath the overhang  34  of the resist layer  24  serve to provide good, clean edges  60  to the deposited structure  54 .  
         [0021]    Following the material deposition step depicted in FIG. 3, an organic solvent which dissolves the PMGI release layer  20  is utilized to remove all of the unwanted material; that is, the release layer  20 , the resist layer  24  and the material  50  on top of the resist layer, such that the desired structure  54  remains on the surface  14  of the substrate  16 , as depicted in FIG. 4. A suitable organic stripper for PMGI is N-methyl pyrrolidone (NMP).  
         [0022]    Having generally described the bilayer liftoff process of the present invention, the particular process materials and parameters of the present invention as utilized in the manufacturing of a magnetic head for magnetic tape systems are next discussed with the aid of FIGS. 5 and 6.  
         [0023]    [0023]FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view depicting the magnetic pole pieces of a magnetic head  100  of the present invention. As depicted in FIG. 5, an electromagnetic shield  104  is deposited upon a substrate base material  108  utilizing standard deposition techniques such as electroplating, sputter deposition and the like. An insulation layer  112  is thereafter formed on the shield  104  utilizing standard techniques. Thereafter, a first magnetic pole (P 1 )  120  is fabricated on the surface  124  of the insulation layer utilizing the bilayer liftoff fabrication process described hereinbelow. The P 1  pole is composed of a NiFeN/FeN laminate structure.  
         [0024]    [0024]FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view depicting the bilayer liftoff resist structure of the P 1  pole fabrication process. As depicted in FIG. 6, a PMGI release layer  20  is formed on the upper surface  124  of the insulation layer  112 , and the photoresist layer  24  is formed on top of the release layer  20  and a hole or trench  28  has been photolithographically formed such that the undercuts  30  are formed in the release layer  20  beneath overhanging portions  34  of the resist layer  24 . NiFeN/FeN laminate material is then deposited such that the P 1  pole piece  120  is formed within the hole or trench  28 , and NiFeN/FeN laminate material  50  is also deposited upon the upper surface of the resist layer  24 .  
         [0025]    As indicated above, the undercut  30  in the release layer  20  provides a valuable function in preventing the formation of edge deposits, or fences. In the preferred embodiment, where the P 1  pole  120  has a thickness of approximately 1.5 μm, the release layer  20  is formed with a thickness h of approximately 2.0 μm, the resist layer  24  is formed with a thickness of approximately 1.0 μm, and the undercut  30  is formed with a length of approximately 2.0 μm from the edge  130  of the resist layer  24  at the hole or trench  28 . While a deeper undercut  30  is permissible, although unnecessary in the manufacturing process of the present invention, an undercut  30  having a length that is less than approximately 50% of the thickness h of the release layer  20  will generally result in the unwanted deposition of fence material, thereby creating manufacturing and quality control difficulties.  
         [0026]    After the P 1  pole  120  has been deposited, the release layer  20  and material on top of it are chemically removed, as described hereabove. Thereafter, a write gap layer  136  is formed upon the top surface  140  of the P 1  layer utilizing well known deposition techniques. Thereafter, a P 2  pole layer  145  of laminated NiFeN/FeN approximately 1.5 μm thick is formed upon the write gap layer again utilizing the bilayer liftoff manufacturing process described hereabove. It is to be noted that other and intervening well known process steps utilized in fabricating additional magnetic tape head structural features are performed between or after the formation of the P 1  and P 2  poles as described hereabove, as would be well known to those skilled in the art. A detailed description of process steps involved in creating such well known additional tape head structures is not necessary to an understanding of the present invention, and is therefore not presented herein.  
         [0027]    The high magnetic moment NiFeN/FeN laminate structure of the magnetic tape head of the present invention is deposited in a multi-layer sputtering process utilizing conventional RF diode, RF magnetron, or DC magnetron methods. Depending on the detailed deposition process, the wafer temperature may reach 150° C. The compressive stress in the NiFeN/FeN laminated film may be in the range from 500 MPa to 1.5 MPa according to the sputtering method and process conditions. A robust photoresist liftoff process is therefore required, wherein no movement or flow of the photoresist occurs under these process conditions. Additionally, a bilayer liftoff process facilitates the clean removal of both the robust photoresist layer and the NiFeN/FeN layers that are deposited upon the resist. The bilayer resist process is well known in the semiconductor processing industry, and has been applied in the manufacture of hard disk drive magnetic heads (termed DASD heads), and in both of these applications the thickness of the release layer is significantly less than that employed in the present invention because the metallization layers to be lifted off are considerably thinner. Specifically, whereas the release layer thickness in typical DASD manufacturing processes is approximately 0.2-0.3 μm, the thickness of the release layer  20  in manufacturing the tape heads of the present invention is approximately 2.0 μm. Such a thick release layer consequently requires an increased undercutting to avoid edge deposition or fencing of deposited material. In the present invention, the recommended undercutting is approximately equal to the thickness h of the release layer.  
         [0028]    Another critical difference between prior art bilayer resist applications in the semiconductor and DASD head industries and the present invention is that the combined effects of NiFeN/FeN laminated film stress and thickness and wafer temperature during deposition place a significantly greater demand on the mechanical properties of the photoresist layers in the present invention. As thickness, stress, and temperatures increase, the forces that tend to distort the patterned structures in the photoresist in an unacceptable way increase as well.  
         [0029]    The following examples illustrate the robustness of various bilayer photoresist structures with respect to fencing of deposited material and pattern distortion due to flow or deformation of the resist structure during processing:  
         [0030]    A 125 mm (5 in) ceramic wafer was first coated with a dyed thick film version (SFN11) of polydimethylglutarimide (PMGI) from Microlithography Chemical Corp (MCC). Spinning at 1500 rpm (60 sec) and soft-baked on a hotplate (165-170 C., 450 sec) gave approximately a 2.0 μm thick release layer film. In a second step, a negative working photoresist, Ultra i-300 (Shipley corp.) was applied to the wafer at 2600 rpm (60 sec) and soft-baked at 105-110° C. (450 sec) to give a 1.0 μm thick resist layer film. The bilayer of PMGI and photoresist (approximately 3.0 μm total film thickness) was exposed to a mercury lamp (g-h lines) using an Ultratech stepper (UTS-1700) at doses ranging between 800-1200 mj/cm-2. After exposure the wafer was post-expose baked (PEB) at 105-110° C. (450 sec) and puddle developed (6×50 sec) in a dilute KOH developer (0.16 N, MP 2401 from Shipley Company diluted 1:6 in water, 22° C.). An acceptable undercut of the PMGI layer was generated by this method and determined to be 1.0-2.0 μm by optical inspection.  
         [0031]    The photoprocessed wafer was cleaned with a hydrogen/nitrogen plasma for 2 min in a barrel asher. Next, the high moment NiFeN/FeN laminate was deposited using a Balzers Z660 sputtering system. The laminate has the following structure: 200 Å NiFe/(600 Å FeN/200 Å NiFeN) 19X , in which the subscript denotes the number of repetitions of the alternating FeN and NiFeN layers. The total laminate thickness was approximately 1.5 μm. In this process the NiFeN layers are deposited by RF diode reactive sputtering from a Ni81.9Fe18.1 (wt %) target at 2.0 kW power, 1.0×10 −2  mbar pressure, −35 V substrate bias, 99 sccm Ar gas flow and 6 sccm N 2  gas flow. The NiFe base layer is deposited using the same conditions except that no N 2  gas is used. The FeN layers are sputtered from an Fe target by reactive RF diode sputtering at 2.0 kW power, 1.0×10 −2  mbar pressure, −35V substrate bias, 58 sccm Ar gas flow and 10 sccm N 2  gas flow. The wafers were heat sunk to the pallet using Indium foil, and the pallet in turn is heat sunk to a water cooled substrate table. The substrate temperature rises to approximately 120° C. in the deposition. A magnetic field is applied to each wafer by permanent magnets to set the easy axis orientation of the film.  
         [0032]    The wafer deposited with high moment laminate films was treated to hot NMP (55-60 C.) in a tank with sweep powered ultrasonics for 30-45 min. The excess laminate was removed with minimal metal fencing as was determined by optical inspection.  
         [0033]    While the present invention has been shown and described with reference to certain preferred embodiments, it is contemplated by the inventors that those skilled in the art will develop certain alterations and modifications therein that nevertheless include the true spirit and scope of the invention. It is therefore intended that the following claims cover all such alterations and modifications that nevertheless include the spirit and scope of the present invention.