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Microelectronic Fabrication

Microelectronic Fabrication. Lecture 6 Metallization. School of Microelectronic Engineering. Microelectronic Fabrication. Summary of IC Processes. `. School of Microelectronic Engineering. Microelectronic Fabrication. Two Types of Thin Film. Dielectric Film (CVD Process) Oxide

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Microelectronic Fabrication

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  1. Microelectronic Fabrication Lecture 6 Metallization School of Microelectronic Engineering

  2. Microelectronic Fabrication Summary of IC Processes ` School of Microelectronic Engineering

  3. Microelectronic Fabrication Two Types of Thin Film • Dielectric Film (CVD Process) • Oxide • Nitride • Epitaxial silicon • Conducting Film (PVD Process) • Aluminum alloy • Ti, TiN • Silicides • Copper (CVD or electroplating) • Tungsten (Metal CVD) • Polysilicon (LPCVD) School of Microelectronic Engineering KUKUM – SHRDC INSEP Training Program 2006

  4. Microelectronic Fabrication Conducting Thin Film Applications • Front-End-Of-Line (FEOL) • Gate and electrodes • Polysilicon • Polycide • Back-End-Of-Line (BEOL) • Interconnection • Silicides • Barrier • Anti Reflective Coating (ARC) School of Microelectronic Engineering

  5. Microelectronic Fabrication • Interconnection • Al-Cu alloy is commonly used material School of Microelectronic Engineering

  6. Microelectronic Fabrication • Interconnection • Copper Metalization – deep submicron School of Microelectronic Engineering

  7. Microelectronic Fabrication • Silicides • To reduce contact resistance of metal / semiconductor • interface. • TiSi2, WSi2 and CoSi2 are commonly used materials • Self-aligned-silicide-process (SALICIDE) School of Microelectronic Engineering

  8. Microelectronic Fabrication • Barrier Layer • To prevent aluminum diffusion into silicon (junction-spiking) • TiN is widely used barrier material School of Microelectronic Engineering

  9. Microelectronic Fabrication School of Microelectronic Engineering

  10. Microelectronic Fabrication • ARC (anti reflective coating) to reduce “notching” during photolithography process. • TiN is widely used material School of Microelectronic Engineering

  11. Microelectronic Fabrication Figure of Merits • Step Coverage (Aspect Ratio, Bottom and Sidewall Step Coverage) • High Conductivity / Low Resistivity School of Microelectronic Engineering

  12. Microelectronic Fabrication CVD vs PVD for Metalization • CVD: Chemical reaction on the surface • PVD: No chemical reaction i.e. purely physical • CVD: Better step coverage (50-100%) and gap-fill capability • PVD: Poor step coverage (<15%) and gap-fill capability • CVD: Impurities in the film, lower conductivity, hard to deposit alloy. • PVD: Purer deposited film, higher conductivity, easy to deposit alloy. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  13. Microelectronic Fabrication Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) Process PVD works by vaporizing the solid materials, either by heating or by sputtering, and recondensing the vapor on the substrate to form the solid thin film. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  14. Microelectronic Fabrication Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) Process • Evaporation • Thermal Evaporation • Electron Beam Evaporation • Sputtering • Simple DC Sputtering • DC Magnetron Sputtering • DC Triode • RF Diode • RF Triode • RF / DC magnetron School of Microelectronic Engineering

  15. Microelectronic Fabrication Thermal Evaporation • In the early years of IC manufacturing, thermal evaporation was widely used for aluminum deposition. • Aluminum is relatively easy to vaporized due to low melting point (660 C). School of Microelectronic Engineering

  16. Microelectronic Fabrication • System needs to be under high vacuum (~ 10-6 Torr) • Flowing large electric current through aluminum charge heats it up by resistive heating. • Aluminum starts to vaporized • When aluminum vapor reaches the wafer surface, it recondenses and forms a thin aluminum film. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  17. Microelectronic Fabrication • The deposition rate is mainly related to the heating power, which controlled by the electric current. • The higher the current, the higher the deposition rate. • A significant trace amount of sodium, low deposition rate and poor step coverage. • Difficult to precisely control the proper proportions for the alloy films such as Al:Si, Al:Cu and Al:Cu:Si. • No longer used for metalization processes in VLSI and ULSI School of Microelectronic Engineering

  18. Microelectronic Fabrication Electron Beam Evaporation • A beam of electrons, typically with the energy about 10 keV and current up to several amperes, is directed at the metal in a water-cooled crucible in vacuum chamber. • This process heats the metal to the evaporation temperature. • IR lamp is used to heat the wafer (improve step coverage) School of Microelectronic Engineering

  19. Microelectronic Fabrication • Better step coverage (higher surface mobility due to lamp heating) • Less sodium contamination (only part of aluminum charge is vaporized. • Cannot match the quality of sputtering deposition, therefore very rarely used in advanced semiconductor fab. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  20. Microelectronic Fabrication Sputtering • The most commonly used PVD process for metallization • Involves energetic ion bombardment, which physically dislodge atoms or molecules from the solid metal surface, and redeposit them on the substrate as thin metal film. • Argon is normally used as sputtering atom School of Microelectronic Engineering

  21. Microelectronic Fabrication Sputtering Mechanisme • When power is applied between two electrodes under low pressure, a free electron is accelerated by the electric field. • When it collides with Ar, another free electron is generated (ionization collision). Ar becomes positively charged i.e glow discharge. • The free electron repeat this process to generate more free electrons. DC, RF DC/RF School of Microelectronic Engineering

  22. Microelectronic Fabrication • The positively charged Ar ions are accelerated toward a negatively biased cathode, usually called target. The target plate is normally made from the same metal that to be deposited on wafer. • When these energetic argon ions hit the target surface, atoms of the target material are physically removed from the surface by the momentum transfer of the impacting ions. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  23. Microelectronic Fabrication • Sputtered-off atoms leave the target and travel inside the vacuum chamber in the form of metal vapor. • Eventually, some of them reach the wafer surface, adsorb and become so-called adatoms. • The adatoms migrate on the surface until they found nucleation sites and rest there. Other adatoms recondense around the nucleation sites to form grain. • When the grains grow and meet with other grains, they form a continuous poly-crystalline metal thin film on the wafer surface. • The border between grains is called a grain boundary. The grain boundary can scatter electron flows, therefore cause higher resistivity. • Grain size mainly determined by surface mobility, • which is related to many other factors School of Microelectronic Engineering

  24. Microelectronic Fabrication • Normally, higher temperature will result in larger grain size. • Grain size has a strong effect on film reflectivity and sheet resistance. • Film with larger grain size has less grain boundary to scatter electron flow, therefore lower resistivity. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  25. Microelectronic Fabrication Simple DC Sputtering • The simplest sputtering system. Wafer is placed on on the grounded electrode and the target is the negatively biased electrode, the cathode. • When a high-power DC voltage (several hundred volts) is applied, the argon atoms are ionized by electric field. These accelerate and bombard the target, then sputtered-off the target material from the surface. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  26. Microelectronic Fabrication DC Magnetron Sputtering • The most popular method for PVD metallization process, because it can achieve high deposition rate, good film uniformity, high film quality, and easy process control. • High deposition rate allow single-wafer processing, which has several advantages over batch-processing. • A rotating magnet is placed on top of metal target. • In a magnetic field, electrons will be constrained near magnetic field line. • This gives electrons more chances for ionization collision. • Therefore, the magnetic field serves to increase plasma density and cause more sputtering • near the magnet. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  27. Microelectronic Fabrication School of Microelectronic Engineering

  28. Microelectronic Fabrication • By adjusting the location of magnets, the uniformity of the deposited film can be optimized. • Normally, a shield is installed inside the chamber to protect the chamber wall from being deposited. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  29. SPUTTER CHAMBER GENERATOR RACK TRNSFORMER /MAIN AC BOX PUMP FRAME COOL DOWN PRE CLEAN SYSTEM CONTROLLER / SYSTEM AC BOX CRYOPUMP COMPRESSOR MAINFRAME ORIENT / DEGAS HEAT EXCHANGER LOAD LOCK Microelectronic Fabrication Sputtering System • Cluster tool with multiple chamber. • Staged vacuum; • Loading station: 10-6 Torr • Transfer chamber: 10-7 to 10-8 Torr • Process chamber: 10-9 Torr SPUTTER CHAMBER School of Microelectronic Engineering

  30. Microelectronic Fabrication APPLIED MATERIALS, ENDURA HPPVD SYSTEM School of Microelectronic Engineering

  31. Microelectronic Fabrication Basic Metallization Process Steps • De-gas (Orient/Degas Chamber) • To orient the wafer. • Heat the wafer to drive-out gases and moiture. • Prevent out-gassing during the deposition process School of Microelectronic Engineering

  32. Microelectronic Fabrication • Pre-Clean (Pre-clean Chamber) • Sputtering etch to remove native oxide on the metal surface. • Prepare contact holes and vias for metal deposition. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  33. Microelectronic Fabrication Titanium Deposition Process • Normally deposited as welding layer prior to aluminum alloy deposition (reduce contact resistance) • Titanium can trap oxygen and prevent it from bonding with aluminum to form high reistivity aluminum oxide. • To produce larger grain size, wafer is normally heated to 350 C. • Collimated chamber is normally used in deep submicron IC fabrication to achieve better titanium step coverage. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  34. Microelectronic Fabrication • Collimator allows metal atoms to move in mainly in vertical direction • Significantly improve bottom step coverage School of Microelectronic Engineering

  35. Microelectronic Fabrication Titanium Nitride Deposition Process • TiN is widely used as ARC, glue and barrier layers. • The deposition normally uses a reactive sputtering process. • When nitrogen flows with argon into the process chamber, some nitrogen molecules dissociate as a result of ionization collision. • Free nitrogen radicals are very reactive. They can react with sputtered Ti atoms to form TiN and deposit it on the wafer surface. • They can also react with Ti target to form a thin TiN layer on the target surface. • Argon bombardment could dislodge TiN from the target surface, redeposited on the wafer surface. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  36. Microelectronic Fabrication School of Microelectronic Engineering KUKUM – SHRDC INSEP Training Program 2006

  37. Microelectronic Fabrication Al-Cu alloy Deposition Process • Needs an ultrahigh baseline vacuum to achieve low film resistivity. • Standard process • Depositing aluminum alloy over tungsten plug, after Ti and TiN • wetting layer. • Normally deposited at 200 C, to achieve smaller grain size for better line patterned etch. School of Microelectronic Engineering KUKUM – SHRDC INSEP Training Program 2006

  38. Microelectronic Fabrication • Hot Aluminum Process • To allow aluminum to fill contact holes and vias, instead of W-plug (CVD) • This will reduce the contact resistance between metal layers. • Aluminum: ~ 3.3 Ω.cm • Tungsten: ~ 5.6 Ω.cm • Aluminum is deposited at 450 to 500 C. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  39. Microelectronic Fabrication Metal Thin Film Measurement / Characterization • Thickness Measurement • Reflectivity • Sheet Resistance • Deposition Rate • Film Stress • Process Uniformity School of Microelectronic Engineering

  40. Microelectronic Fabrication Thickness Measurement • Metal films such as aluminum, Ti, TiN and copper are opaque films; therefore, optical-based technique such as reflectospectrometry cannot be used. • A destructive process is normally required to precisely measure the actual film thickness. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  41. Microelectronic Fabrication • Step height measurement (profilometer) • SEM / TEM • Four point probe – indirect measurement School of Microelectronic Engineering KUKUM – SHRDC INSEP Training Program 2006

  42. Microelectronic Fabrication • Accoustic Measurement • Laser shot on thin film surface • Photo-detector measures reflected intensity • Thermal expansion causes a sound wave • Propagates and reflects at interface of different materials • Accoustic wave echoes back and forth • Film thickness can be calculated by; d = Vs ∆t / 2 Vs – speed of sound ∆t - time between reflectivity peaks School of Microelectronic Engineering KUKUM – SHRDC INSEP Training Program 2006

  43. Microelectronic Fabrication Reflectivity • Reflectivity change indicates a process drift. • A function of film grain size and surface smoothness • Larger grain size, lower reflectivity • Can be measured using Reflectometry (intensity of the reflected beam of light). • Reflectivity measurement results usually use the relative value to silicon. School of Microelectronic Engineering

  44. Microelectronic Fabrication Sheet Resistance Measurement • Most important characteristics of conducting film. • Widely used to rapidly monitor the deposition process uniformity by indirectly measure the film thickness. • Four Point Probe is commonly used measurement tool School of Microelectronic Engineering

  45. Microelectronic Fabrication Deposition Rate School of Microelectronic Engineering

  46. Microelectronic Fabrication Film Stress Measurement • Stress is due to the mismatch between different materials • Compressive stress causes hillock, short between metal • Tensile stress causes crack, metal open, peel off • Two types of measurement • Contact – profilometer • Non-contact – capacitance measurement School of Microelectronic Engineering

  47. Microelectronic Fabrication Process Uniformity • Max-min uniformity (Max value – Min value) / 2 x average School of Microelectronic Engineering

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