390 likes | 513 Views
Models. The first major model is that of Deal and Grove (1965) This lead to the linear/parabolic model Note that this model cannot explain the effect of oxidation of the diffusion rate the oxidation of shaped surfaces the oxidation of very thin oxides in mixed ambients
E N D
Models • The first major model is that of Deal and Grove (1965) • This lead to the linear/parabolic model • Note that this model cannot explain • the effect of oxidation of the diffusion rate • the oxidation of shaped surfaces • the oxidation of very thin oxides in mixed ambients • The model is an excellent starting place for the other more complicated models
CHEMICAL REACTIONS • Process for dry oxygen Si + O2 SiO2 • Process for water vapor Si + 2H2O SiO2 + 2H2
OXIDE GROWTH • Si is consumed as oxide grows and oxide expands. The Si surface moves into the wafer. Original surface 54% SiO2 46% Silicon wafer
MODEL OF OXIDATION • Oxygen must reach silicon interface • Simple model assumes O2 diffuses through SiO2 • Assumes no O2 accumulation in SiO2 • Assumes the rate of arrival of H2O or O2 at the oxide surface is so fast that it can be ignored • Reaction rate limited, not diffusion rate limited
Deal-Grove Model of Oxidation • Fick’s First Law of diffusion states that the particle flow per unit area, J (particle flux), is directly proportional to the concentration gradient of the particle. • We assume that oxygen flux passing through the oxide is constant everywhere. • F1 is the flux, CG is the concentration in the gas flow, CS is the concentration at the surface of the wafer, and hG is the mass transfer coefficient
No Silicon dioxide J Silicon N Ni SiO2 Si Xo Distance from surface, x
Deal-Grove Model of Oxidation • Assume the oxidation rate at Si-SiO2 interface is proportional to the O2 concentration: • Growth rate is given by the oxidizing flux divided by the number of molecules, M, of the oxidizing species that are incorporated into a unit volume of the resulting oxide:
Deal-Grove Model of Oxidation • The boundary condition is • The solution of differential equation is
Deal-Grove Model of Oxidation xox : final oxide thickness xi : initial oxide thickness B/A: linear rate constant B : parabolic rate constant xi: thickness of initial oxide layer t: equivalent time required to grow initial oxide layer
There are two limiting cases: • Very long oxidation times, t >> • xox2 = B t • Oxide growth in this parabolic regime is diffusion controlled. • Very short oxidation times, (t + ) << A2/4B • xox= B/A ( t + ) • Oxide growth in this linear regime is reaction-rate limited.
Temperature (0C) 1200 1100 1000 900 800 700 10.0 1.0 H2O (640 torr) EA = 2.05 eV 0.1 B/A (mm/hr) (111) Si (100) Si 0.01 Dry O2 EA = 2.0 eV 0.001 0.0001 0.6 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 0.7 1000/T (K-1) At short times, B/A is the linear rate constantProcess is controlled by the reaction at the Si surface
Temperature (0C) 1200 900 800 1100 1000 1.0 H2O (640 torr) EA=0.78eV 0.1 B(mm2/hr) 0.01 Dry O2 EA=1.23eV 0.001 1.0 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1000/T(K-1) At long times, B is the parabolic rate constant (xO2aB) Process is controlled by diffusion of O through oxide
Deal-Grove Model Predictions • Once B and B/A are determined, we can predict the thickness of the oxide versus time
B P 1200 C Mask thickness (mm) 1200 C 1100 C 1100 C 1000 C 900 C 1000 C 900 C Diffusion time (hr) Oxide as a Diffusion Barrier • Diffusion of As, B, P, and Sb are orders of magnitude less in oxide than in silicon • Oxide is excellent mask for high-temperature diffusion of impurities 10 10 Boron Phosphorus 1 1 0.1 0.1 0.01 0.01 0.1 0.1 1.0 10 100 1.0 10 100
Other Models • A variety of other models have been suggested, primarily to correct the deficiencies of the Deal-Grove model for thin oxides • These include • The Reisman power law model • The Han and Helms model with parallel oxidation paths • The Ghez and van Meulen model to account for the effect of oxygen pressure • Some of these models do a much better job for thin oxides • None are widely accepted
Other Topics • Several topics other than the simple planar growth of wet and dry oxide are important • These include • Thin oxide growth kinetics • Dependence on oxygen pressure • Dependence on crystal orientation • Mixed ambient growth kinetics • 2D growth kinetics
Example: 2D Growth • There are several interesting observations • There is significant retardation of the oxide growth in sharp corners • The retardation is more pronounced for low temperature oxidation than for high temperature oxidation • Interior (concave) corners show a more pronounces retardation that exterior (convex) corners
Example: 2D Growth • Several physical mechanisms are needed to understand these results • Crystal orientation • Oxidant diffusion • Stress due to volume expansion • Kao et al suggested changes to the linear-parabolic (Deal-Grove) model to correct for these effects • Most of these effects are built into the modeling software such as SUPREM IV and ATHENA
Measurement Methods • The parameters of interest include • Thickness • Dielectric constant and strength • Index of refraction • Defect density • There are three classes of measurement • Physical (usually destructive) • Optical (usually nondestructive) • Electrical (usually nondestructive)
Physical Measurements • Simple step height technique (DekTak) • Etch away oxide with HF • Use a small stylus to measure the resulting step height • The resolution is <10 nm • More complex technique uses one or more of the SFM concepts (AFM, MFM, etc) • Technique has atomic resolution • SEM or TEM (electron microscopy) • All require sample preparation that makes the tests destructive and not easy to use in production
Optical Measurements • Most optical techniques use the concept of measuring reflected monochromatic light • If monochromatic light of wavelength shines on a transparent film of thickness x0, some light is reflected directly and some is reflected from the wafer-film interface • For some wavelengths, the light will be in phase and for others it will be out of phase • constructive and destructive interference • Minima and maxima of intensity are observed as is varied
Color Chart http://www.htelabs.com/appnotes/sio2_color_chart_thermal_silicon_dioxide.htm
Optical Measurements • Instrument from Filmetrics(http://www.filmetrics.com)
Optical Measurements • The positions of the minima and maxima are given bym=1,2,3… for maxima and ½,3/2,5/2,… for minima • This is called reflectometry and works well for thicknesses over a few 10’s of nm
Optical Measurements • If one does not know n, or if the film is very thin, then ellipsometry is better • When multiple wavelengths of light are used, the instrument is known as a spectroscopic ellipsometer
Optical Measurements • Here, one uses polarized light. • The measurement may be performed at multiple angles of incidence to obtain a higher degree of accuracy • One can get the index of refraction as a function of wavelength as well as the extinction coefficient • Can be used to measure thickness to <1 nm • Fitting routines are necessary to take into account rough interfaces between Si and SiO2 layers.
Cauchy Equation Sellmeier Equation
Electrical Measurements • These measure properties that correlate directly to the performance of the devices fabricated using the oxides • The dominant techniques is the C—V measurement • The basic structure for the measurement is the MOS capacitor • The usual combination is Si-SiO2-(Al or pSi) • Any conductor-dielectric-semiconductorcan be used
MOS Capacitor + Al tox V Si wafer Al -
http://www.mtmi.vu.lt/pfk/funkc_dariniai/transistor/mos_capacitors.htmhttp://www.mtmi.vu.lt/pfk/funkc_dariniai/transistor/mos_capacitors.htm
C-V Plot http://ece-www.colorado.edu/~bart/book/book/chapter6/ch6_3.htm#fig6_3_5
C-V Plot • Differences between high frequency and low frequency C-V data • Doping concentration in Si near Si-oxide interface • Voltage shift proportional to charged defects within oxide