1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to semiconductor manufacturing and more specifically to a cleaning method and apparatus for a single-wafer cleaning system, which minimizes galvanic corrosion.
2. Description of the Related Art
Galvanic corrosion is induced in an environment where two dissimilar metals are coupled through an electrolyte. One of the metals in the galvanic cell becomes an anode and corrodes faster than it would normally, while the other metal becomes a cathode and corrodes slower than it would normally.
Metal interconnects used in semiconductors are often constructed from dissimilar metals such as Copper/Tantalum (Cu/Ta) or Copper/Tantalum Nitride (Cu/TaN). During cleaning operations following processing operations such as etch and chemical mechanical planarization (CMP), the dissimilar metals are brought into electrical contact through an electrolyte, such as water from an aqueous based cleaner or a semi-aqueous based cleaner. As a result, corrosion of one of the metals is accelerated, thereby creating the potential for device failure.
During cleaning operations, substrates are exposed to cleaning chemistries. In the case of single-wafer cleaning operations the cleaning chemistries are formulated to be fast acting and the stoichiometry of the components is critical to the performance of the cleaning chemistry. For example, semi-aqueous cleaning chemicals for single-wafer cleaning operations typically include a solvent to remove organic material, a chelator to enhance metal contaminant removal from surfaces exposed to sputtering from the etch process, and a surfactant to passivate sensitive surfaces, especially those vulnerable to corrosion. Examples of commercially available single-wafer cleaning chemistries used for post via etch applications include NE-89 from Ashland Inc. of Dublin, Ohio and EKC 640 from EKC Technology, Inc. of Hayward, Calif.
The surfactant of the cleaning chemicals for the single-wafer cleaning operations are formulated to help improve wetting of difficult-to-access features such as vias and contacts, and also to control galvanic effects where necessary, however, if the surfactant is diluted then its passivation capacity is reduced or inhibited, thereby leaving the substrate more vulnerable to galvanic corrosion effects. For example, where the cleaning chemistry is puddled on the substrate and then rinsed off with de-ionized (DI) water, the water acts as an electrolyte to initiate the mechanism for galvanic corrosion. The galvanic corrosion may occur within the first few seconds of rinsing, where the cleaning chemistry and the surfactant are initially diluted upon rinsing of the cleaning chemistry. The dilution of the cleaning chemistry upsets a chemical equilibrium established to protect the substrate surface from corrosion. Since the surfactant concentration is modified by dilution through rinsing, the semiconductor substrate is vulnerable to corrosion when the diluted surfactant concentration is insufficient to inhibit corrosion.
As mentioned above, region 130 includes a mixture of cleaning chemistry and DI water. Thus, the chemical equilibrium under which the cleaning chemistry is designed to function has been shifted. As a result of the dilution of the surfactant by the DI water, the corrosion protection of the surfactant is inhibited, which in turn exposes the substrate 126 to the effects of galvanic corrosion. As mentioned above, the effects of corrosion, especially galvanic corrosion, can occur within seconds.
In view of the foregoing, there is a need to provide an apparatus and method to rinse the cleaning chemistry from a substrate in a manner which protects the exposed metals of the substrate from galvanic corrosion.
Broadly speaking, the present invention fills these needs by providing an apparatus and a method which quickly removes the cleaning chemistry from the surface of a semiconductor substrate. It should be appreciated that the present invention can be implemented in numerous ways, including as an apparatus, a system, a device, or a method. Several inventive embodiments of the present invention are described below.
In one embodiment, a method for minimizing galvanic corrosion effects in a single-wafer cleaning system is provided. The method initiates with applying a cleaning chemistry containing corrosion inhibitors to a surface of a wafer. Then, the surface of the wafer is exposed to the cleaning chemistry for a period of time. Next, a concentration gradient at an interface of the cleaning chemistry and the surface of the wafer is refreshed. Then, a rinsing agent and a drying agent are applied simultaneously to remove the cleaning chemistry, wherein the drying agent dries the surface of the wafer prior to a concentration of the corrosion inhibitors being diluted to a level insufficient to inhibit corrosion.
In another embodiment, a method for quickly drying a surface of a semiconductor substrate is provided. The method initiates with applying a cleaning chemistry including a surfactant to the surface of the semiconductor substrate. Then, the surface of the semiconductor substrate is exposed to the cleaning chemistry for a defined time period. Next, a rinsing agent and a drying agent are applied simultaneously to the surface of the semiconductor substrate to remove the cleaning chemistry, wherein the drying agent inhibits the rinsing agent from forming a diluted region of the cleaning chemistry from residing on the surface of the semiconductor substrate for a time period sufficient to allow corrosion of the substrate.
In yet another embodiment, a chemical sequencing method for single-wafer cleaning of a residue on a surface of a semiconductor substrate is provided. The chemical sequencing method is configured to maintain a concentration gradient at an interface between a cleaning chemistry and a residue on the semiconductor substrate. The method initiates with applying a cleaning chemistry to the surface of the semiconductor substrate. Then, the cleaning chemistry is allowed to react with the residue. Next, the cleaning agent is removed to reduce exposure of the semiconductor substrate to corrosion. Then, the applying, the allowing and the removing steps are repeated such that the concentration gradient is refreshed to more effectively remove the residue on the surface of a semiconductor substrate.
In still another embodiment, a method for minimizing galvanic corrosion effects in a single-wafer cleaning system while maintaining a concentration gradient at an interface between a cleaning chemistry and a residue on a wafer is provided. The method initiates with applying the cleaning chemistry containing corrosion inhibitors to a surface of a wafer. Then, the surface of the wafer is exposed to the cleaning chemistry for a period of time. Next, a concentration gradient at an interface of the cleaning chemistry and the surface of the wafer is refreshed. Then, the wafer is rinsed with the cleaning chemistry and simultaneously dried with a drying agent to remove the cleaning chemistry and dry the wafer.
In another embodiment, a system for cleaning a single substrate is provided. The system includes a spindle adapted to support the substrate where the spindle is configured to spin the substrate. A substrate surface having a layer of a cleaning chemistry disposed thereover is included. A first nozzle positioned over the substrate surface is also included. The first nozzle is configured to apply a rinsing agent on the substrate surface while the substrate is spinning. A second nozzle positioned over the substrate surface is included. The second nozzle is configured to apply a drying agent on the substrate surface while the first nozzle is applying the rinsing agent. A dispense arm to which the first and second nozzles are rigidly attached is included. The dispense arm is configured to advance radially above the substrate surface from a center of the substrate to an edge of the substrate while the substrate is spinning and while the first and second nozzles are applying the rinsing agent and the drying agent, respectively. The substrate surface is dried quickly to reduce exposure of the substrate surface to corrosion. Alternative configurations can be incorporated to increase the speed of rinsing and drying, such as incorporating multiple nozzle pairs.
In yet another embodiment, a single substrate cleaning apparatus that prevents galvanic corrosion is provided. The apparatus includes a spindle configured to rotatably support a substrate. A moveable dispense arm disposed over the spindle is included. The dispense arm supports a first supply line and a second supply line. The first supply line has a first nozzle affixed to an end of the first supply line, and the second supply line has a second nozzle affixed to an end of the second supply line. The first nozzle is positioned behind the second nozzle such that a fluid dispensed from the second nozzle is dried by application of a fluid simultaneously dispensed from the first nozzle in manner that protects the substrate from galvanic corrosion.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, illustrating by way of example the principles of the invention.
The present invention will be readily understood by the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals designate like structural elements.
An invention is described which provides a method and apparatus for removing a cleaning chemistry from the surface of a semiconductor substrate without exposing the substrate to corrosion effects during a single-wafer cleaning operation. In addition, the method and apparatus provide a more effective means for removing the residue during cleaning operations without increasing the consumption of the cleaning chemistry. It will be obvious, however, to one skilled in the art, that the present invention may be practiced without some or all of these specific details. In other instances, well known process operations have not been described in detail in order not to obscure the present invention.
The embodiments of the present invention provide a method and apparatus for applying and removing a cleaning agent from a semiconductor substrate without exposing the substrate to galvanic corrosion effects. In one embodiment, the precisely formulated cleaning chemistry applied to the semiconductor substrate is removed in a manner to reduce dilution of the components of the cleaning chemistry. In another embodiment, the cleaning chemistry includes a surfactant to inhibit corrosion. As used herein, surfactant also refers to corrosion inhibitors. The cleaning chemistry is removed from the surface of the semiconductor substrate in a manner where the dilutive effects of the rinsing agent are counteracted by quickly removing the cleaning chemistry from the surface of the substrate. By quickly drying the surface of the substrate during the rinsing process, the semiconductor remains protected from corrosion.
In addition, a method and apparatus for more effectively removing the cleaning chemistry from the surface of the semiconductor substrate during single-wafer cleaning is provided in another embodiment. The fast acting formulations of the cleaning chemistries for single-wafer cleaning processes perform optimally when a concentration gradient between the cleaning chemistry and the residue to be removed at the surface of the semiconductor substrate is maintained by removal of the boundary layer formed from reaction of the cleaning chemistry with the residue. More particularly, the retarding effects of the reactant species produced by the interaction of the cleaning chemistry and the residue is minimized by a chemical sequencing process to refresh the cleaning chemistry in order to maintain the concentration gradient. The refreshing process can include removing cleaning chemistry from the surface of the substrate and replacing it with fresh cleaning chemistry or continually recycling the cleaning chemistry to maintain the concentration gradient as will be discussed in more detail below.
Surrounding hollow spindle 142, fingers 158, and substrate 148 is spray shield 164. Spray shield 164 is configured to contain any liquid from the rinsing and drying process to the region around hollow spindle 142. In one embodiment of the invention, spray shield 164 is configured with a door (not shown) that is magnetically coupled to a semi-circular pneumatic system to provide lateral access to the hollow spindle 142 for the insertion and removal of substrates 148.
In another embodiment of the invention, a rinsing agent and a drying agent are simultaneously applied to the top surface of substrate 148. The rinsing agent is applied through nozzle 166 and the drying agent is applied through nozzle 168 in one embodiment. Examples of rinsing agents include de-ionized water (DIW) and Isopropyl alcohol. Examples of drying agents include isopropyl alcohol (IPA), IPA vapor, heated Nitrogen (N2) gas, and other inert gasses or vaporized chemicals. Some drying agents produce by-products or result in excess vapors that can become trapped within drip tray 150. An exhaust 170 is provided for the release of airborne chemicals or vapors, and a drain 172 is provided to drain any liquid residue of both cleaning and drying agents.
Dispense arm 152 provides for the supply of rinsing and drying agents through dispense nozzles 166 and 168 through corresponding supply lines 174 and 176 to substrate 148 positioned in fingers 158 on the hollow spindle 142. The drying agent and the rinsing agent are supplied from separate reservoirs (not shown) and are routed along dispense arm 152 to dispense nozzles 168 and 166, respectively. Nozzles 166 and 168 direct streams of drying agent and the rinsing agent to a top surface of substrate 148.
In one embodiment, positioning of the dispense arm 152 across the top and surface of substrate 148 is controlled by a dispense arm controller (not shown) and a dispense arm drive shaft (not shown) contained within a dispense arm drive shaft housing 156. The dispense arm drive shaft is mechanically connected to the dispense arm support post 154 providing a direct mechanical connection between the drive shaft and the dispense arm 152 to position the dispense arm 152. The dispense arm 152 is configured to pivot about the dispense arm support post 154 to move the dispense arm 152 and move the dispense nozzles 166 and 168 radially across a top surface of a substrate. In one embodiment of the invention, the rinsing and drying agents are dispensed along a radius of a spinning substrate from a center region of the substrate to a peripheral region of the substrate. The dispense arm 152 is therefore moved along the surface of the spinning substrate from the center region outward to a peripheral region. In another embodiment, the nozzles 166 and 168 are positioned so that the drying agent is applied to the surface of the substrate directly behind the rinsing agent as the dispense arm 152 traverses across the surface of the substrate 148. As will be described in more detail below, applying the drying agent simultaneously with the rinsing agent and in a manner which quickly dries the surface of the substrate 148 in a single-wafer cleaning operation protects the substrate from corrosion effects. It should be appreciated that
It should be appreciated that by simultaneously applying the drying agent 184 and the rinsing agent 182 of
Therefore, at the interface 194 of
The method of
The method of flowchart 208 then moves to operation 214 where the cleaning chemistry is removed quickly to reduce exposure of the semiconductor substrate to corrosion. In one embodiment, the cleaning chemistry is removed quickly as described in reference to
By refreshing the cleaning chemistry, the optimal chemical equilibrium is re-established. In one embodiment, the method of flowchart 208 consumes substantially the same amount of cleaning chemistry as a single application process. More specifically, if the single application process consumes about 10 ml to about 100 ml, then the chemical sequencing operation where the cleaning chemistry is removed once and re-applied consumes half the amount for each application i.e., between about 5 ml to about 50 ml. Therefore, the absolute quantity of cleaning chemistry consumed does not increase. Additionally, the total amount of time for the single-wafer cleaning method of flowchart 208 is substantially the same as for a single application of the cleaning chemistry. Since the concentration gradient is refreshed, the summation of the residence time for the cleaning chemistry for each application of the chemical sequencing method is substantially similar to the single application residence time. For example, the processing time for a chemical sequencing operation where the cleaning chemistry is applied, then removed and re-applied is substantially similar to the processing time of a single application of the cleaning chemistry. That is, the cleaning chemistry for the chemical sequencing is applied twice, however, each application has a residence time of about half of the residence time for the single application, since the gradient is refreshed in between applications during chemical sequencing. Therefore, the total processing time remains substantially similar.
It should be appreciated that more than two applications of the cleaning chemistry may be utilized. For example, the cleaning chemistry may be applied three or more times in one embodiment. In this embodiment, the amount of cleaning chemistry consumed remains substantially similar as well as the processing time when compared to the single application. In another embodiment, the cleaning chemistry can be continually applied to the surface of the semiconductor substrate. Here, the cleaning chemistry sprayed or puddled onto the surface of the substrate is recycled as it is removed from the substrate surface. In this embodiment the concentration gradient would be continually refreshed.
In yet another embodiment of the invention, the cleaning chemistry is applied to the substrate using the apparatus of
For the embodiment where the cleaning chemistry replaces the rinsing agent discussed above, it should be appreciated that the cleaning chemistry will be easily captured and recycled if desired. In turn, the waste effluent quantity would be reduced as the cleaning chemistry is not diluted with DI water or other rinsing agent, thus the cleaning chemistry can be recycled and reused. Furthermore, galvanic corrosion effects would be minimized as the cleaning chemistry is not diluted by the rinsing agent. Therefore, the chemical equilibrium established for the surfactants or corrosion inhibitors of the cleaning chemistry is maintained and refreshed to control galvanic corrosion effects.
Although the foregoing invention has been described in some detail for purposes of clarity of understanding, it will be apparent that certain changes and modifications may be practiced within the scope of the appended claims. Accordingly, the present embodiments are to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive, and the invention is not to be limited to the details given herein, but may be modified within the scope and equivalents of the appended claims.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/013,211, filed on Dec. 7, 2001, and entitled “METHOD FOR CONTROLLING GALVANIC CORROSION EFFECTS ON A SINGLE-WAFER CLEANING SYSTEM,” which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/305,372 filed Jul. 13, 2001 and entitled “Drying substrate using a combination of substrate processing techniques.” Each of these applications is herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60305372 | Jul 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10013211 | Dec 2001 | US |
Child | 11029821 | Jan 2005 | US |