Chemical-mechanical polishing system having a bi-material wafer backing film assembly

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6344414
  • Patent Number
    6,344,414
  • Date Filed
    Friday, April 30, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 5, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
A system for chemical-mechanical polishing is described which includes a wafer backing film having concentric first and second portions. The portions of the wafer backing film are of different materials. The second portion of the wafer backing film has an annular shape and surrounds the first portion; a backing shim is used to adjust the first portion and second portion with respect to each other in a vertical direction. The first and second portions of the wafer backing film and the backing shim are mounted on an adhesive assembly film, thereby forming an assembly for mounting on a wafer carrier. The second portion of the wafer backing film is less compressible than the first portion, and is adjusted in the vertical direction so that the outer edge of the wafer is substantially sealed when backside air is applied to the wafer during a film removal process.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to semiconductor processing, and more particularly to improvement of uniformity in chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) processes.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




In the semiconductor industry, critical steps in the production of integrated circuits are the selective formation and removal of films on an underlying substrate. Chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) is widely used to reduce the thickness and planarize the topography of films on the substrate (generally a silicon wafer).




In a typical CMP process, a film is selectively removed from a semiconductor wafer by rotating the wafer against a polishing pad (or rotating the pad against the wafer, or both) with a controlled amount of pressure in the presence of a slurry.

FIG. 1

shows a conventional CMP arrangement wherein the wafer


1


is held against a polishing pad


11


using a wafer carrier


2


. Wafer carrier


2


, which often comprises a metal plate, is covered by a backing film


3


in contact with the backside of the wafer (that is, the side not being polished). The wafer, wafer carrier, and backing film are held in radial alignment by a retaining ring


4


.




Chemical-mechanical polishing using this standard arrangement does not result in a uniform polishing rate across the wafer, and thus does not produce a planar polished surface. Both radial and non-radial variations in uniformity have been observed. A number of techniques have been employed in attempts to equalize the polishing rate at different areas of the wafer, as detailed below.




CMP tools often use vacuum or backside air pressure at the surface of the wafer carrier to hold a wafer during loading on the tool and to eject a wafer after the process is finished. This may be done by providing a porous wafer carrier plate (as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,645,474) and pre-punching holes in the backing film. Another typical arrangement (shown in

FIG. 1B

) uses a wafer carrier


2


with a plenum formed therein and holes


12


aligned with holes


13


in the backing film, to conduct air to the backside of the wafer.




Another known practice is to modulate the amount of backside air pressure during the polishing process to control and improve polishing uniformity (see, for example, Murakami et al., VMIC Conference, 1996). Air pressure applied to the backside of the wafer causes the wafer to flex outward, which in turn causes the wafer center to come into closer contact with the polishing pad. Generally, additional force on the wafer at the center reduces the polishing rate near the wafer perimeter relative to that at the center, thereby improving the overall polish uniformity.




Unfortunately, the use of backside air pressure has drawbacks. If the air is permitted to leak around the edge of the wafer, a substantial portion of the applied force is lost.




In addition, greater and greater amounts of backside air pressure are required as various tool elements (such as the polishing pad and backing film) degrade with repeated use.




Furthermore, since the use of backside air pressure reduces the relative polishing rate near the wafer edge, it aggravates a well-known radial non-uniformity called “edge bead.”

FIG. 2

shows the radial variation in polishing rate on a 200 mm wafer in a typical CMP process. The polishing rate is generally higher near the periphery of the wafer than near the center, but drops sharply at a radius of 90-98 mm. This results in a sharp increase in film thickness (a bead) at the edge of the wafer after polishing. It is generally accepted that the edge bead is caused by deflection of the polishing pad as it meets the wafer edge; this is referred to as “pad dive.” As the pad moves under the wafer and wafer carrier, the wafer edge forces the pad to tilt locally. The pad pressure on the wafer is very high at the outer 2 mm of the wafer, but very low at a radial distance of 3 to 7 mm from the edge. This low pressure results in a low polish rate. This problem is aggravated by the use of a stacked pad arrangement (preferred for many processes for better overall planarization), wherein a hard polishing pad is in contact with the wafer and a soft pad is placed underneath.




Various tool modifications have been suggested to reduce the effect of pad dive. These include milling the carrier face to a predetermined concave profile (so that the perimeter of the carrier is in closer contact with the wafer) and placing shims behind the backing film in the 90-98 mm radius area. However, even if the effects of backside air pressure and pad dive are brought into balance, that balance cannot be maintained for repeated process cycles as various components of the polishing apparatus are subjected to wear.




An additional problem that appears at the wafer edge is called “slurry penetration.” If the wafer is not sealed to the wafer carrier at its edge, slurry may penetrate between the wafer edge and the retaining ring and deposit on the backside of the wafer near the edge. A cleaning process is then required after the CMP process to remove the deposited slurry. This problem is aggravated by backside air leaking radially outward, which dries the slurry and causes it to adhere to the wafer (as noted by Ikenouchi et al., CMP-MIC Conference, 1999).




There remains a need for a wafer carrier and wafer backing film arrangement which provides improved polishing uniformity and is simple and inexpensive to implement on a wide variety of tools.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention addresses the above-described need for improved CMP process uniformity by providing a bi-material wafer backing film assembly, with a wafer edge sealed against backside air leakage.




In accordance with the present invention, a film removal apparatus is provided which includes a wafer backing film having a first portion and a second portion composed of different materials. The wafer backing film is substantially circular in shape and the first portion and second portion are concentric; the first portion has a circular shape at the center of the backing film and the second portion has an annular shape and surrounds the first portion. One or more backing shims may be provided to adjust the first portion of the wafer backing film and the second portion of the wafer backing film with respect to each other in the vertical direction. The backing shim, the first portion of the wafer backing film and the second portion of the wafer backing film are mounted on an adhesive assembly film, thereby forming an assembly for mounting on a wafer carrier. The first and second portions of the wafer backing film are adjusted with respect each other in the vertical direction in accordance with the thickness of the backing shim or shims.




During a film removal process, the wafer is pressed by the wafer carrier and wafer backing film with greater pressure at the perimeter of the wafer than at its center.




According to a further aspect of the invention, the wafer backing film is assembled so that, during a film removal process, the wafer is in contact with the second portion of the wafer backing film. Furthermore, the second portion of the wafer backing film is substantially impermeable to air. When the wafer backing film is assembled as described just above, this permits a seal to be formed at the edge of the wafer during a film removal process. Accordingly, when backside air pressure is applied to the wafer, leakage of the air around the edge of the wafer is controlled.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1A

shows a polishing pad, wafer carrier and wafer backing film in a conventional chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) arrangement.





FIG. 1B

shows a typical chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) arrangement in which backside air is used.





FIG. 2

is a plot of radial variation of film polishing rate, showing the edge bead effect in a typical CMP process.





FIG. 3A

shows a bi-material wafer backing film in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 3B

is a detail view showing the bi-material wafer backing film assembled on an adhesive film.





FIG. 4

is a detail view showing the wafer edge sealing effect of the bi-material backing film of the present invention.





FIG. 5

is a detail view showing the effect of improper alignment of the surfaces of the two pieces of the backing film.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




A preferred embodiment of the present invention includes a wafer backing film with an inner portion and an outer portion having different properties, where the outer portion of the backing film seals the edge of the wafer against backside air leakage. These two film portions are preassembled on a single adhesive film and then mounted on the wafer carrier.




Bi-Material Backing Film




The uniformity of a film polishing process may be improved by replacing the single-piece wafer backing film


3


with a bi-material backing film


30


, as shown schematically in FIG.


3


A. In order to show details of the backing film and wafer carrier more clearly, the wafer and polishing pad are not shown in the figure.




The backing film


30


includes two concentric pieces, a center piece


31


and an outer ring


32


. These pieces in general have different compressibilities, hardnesses, porosities and thicknesses. The outer diameter of ring


32


matches the diameter of the wafer being polished (e.g., 200 mm for a standard production Si wafer). In a CMP arrangement for 200 mm wafers, the outer ring


32


has a width of about 5 mm, so that the center piece


31


has a diameter of about 190 mm. The combination of two pieces


31


and


32


overcomes the problems of backside air leakage and pad dive, permitting substantial improvement in CMP process uniformity.




The center piece


31


is made from a relatively soft, compressible gas-permeable material, such as Rodel DF200. This material may have a fibrous or open-cell structure. Center piece


31


may have a film (such as mylar) on the backside thereof, with an adhesive coating to permit positive attachment to the surface of the wafer carrier


2


. Such a film, if not gas-permeable, must be perforated with holes to align with the holes


12


in the wafer carrier, so that backside air can penetrate the gas-permeable material. The thickness of center piece


31


is typically about 0.025 inch.




If the center piece


31


is substantially thinner than the outer ring


32


, a backing shim


33


may be placed behind the center piece


31


. In this embodiment, the thickness of the backing shim


33


is about 0.005 inch. If the backing shim


33


is made of a gas-impermeable material such as mylar, it must have holes


36


punched therein, aligned with holes


12


, to permit air to reach center piece


31


. As shown in

FIG. 3A

, the thickness of outer ring


32


exceeds the combined thickness of center piece


31


and backing shim


33


, so that there is a step


35


between the center and outer pieces of the backing film


30


.




The outer ring


32


is made from an elastic material which is harder and less compressible than that used for the center piece


31


. For example, the outer ring


32


may be made from Rogers Poron 4701-50, with a compressibility about half that of Rodel DF200. This material has a closed-cell structure that is relatively impermeable to air. The thickness of the outer ring is typically about 0.031 inch in this embodiment.




Alternatively, if the outer ring


32


is thinner than the center piece


31


, a backing shim is then provided for the outer ring


32


to maintain an appropriate step height


35


, as discussed in more detail below.




The center piece


31


and outer piece


32


must be centered and mounted concentrically on the wafer carrier


2


. In addition, the holes


36


in backing shim


33


must be aligned with the holes


12


in the wafer carrier. Furthermore, the polishing process requires that the backing film be mounted smoothly against the wafer carrier


2


, with no gaps or air bubbles.




To minimize the difficulties of assembling the two-piece backing film on the wafer carrier, the center piece


31


, backing shim


33


and outer piece


32


are pre-assembled on an adhesive assembly film


34


. The film


34


typically is composed of mylar with a suitable adhesive coating, and has holes


37


aligned with holes


36


and


12


.




In this embodiment, as shown in FIG.


3


A and in greater detail in

FIG. 3B

, the combined thickness of outer ring


32


and adhesive film


34


exceeds the combined thickness of center piece


31


, backing shim


33


and adhesive film


34


. Accordingly, there is a step


35


representing the vertical distance between surfaces


31




f


and


32




f


facing the wafer.




When a wafer is pressed against the polishing pad by the wafer carrier during a CMP process, both the center piece


31


and the outer ring


32


are compressed. The lower compressibility of outer ring


32


results in greater polishing pressure near the wafer edge, thereby increasing the polishing rate and counteracting the edge bead effect.




Wafer Carrier Film Change




Since the wafer backing film


30


is preassembled on the adhesive film


34


, changing the wafer backing film on the wafer carrier can be done quickly and accurately. Compared to the two pieces of the wafer backing film, the assembly is relatively stiff and easy to handle. In particular, the concentric alignment of wafer backing film pieces


31


,


32


is maintained during the wafer carrier rebuild procedure. Accordingly, using a preassembled wafer backing film minimizes the time required for this procedure, as compared with aligning the two pieces of the wafer backing film directly on the wafer carrier surface. Any assemblies with misaligned pieces, air bubbles, gaps, or incorrect step heights are rejected before use, saving the tool downtime associated with reworking the wafer backing film.




The assembly has an overall diameter greater than or equal to that of the face


2




f


of the wafer carrier. When the diameter is greater than that of the wafer carrier, the entire wafer backing film is easily aligned to the wafer carrier by matching the edge of adhesive film


34


with the edge of wafer carrier


2


. When the diameter of the assembly is larger, alignment can easily be achieved by matching the punched holes in the film to the holes in the wafer carrier face and then trimming the excess portion with a razor. Alignment-aiding jigs may also be used wherein notches or holes in the excess portion of the film match pins on the jig.




Wafer Edge Seal




As shown in

FIGS. 3A and 3B

, backside air is introduced behind the wafer through holes


12


in wafer carrier


2


. Since the center piece


31


of the backing film


30


is gas-permeable (and films


31


,


33


and


34


are perforated), the backside air penetrates center piece


31


so that backside air pressure is distributed over the area of center piece


31


. However, there are no holes


12


to apply backside air pressure behind outer ring


32


, and outer ring


32


is relatively gas-impermeable. Accordingly, when the wafer


1


is pressed against the backing film


30


during polishing, the edge of the wafer is effectively clamped against outer ring


32


, so that the escape of backside air between the wafer


1


and wafer carrier


2


is hindered (see FIG.


4


).




It should be noted that in the present invention, the elastic outer ring


32


conforms to the backside of the wafer's outer edge when backside air pressure is applied. This is in contrast to the conventional arrangement, wherein radially leaking backside air tends to move the entire wafer in a vertical direction away from the face of the wafer carrier. When the outer edge of the wafer is sealed or partially sealed against the wafer carrier by the outer ring


32


during polishing, the flexure of the wafer tends to be a radially symmetric bowing of the wafer. Because the backside air is substantially trapped between the wafer and wafer carrier, the air pressure is uniformly distributed across the wafer backside, thereby improving polishing uniformity. Furthermore, the outer edge of the wafer is securely supported while backside air pressure is applied to the center region of the wafer. The combination of (1) control of backside air leakage and (2) mechanical support of the outer edge of the wafer permits improved control of polishing pressure on the wafer by modulating the backside air pressure. In particular, the backside air pressure at the center of the wafer may be adjusted to balance the mechanical pressure of the seal near the outer edge of the wafer, to obtain a uniform polishing rate across the wafer.




The tightness of the seal may be varied by varying the choice of material for the outer backing film piece


32


and/or the wafer carrier.




It is also noteworthy that the outer diameter of outer ring


32


is essentially the same as that of wafer


1


, so that the entire back side of the wafer is covered by the backing film


30


. In addition, since outer ring


32


is a relatively hard material, contaminants are prevented from penetrating the backing film and depositing on the back side of the wafer. In particular, the problem of slurry penetration is avoided.




Control of Step Height




It has been found that the height of the step


35


between the two pieces


31


,


32


of the backing film


30


has a critical effect on the uniformity of the polishing process. In particular, as both pieces are compressed during the polishing process, the vertical alignment of the two pieces


31


,


32


must be such that outer ring


32


remains in contact with the backside of the wafer.

FIG. 5

shows a situation where the surface


31




a


of center piece


31


, when compressed during polishing and when backside air pressure is applied, is not in vertical alignment with the surface


32




a


of outer ring


32


. A gap


51


appears between the wafer


1


and the outer ring


32


. This results in inadequate polishing pressure on the wafer at the outer edge, and permits backside air to leak radially outward. The beneficial effects of the bi-material backing film are therefore lost.




In this embodiment of the present invention, the thicknesses of the wafer backing film pieces


31


,


32


and the thickness of the backing shim


33


are selected so as to yield the correct step height


35


when assembled on the adhesive film


34


.




In this arrangement (see FIG.


3


B), the step height


35


may be characterized as the vertical distance between surfaces


31




f


and


32




f


of the center piece


31


and outer ring


32


of the wafer backing film


30


(that is, the surfaces facing the wafer during a polishing process). A positive value of step height


35


is defined as surface


32




f


being at a greater vertical distance, relative to surface


2




f


of the wafer carrier


2


, than surface


31




f.


When the center piece


31


and outer ring


32


are of the materials and dimensions given above, the optimum height of step


35


has been found to be about 0.001 inch. Furthermore, adjustment of the step height


35


, using various thicknesses of backing shim


33


, permits use of varying thicknesses of both backing film pieces


31


,


32


. The thicknesses of backing film pieces


31


,


32


may thus be varied to optimize the polishing process, without the need for modification of the wafer carrier.




While the invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments, it is evident in view of the foregoing description that numerous alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the invention is intended to encompass all such alternatives, modifications and variations which fall within the scope and spirit of the invention and the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. A film removal apparatus in which a film is removed from a wafer, the apparatus comprising:a wafer backing film having a first portion and a second portion composed of different materials, said wafer backing film being substantially circular in shape and the first portion and the second portion being concentric, the first portion having a circular shape at the center of said backing film and the second portion having an annular shape and surrounding the first portion; an assembly film on which the first portion of the wafer backing film and the second portion of the wafer backing film are mounted, said assembly film and said wafer backing film thereby forming an assembly for mounting on a wafer carrier; and a backing shim for vertical adjustment of the first portion of the wafer backing film with respect to the second portion of the wafer backing film, in accordance with the thickness of the backing shim.
  • 2. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the second portion of the wafer backing film is adjusted in the vertical direction with respect to the first portion of the wafer backing film so that, during a film removal process, the wafer is in contact with the second portion of the wafer backing film.
  • 3. An apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the second portion of said wafer backing film is substantially impermeable to air, thereby controlling air leakage when air pressure is applied to a back surface of the wafer.
  • 4. An apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the first portion of the wafer backing film is permeable to air.
  • 5. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein during a film removal process the wafer is pressed by said wafer carrier and said wafer backing film with greater pressure at the perimeter of the wafer than at the center of the wafer.
  • 6. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the assembly film has an adhesive for mounting on the wafer carrier.
  • 7. An apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the wafer carrier has a surface on which the assembly is mounted and which is substantially coextensive with the assembly film.
  • 8. An apparatus according to claim 7, wherein the second portion of the wafer backing film and the assembly film each have an outer diameter substantially identical to the diameter of the wafer.
  • 9. An apparatus according to claim 8, wherein the wafer has a diameter of 200 mm, the first portion of the wafer backing film has a diameter greater than 170 mm, and accordingly the second portion of the wafer backing film has an inner diameter greater than 170 mm.
  • 10. An apparatus according to claim 9, wherein the first portion of the wafer backing film has a diameter of about 190 mm, and accordingly the second portion of the wafer backing film has an inner diameter of about 190 mm.
  • 11. A method for removing a film from a wafer, the method comprising the steps of:providing a wafer backing film having a first portion and a second portion composed of different materials, said wafer backing film being substantially circular in shape and the first portion and the second portion being concentric, the first portion having a circular shape at the center of said backing film and the second portion having an annular shape and surrounding the first portion; assembling the first portion of the wafer backing film and the second portion of the wafer backing film on an assembly film, thereby forming an assembly for mounting on a wafer carrier; and providing a backing shim to adjust the first portion of the wafer backing film with respect to the second portion of the wafer backing film in a vertical direction, in accordance with the thickness of the backing shim.
  • 12. A method according to claim 11, wherein the backing shim is provided to adjust the second portion of the wafer backing film with respect to the first portion of the wafer backing film so that, during a film removal process, the wafer is in contact with the second portion of the wafer backing film.
  • 13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the second portion of the wafer backing film is substantially impermeable to air, thereby controlling air leakage when air pressure is applied to a back surface of the wafer.
  • 14. A method according to claim 13, wherein the first portion of the wafer backing film is permeable to air.
  • 15. A method according to claim 11, further comprising the step of pressing the wafer by said wafer carrier and said wafer backing film with greater pressure at the perimeter of the wafer than at the center of the wafer.
  • 16. A method according to claim 11, wherein the assembly film has an adhesive for mounting on the wafer carrier.
  • 17. A method according to claim 11, wherein the wafer carrier has a surface on which the assembly is mounted and which is substantially coextensive with the assembly film.
  • 18. A method according to claim 11, wherein the wafer carrier has a surface on which the assembly is mounted, and further comprising the step of trimming the second portion of the wafer backing film and the assembly film so that the second portion of the wafer backing film and the assembly film each have an outer diameter substantially identical to the diameter of said surface.
  • 19. A method according to claim 18, wherein the wafer has a diameter of 200 mm, the first portion of the wafer backing film has a diameter greater than 170 mm, and accordingly the second portion of the wafer backing film has an inner diameter greater than 170 mm.
  • 20. A method according to claim 19, wherein the first portion of the wafer backing film has a diameter of about 190 mm, and accordingly the second portion of the wafer backing film has an inner diameter of about 190 mm.
RELATED APPLICATION

This application is related to application Ser. No. 09/303,471, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,171,513, filed the same day and assigned to the same assignee as the present application. The disclosure of this related application is incorporated herein by reference.

US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
5645474 Kubo et al. Jul 1997 A
5885135 Desorcie et al. Mar 1999 A
5938512 Takei et al. Aug 1999 A
6171513 Davis et al. Jan 2001 B1
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
10-113859 May 1998 JP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
T. Murakami et al., “Long Run Planarity and Uniformity Performance of CMP on Single Hard Pad with Air-Backed Carrier and In-Situ Pad Profile Control,” 1996 VMIC Conference, p. 413.
K. Ikenouchi et al., “Particle Reduction by Optimization of Structure in CMP Carrier,” 1999 VMIC Conference, p.271.