The present invention relates to a process for reclaiming control wafers.
In modern semiconductor device technology, low-k dielectric material has been used to replace traditional silicon diode oxide as the inter-metal dielectric layers to improve the electrical performance of the semiconductor devices by suppressing signal-propagation delay, cross-talk between metal lines and power consumption due to their low dielectric constants. One of the promising low-k dielectric material is the trimethylsilane (TMS)-based dielectric material. The TMS-based dielectric material is an organosilicate glass with a dielectric constant as low as about 2.1.
Prior to forming a low-k dielectric layer on production wafers, the low-k dielectric layer usually is deposited on a control wafer to assure that physical and electrical characteristics of the low-k dielectric layer satisfy process requirements. Once these characteristics of the low-k dielectric layer deposited on the control wafer are verified to be within the desired range defined by the process specifications, the same recipe is used for the test wafer is set up to process the production wafers. After being processed, the control wafer must be transferred to a cleaning station where the low-k dielectric layer is removed and the control wafer's silicon substrate is recycled to be used again as a control wafer. This is also known as a reclaim procedure of control wafers.
Other known methods involve removing the low-k dielectric layer from the control wafers by sandblasting or polishing. These mechanical removal process, however, remove some amount of the underlying silicon wafer substrate at each reclaim cycle and thus limit the number of times the control wafer substrate can be recycled.
According to an embodiment, a method of recycling a control wafer having a dielectric layer deposited thereon is disclosed. The method comprises plasma etching the dielectric layer using a plasma formed with a gas comprising CxFy gas, wherein the plasma etching is conducted for a determined time to leave a residual film of the dielectric layer on the substrate at the end of the plasma etching process, whereby the residual film protects the substrate from the plasma. The residual film of the dielectric layer is then removed by a wet etching process leaving behind a clean wafer that is ready to be reused as a control wafer.
According to another embodiment, a method of recycling a control wafer is disclosed. The method comprises providing the control wafer, the control wafer comprising a substrate, and forming a dielectric layer on the substrate. Then, the dielectric layer is plasma etched using a plasma formed with a gas comprising CxFy gas, wherein the plasma etching is conducted for a determined time to leave a residual film of the dielectric layer on the substrate at the end of the plasma etching process, whereby the residual film protects the substrate from the plasma. The residual film of the dielectric layer is then removed by a wet etching process leaving behind a clean wafer that is ready to be reused as a control wafer.
According to another embodiment, a method of recycling a control wafer having a dielectric layer deposited on a substrate is disclosed. The method comprises plasma etching the dielectric layer using a plasma formed with a gas comprising CxFy gas, wherein the plasma etching is conducted for a determined time to leave a residual film of the dielectric layer on the substrate at the end of the plasma etching process, whereby the residual film protects the substrate from the plasma. The residual film of the dielectric layer is then removed by a wet etching process at the end of which some byproduct particulates can remain on the substrate. The byproduct particulates are then cleaned by ammonia peroxide mixture followed by a brush scrubbing, leaving a clean substrate that can be reused as a control wafer.
The innovative method disclosed herein is suitable for all low-k dielectric film control wafers. The method is also suitable for all silicon-based substrate control wafers as well as gallium arsenide-based substrate control wafers.
The features shown in the above referenced drawings are illustrated schematically and are not intended to be drawn to scale nor are they intended to be shown in precise positional relationship. Like reference numbers indicate like elements.
This description of the exemplary embodiments is intended to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings, which are to be considered part of the entire written description. In the description, relative terms such as “lower,” “upper,” “horizontal,” “vertical,”, “above,” “below,” “up,” “down,” “top” and “bottom” as well as derivative thereof (e.g., “horizontally,” “downwardly,” “upwardly,” etc.) should be construed to refer to the orientation as then described or as shown in the drawing under discussion. These relative terms are for convenience of description and do not require that the apparatus be constructed or operated in a particular orientation. The terms “reclaim” and “reclaiming” are used interchangeably herein with “recycle” and “recycling” to refer to the recovery of the semiconductor substrate portion of the control wafer through the method disclosed herein.
The low-k dielectric layer 203 is made of an organosilicate material such as BD-II (Black Diamond II) available from Applied Materials, Inc. of Santa Clara, Calif. Such low-k dielectric material when deposited on the substrate 201 and cured is a porous material in which the porosity lends to the low-k value. The low-k dielectric material such as the BD-II may be characterized as carbon-doped silicon oxide (or silicon oxycarbide) having a carbon fraction of above 10 at %. Their porosity can be in the range of up to 30%. Other carbon-containing low-k dielectrics are known, including Silk and Cyclotene (benzocyclobutene) dielectric materials available from Dow Chemical. Many of these materials are characterized as organic or polymeric dielectrics. The low-k dielectric material layer 203 includes short-chain polymer structure that are adapted to be dissolved in organic solvents such as hydrofluoric acid-based etchants.
According to an embodiment of the present disclosure,
Next, the residual low-k dielectric film 205 is removed by a wet etch process 52. The wet etch process 52 comprises dipping the control wafer 200 in a solution of a hydrofluoric acid-based organic etch solvent. As will be described in more detail below, the wet etch process 52 removes the residual film 205 but some byproduct particulates 15 of the wet etch process remain on the surface of the wafer substrate 201.
Next, the byproduct particulates 15 are removed by a cleaning process 54 which comprises Ammonia Peroxide Mixture (APM) clean and scrubbing. After the cleaning process 54, a clean wafer substrate 201 is obtained, that can be reused as a process control wafer. At the end of this process, a clean substrate 201 remains that is ready to be reused as a process.
Referring to
The duration of the plasma etching process 50 is optimized according to the particular thickness of the low-k dielectric layer 203 so that at the end of the plasma etching process, much of the porous low-k dielectric layer 203 is removed but not completely and a thin residual film 205 of the low-k dielectric layer is left behind. Stopping the plasma etching before the low-k dielectric layer is completely removed prevents the surface of the wafer substrate 201 from being damaged by the plasma etching process. The inventors have experimentally verified that without the residual film 205, plasma gas will damage the surface of the bare Si wafer substrate 201. In one preferred embodiment, the residual film 205 is approximately 300 to 1000 Å thick. Thus, the duration of the plasma etching process 50 depends on the starting thickness of the dielectric film. In one embodiment, for the starting thickness of the low-k dielectric film 203 of 2800 Å, the plasma etching with CF4 gas plasma at 200 W at 40 mbar is at least about 65 seconds.
Referring back to
The concentration of hydrofluoric acid in such etching solvent required to etch the low-k dielectric material is generally high and will etch the underlying wafer substrate 201 if etched too long. Thus, the pH level of the etching solution and the optimal etching duration time to remove the film needs to be controlled. The chemical composition of CDO3.1 is HF+a surfactant+organic solvent A+organic solvent B. And for the residual film 205 having a thickness of 300 to 1000 Å mentioned above, the control wafer 200 is dipped in a CDO3.1 solvent for an optimal time of about 120 seconds, where the HF concentration in CDO3.1 is approximately 19% and the pH of CDO3.1 is maintained at 3.
HF+SiOC→H2+SiF4+C++H2O+SiO2
In this embodiment, the HF based etchant CDO3.1 comprises organic components solvent A, solvent B and a surfactant. The organic solvent A component of CDO3.1 is a higher polarization solvent and its Zeta potential is <0 at pH=3 and tends to be attracted to the bare silicon wafer substrate 201 surface whose Zeta potential at pH=3 is about −20 mV. The organic solvent B component of CDO3.1 is a lower polarization solvent and its Zeta potential is >0 at pH=3 and tends to repel from the bare silicon wafer substrate 201 surface. The surfactant component of CDO3.1 allows the organic solvent components A and B to be miscible. The mixed solvent behaves more like a lower polarization solvent. This allows the byproduct particulates 15, such as C+20 and SiO2 22 from the low-k dielectric material reacting with HF, to readily dissolve in the solvent B component of CDO3.1. Some examples of the suitable surfactant are long C-chain compounds. The wet etch process 52 comprises the mixed solvent formed from the organic solvents A and B because the inventors have experienced that using only HF to remove the residual low-k dielectric film 205 results in the byproduct particulates 15 being bonded to the bare silicon substrate 201 and not easily removed. An example of a solvent A is Dimethyl Sulfoxide and an example of a solvent B is Dioxane, both having solubility in water >0.95 as shown in Table 1 below. Table 1 shows the polarity index and water solubility of various solvents as a reference.
One of the aspects of the method disclosed herein that facilitates the effective removal of the residual low-k dielectric film 205 using the wet etch process 52 is that, during the plasma etch 50, the chemical bond among the polymer chains in the low-k dielectric layer 203 changes and the remaining residual low-k dielectric film 205 is of the type that is more easily dissolved during the wet etch process 52. During the plasma etch 50, some CF4 gas molecules that has not transformed into plasma form accompany the plasma and the non-plasma CF4 gas molecules transfer energy to the low-k dielectric layer and induce the low-k dielectric film to change its chemical bond characteristics.
Referring back to
Although the invention has been described in terms of exemplary embodiments, it is not limited thereto. Rather, the appended claims should be construed broadly, to include other variants and embodiments of the invention, which may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and range of equivalents of the invention. Thus, the method of the present disclosure provides a process sequence of dry etching then wet etching for reclaiming control wafers.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/046,096 filed Mar. 11, 2008, which is expressly incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12046096 | Mar 2008 | US |
Child | 13114333 | US |