Integrated circuits (IC) play a significant role in the field of modern semiconductor technology. The development of integrated circuits has made possible a modern world with advanced electrical technology. Applications of integrated circuits are so widespread and their significance affects our every day lives from cellular phones, digital televisions, to flash memory chips in cameras. These integrated circuits typically are formed on silicon substrates or wafers, which can include active semiconductor devices with structured processes for a wide range of stacked layers made from different materials, allowing for memory capabilities.
Recently, in modern semiconductor technology, integrated circuits have advanced towards smaller devices with more memory. In the manufacture of semiconductor integrated circuits (IC), typically, dielectric materials such as silicon dioxide (SiO2), silicon nitride (Si3N4) and silicon oxynitride (SiON) have been widely used. However, as technology has progressed, IC device geometry has become smaller, resulting in progressively thinner integrated circuit devices. When typical IC devices approach thicknesses of a few nanometers or less, conventional aforementioned dielectric materials can typically undergo electronic breakdown and can no longer provide the memory storage needed.
To address the aforementioned problems, high dielectric constant materials (high k dielectric materials) have been used in semiconductor chip manufacturing with their potential application in memory devices, such as flash memory. A conventional flash memory film stack consists of poly 2 (control gate)/ONO (interpoly dielectric)/poly 1 (floating gate) gate oxide. One of the key changes in the gate film stack at 65 nanometer node and beyond, for flash memory applications, is the replacement of the ONO inter-poly dielectric film with a high-k material. Examples of high-k materials include aluminum oxide, (Al2O3), hafnium oxide (HfOx), zirconium oxide (ZrOx), titanium oxide (TiOx), and mixtures thereof, and metal silicates such as HfSixOy, ZrSiO4 and mixtures thereof.
Because of the different composition and reduced size of the high-k dielectric flash memory stack, processing can not be efficiently carried out with conventional etch chamber processing. Therefore, what is needed is an etch chamber and processing methods designed for efficient processing of high-k dielectric flash memory stacks.
In one implementation, a method is provided for multi-chamber plasma etching to form high-k dielectric flash memory devices on a wafer. The method includes etching an upper conductive material layer in a first plasma chamber with a cathode temperature below about 100 degrees Celsius to define a control gate and transferring the wafer from the first chamber to a hot cathode chamber without breaking vacuum. In the hot cathode chamber, plasma etching is performed of a high-k dielectric layer with a temperature between about 100 and about 300 degrees Celsius. The wafer is transferred from the hot cathode chamber to the first plasma chamber without breaking vacuum. In the first plasma chamber a lower polysilicon layer is etched with a cathode temperature below about 100 degrees Celsius to define a floating gate electrode.
In one implementation, a method for etching a wafer to form high-k dielectric flash memory devices is provided. The method includes etching an upper conductor layer in a first plasma chamber to define a control gate. The wafer is transferred from the first plasma chamber to a reactive ion etch chamber without breaking vacuum. A high-k dielectric layer is etched with a reactive ion etch process, and the wafer is transferred back to the first plasma chamber without breaking vacuum. In the first plasma chamber, a lower polysilicon layer is etched to define a floating gate electrode.
In one implementation a method is provided capable of etching a wafer to form devices including a high-k dielectric layer. The method includes etching an upper conductive material layer in a first plasma chamber with a low cathode temperature and transferring the wafer from the first plasma chamber to a second chamber without breaking vacuum. The high-k dielectric layer is etched in the second chamber. After etching the high-k dielectric layer, the wafer is transferred from the second chamber to the first plasma chamber without breaking vacuum. In the first plasma chamber a lower conductive material layer is etched with a low cathode temperature. In one implementation, the high-k dielectric etch is performed with a plasma using a high temperature cathode. In another implementation, the high-k dielectric etch is performed with a reactive ion etch.
In one embodiment, an integrated etch station is provided for etching of a flash memory high-k gate stack having a control gate and a floating gate, with a high-k dielectric between them. The integrated etch chamber includes a first plasma chamber capable of etching to define the control gate and the floating gate of the flash memory stack. The first plasma chamber is configured to etch in a temperature range of less than about 100 degrees Celsius. A second chamber is configured to etch the high-k dielectric. A vacuum transfer chamber is coupled between the first plasma chamber and the second chamber, the vacuum transfer chamber includes a wafer transport means for transporting wafers between the first plasma chamber and the second chamber. In some embodiments, the second chamber is a high temperature plasma etch chamber configured to etch in a temperature range of from about 100 degrees Celsius to about 300 degrees Celsius. In other embodiments, the second chamber is a reactive ion etch chamber configured to etch the high-k dielectric.
A conventional ONO-based flash memory gate stack is etched in a chamber like a DPSII poly etcher, manufactured by Applied Materials, Inc., of Santa Clara, Calif., at temperatures between 40-85 degrees Celsius. The temperature requirement primarily is driven by need to etch polysilicon with tight profile and critical dimension control.
Unlike ONO (SiO2/SiN/SiO2 sandwich) films, high-k material films such as Al203 and HfOx, for example, are very difficult to etch at temperatures below 100 degrees Celsius because the etch byproducts are non-volatile. Hence it is not practical to carry out the complete gate etch for high-k based flash memory stacks 100 in a single low temperature chamber.
The wafer 202 is transported through a vacuum transport chamber 240, which typically has a wafer transport means such as a robotic arm (not shown), to a second chamber 220, where a high-k dielectric etch is performed. This process is typically controlled by a microprocessor (not shown). In the second chamber 220 the high-k dielectric etch is performed using a hot cathode 220c with a temperature in a range from about 100 degrees Celsius to about 300 degrees Celsius. In some implementations, the high-k dielectric etch is performed using a hot cathode 220c with a temperature in a range from about 250 degrees Celsius to about 300 degrees Celsius. The high-k etch defines the high-k dielectric 130 shown in
In another embodiment, the second etch chamber 220 is a reactive ion etch or RIE chamber, which is used to perform an ion bombardment assisted chemical etch of the high-k material. Such an etch may be performed at less than 100 degrees Celsius, if desired.
In one example implementation, a high-k material such as Al2O3 may be etched with a reactant mixture having BCl3 and a hydrocarbon passivation gas such as C2H4, with a diluent of He, as disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/208,573, by Wang et al., entitled METHOD FOR ETCHING HIGH DIELECTRIC CONSTANT MATERIALS, filed Aug. 22, 2005, herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. In one implementation, a high temperature etch at greater than about 150 degrees Celsius may be used with a BCl3 based chemistry, to provide high selectivity, with a near vertical Al2O3 interface and virtually no control gate poly attack. Thus, a greater than 1.5 to 1 selectivity between the Al2O3 and poly during the Al2O3 etch is possible. In another example, a high-k material such as hafnium oxide may be etched using 250 degrees Celsius, or higher.
After etching the high-k dielectric 130, the wafer 202 is returned back to the first chamber 210 to complete etching of the floating gate 140. The etch is stopped on the gate oxide 150. The floating gate 140 may be a poly 1 or other conducting material.
Various embodiments may provide one or more advantages in high-k flash memory processing. Using a separate chamber for the high-k dielectric etch allows high temperature etching by forming volatile etch byproducts. For example, CF4, C2F6, CHF3 chemistries can provide high etch selectivity in conventional processing. When used to etch high-k materials, these etchant gases combine to form non-volatile compounds, such as AlF3 in the case of Al3O2 high-k dielectric. Thus, another chemistry that forms volatile etch byproducts, such as Cl, could be used to etch the high-k material.
Further, by using separate chambers for the control and/or floating gate 120 and 140 etch, and the high-k dielectric 130, it is easier to maintain consistent chamber conditions and wall effects from wafer to wafer, enabling volume production. Moreover, using separate chambers for the etching of flash memory stacks allows different plasma generation sources for the two chambers, one optimized for etching gate materials and the other for etching high-k dielectric materials. In contrast, etching the entire flash memory stack 100 in a single chamber can produce undesirable etch byproducts. For example, etching a high-k film of Al203 and a gate electrode film of polysilicon in the same chamber can result in Al and Si based etch byproducts in the chamber. Keeping a single chamber clean to achieve consistent chamber performance and a high mean wafer between cleaning or MWBC rate is not easy in a single chamber. Using different chambers for etching the high-k material and the gate material limits the types of byproducts, so improves process consistency and the MWBC rate. By using a separate first chamber 210 for the polysilicon for example, a standard clean process may be used in the first chamber 210, and a different clean process may be used for the high-k dielectric byproducts in the second chamber 220, depending on the particular byproduct.
The high temperature for the high-k dielectric plasma etch in the second chamber 220, about 100 to about 300 degrees Celsius, allows the high-k dielectric material to be etched faster than in a conventional low temperature plasma chamber. Further, at high temperature, the etch byproduct is more volatile, without causing much change in the etch rate of polysilicon. Thus, the selectivity to polysilicon is high, allowing use of an over etch of the high-k material of up to about 700%, or even greater than about 700%.
Although shown with one chamber 210 for gate etching and one chamber 220 for high-k dielectric etch, in some embodiments additional gate etch chambers and/or high-k dielectric etch chambers may be used. Further, although the above description is made with reference to etching of flash memory, embodiments and implementations of the present invention are applicable to processing of any multilayer stack including high-k dielectric material, and where both low and high temperature plasma etch processes are desirable, or where a low temperature plasma etch combined with a reactive ion etch is beneficial.
While the invention herein disclosed has been described by the specific embodiments and implementations, numerous modifications and variations could be made thereto by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention set forth in the claims.
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