Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6783437
-
Patent Number
6,783,437
-
Date Filed
Thursday, May 8, 200321 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, August 31, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- McLarty; Peter K.
- Brady, III; W. James
- Telecky, Jr.; Frederick J.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 451 211
- 451 259
- 451 533
- 451 921
- 451 530
- 451 292
- 451 490
- 451 526
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
The present invention discloses a polishing pad that can facilitate process stability, extend length of use, and mitigate process non-uniformity and process induced defects for chemical mechanical planarization processes. The polishing pad of the present invention is a composite of a top pad and a sealed sub-pad. The sealed sub-pad has a sealing mechanism that mitigates liquid penetration into the sub-pad thereby maintaining a substantially uniform compressibility of the sub-pad and the polishing pad and extending a useable life of the polishing pad.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to semiconductor fabrication, and more particularly, to systems and methods that mitigate altering of a chemical mechanical planarization pad compressibility and spatial uniformity and facilitate chemical mechanical planarization process stability.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Semiconductor device fabrication involves performing a variety of processes, procedures and operations in order to achieve a fabricated device. These operations include, but are not limited to, layering, doping, heat treatments, and patterning. Layering is the operation used to add layers of a selected thickness to a wafer surface. These layers can be insulators, semiconductors, conductors, and the like and can be grown or deposited by a number of suitable methods (e.g., chemical vapor deposition, sputtering, and the like).
Doping is the process that introduces specific amounts of dopants in the wafer surface through openings in surface layers. Two general techniques of doping are thermal diffusion and ion implantation. Doping is used, for example, to create active regions in transistors.
Heat treatments are operations in which a wafer is heated and cooled to achieve specific results. Generally, no additional material is added although contaminates and vapors may evaporate from the wafer surface. A common heat treatment is called an anneal which is employed to repair damage to crystal structures introduced by ion implantation.
Patterning is the operation that employs a series of steps that results in the removal of selected portions of added surface layers. After removal, a pattern of the layer is left on the wafer surface. The material removed can be in the form of a hole in the layer or a remaining island of the material. The patterning operation is also known by the names of photomasking, masking, photolithography, and microlithography.
Another important operation is chemical mechanical planarization (CMP), which can be employed in patterning operations. Generally, planarization is a process by which a wafer topography is made substantially flat or planar. CMP is a type of planarization process in which chemical and mechanical components are employed to planarize a wafer surface. Typically, a slurry comprised of a chemical component and mechanical components (e.g., abrasive particles) is flowed onto a wafer surface and a rotating pad is pressed against the wafer surface. The components chemically and mechanically remove portions of the wafer surface. The combined actions of the slurry and the rotating pad result in a polishing operation that can planarize the wafer surface.
In order to achieve a planar surface, it is important that the polishing pad be substantially spatially uniform with regard to compressibility. Non-uniformities can result in defects and/or a non-planar surface. Accordingly, it is desirable that a polishing pad be able to maintain its uniformity with regard to compressibility even after repeated use.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The following presents a simplified summary in order to provide a basic understanding of one or more aspects of the invention. This summary is not an extensive overview of the invention, and is neither intended to identify key or critical elements of the invention, nor to delineate the scope thereof. Rather, the primary purpose of the summary is to present some concepts of the invention in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented later.
The present invention includes a polishing pad that can facilitate process stability, extend length of use, and mitigate process non-uniformity and process induced defects for chemical mechanical planarization processes. The polishing pad of the present invention is a composite of a top pad and a sealed sub-pad. The sealed sub-pad has a sealing mechanism that mitigates liquid penetration into the sub-pad thereby maintaining a substantially spatially uniform compressibility of the sub-pad and the polishing pad and extending a useable life of the polishing pad.
To the accomplishment of the foregoing and related ends, the invention comprises the features hereinafter fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims. The following description and the annexed drawings set forth in detail certain illustrative aspects and implementations of the invention. These are indicative, however, of but a few of the various ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed. Other objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a schematic view of a system for performing chemical mechanical planarization in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 2
is a schematic diagram of an exemplary semiconductor device in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 3
is a schematic diagram of an exemplary semiconductor device in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 4
is a schematic diagram of an exemplary semiconductor device after processing with a substantially spatially uniform pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 5
is a schematic diagram of an exemplary semiconductor device after processing with a substantially non-uniform pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 6
is a schematic top view of a chemical mechanical planarization system in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 7
is a schematic diagram of a conventional polishing pad prior to substantial use.
FIG. 8
is a schematic diagram of a damaged, conventional polishing pad after substantial use.
FIG. 9A
is a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 9B
is a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 9C
is a detail view of a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 10A
is a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 10B
is a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 10C
is a detail view of a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 11
is a flow diagram illustrating a method of fabricating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
FIG. 12
is a flow diagram illustrating a method of performing a chemical mechanical planarization process in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention will now be described with respect to the accompanying drawings in which like numbered elements represent like parts. The figures provided herewith and the accompanying description of the figures are merely provided for illustrative purposes. One of ordinary skills in the art should realize, based on the instant description, other implementations and methods for fabricating the devices and structures illustrated in the figures and in the following description.
An important characteristic to achieve substantially planar and uniform surfaces by planarization procedures is to employ a polishing pad that, among other characteristics, has a substantially spatially uniform compressibility throughout the pad. The present invention discloses a polishing pad that facilitates process stability, extends length of use, and mitigates process non-uniformity and process induced defects for chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) processes. The polishing pad of the present invention comprises a top pad adhered to a sealed sub-pad. The sealed sub-pad has a sealing mechanism that mitigates liquid penetration into the sub-pad, thereby maintaining a substantially spatially uniform compressibility of the sub-pad and the polishing pad and extending a useable life of the polishing pad.
FIG. 1
is a schematic view of a polishing system
100
for performing chemical mechanical planarization in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. The system operates on a wafer or substrate
102
and includes a polishing head
101
, a polishing head displacement mechanism
103
, a pad
104
, a platen
105
, and a motor driver or drive mechanism
110
.
The pad
104
is a composite of a top pad
106
and a sealed sub-pad
108
, also referred to as a bottom pad. The top pad
106
is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, cast polyurethane, foam, cast polyurethane foam with fillers, polyurethane impregnated felts, and the like. The top pad
106
has selected properties for porosity, compressibility, and hardness. The sub-pad is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, foam, polyester cast with a polyurethane resin, cast polyurethane foam with fillers, polyurethane impregnated felts, and the like. The sub-pad
108
also has selected properties for porosity, compressibility, and hardness. Generally, the top pad
106
is more rigid or hard than the sub-pad
108
so as to provide a sufficiently rigid polishing surface. Typically, stiffness provides better within-die uniformity. The sub-pad
108
is generally less rigid than the top pad
106
, is relatively compressible, and has greater compressibility than the top pad
106
.
An important characteristic of the pad
104
is that overall compressibility of the pad
104
be substantially uniform spatially or radially. The compressibility is largely a function of the sub-pad
108
, which remains substantially uniform, even after repeated use. The sub-pad
108
has edges sealed with a liquid resistant material so that liquids and/or chemicals employed during planarization process do not substantially enter the sub-pad
108
thereby avoiding loss of uniformity of compressibility.
The pad
104
is attachable to the platen
105
, typically by a suitable adhesive. The platen
105
is coupled to the drive mechanism
110
to impart rotational movement to the platen
105
and thereby the pad
104
. During operation, the platen
105
is rotated at a velocity Vp about a center axis X
1
in both a clockwise and a counter-clockwise direction.
The polishing head
101
is mounted above the platen
105
and the pad
104
and generally includes a pocket or other mechanism (not shown) that holds the wafer
102
in place (e.g., typically via a vacuum). During operation, the polishing head
101
applies a controlled pressure behind the wafer
102
indicated by the arrow
112
urging the wafer
102
against the pad
104
to facilitate polishing of the wafer surface. The polishing head displacement mechanism
103
is coupled to the polishing head
101
and rotates the polishing head
101
at a velocity Vs in a clockwise or counter-clockwise direction about an axis X
2
. The polishing head displacement mechanism
103
also can move the polishing head
101
radially across the platen
105
as indicated by arrows
114
and
116
.
Additionally, the system
100
includes a chemical supply system
118
for introducing a chemical slurry of a desired composition to the pad
104
. During operation, the chemical supply system
118
introduces the slurry as indicated by arrow
120
on the pad
104
at a selected rate.
FIGS. 2-5
illustrate exemplary semiconductor device fabrication and serve to illustrate issues and problems encountered by lack of uniformity of a pad employed in a chemical mechanical planarization process. Beginning with
FIG. 2
, a schematic diagram of an exemplary semiconductor device
200
at an initial stage of fabrication is depicted. The device includes a substrate
202
(e.g., wafer) comprised of one or more semiconductor layers and an interdielectric layer
204
formed on the substrate
202
. One or more regions
206
have been patterned in the dielectric
204
.
FIG. 3
is a schematic diagram of the exemplary semiconductor device
200
. At this stage of fabrication, a conductive material
306
has been deposited (e.g., overfilled) on the dielectric layer
204
and filling the regions
206
. A chemical mechanical planarization process is performed on the device
200
in which a rotating pad
307
is pressured against a surface of the device
200
to selectively remove excess conductive material. Additionally, a slurry containing small abrasive particles is flowed onto the surface of the device
200
. The particles remove small pieces of the surface material (e.g., conductive material), which are then carried away by movement of the slurry across the surface.
As is discussed supra, uniformity of the pad
307
employed in the chemical mechanical planarization process is an important characteristic of the process.
FIG. 4
is a diagram of the exemplary semiconductor device after processing with a substantially uniform pad. The chemical mechanical planarization process has selectively removed portions of the conductive material
306
so as to leave a conductive line and plug
408
and a conductive line
410
.
FIG. 5
is a diagram of the exemplary semiconductor device after processing with a substantially non-uniform pad. The chemical mechanical planarization process has selectively removed portions of the conductive material
306
so as to leave a line
410
and a contact
408
, but has also left a number of defects
512
due to non-uniformities of the pad
307
. Note that the non-uniformities illustrated in
FIG. 5
may not be fully drawn to scale, and are provided for purposes of simplicity and illustration.
FIG. 6
is a schematic top view of a chemical mechanical planarization system
600
, such as a Mirra® chemical mechanical planarization system available from Applied Materials, Inc., located in Santa Clara, Calif., in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. The system
600
includes three polishing stations
632
and a loading station
640
. Four polishing heads
636
are rotatably mounted to a polishing head displacement mechanism
637
disposed above the polishing stations
632
. A front-end substrate transfer region
638
is disposed adjacent to the system
600
and may be considered as part of the system.
Generally, a wafer or substrate is loaded on a polishing head
636
at the loading station
640
and is then rotated through the three polishing stations
632
. The polishing stations each comprise a rotating platen
641
having polishing pads comprised of a top pad and an edge sealed sub-pad mounted thereon. One exemplary process sequence includes a polishing pad at the first two stations and a cleaning pad at the third station to facilitate wafer cleaning at the end of the polishing/planarizaiton procedure.
Turning now to
FIG. 7
, a schematic diagram of a conventional polishing pad
700
is depicted. The pad
700
includes a top pad
702
, a sub-pad
704
, and an adhesive layer
706
and is depicted prior to substantial use. Uniform spatial compressibility is an important characteristic for the pad
700
. In order to properly perform chemical mechanical planarization processes and obtain good process results, the pad
700
should maintain this characteristic. However, the sub-pad
704
is susceptible to damage from liquid (e.g., H
2
O) and/or other products employed during planarization procedures.
FIG. 8
is a schematic diagram of the conventional polishing pad
700
after substantial use as appreciated by the inventor of the present invention. During normal, repeated use, the sub-pad
704
is susceptible to liquid penetration (e.g., slurry, surfactants, water, and the like). Once penetrated, the liquid can non-uniformly modify compressibility of the sub-pad. Here, liquid penetration
808
from a circumferential edge into the sub-pad
704
has modified spatial compressibility of the sub-pad as well as the overall compressibility of the pad
700
. The liquid penetrated into the sub-pad
704
can, for example, corrode, leave deposits in, and react with the sub-pad
704
thereby altering compressibility. Chemical mechanical planarization processes performed with this damaged pad
700
can result in undesirable wafer edge profiles and the like. As illustrated in
FIG. 8
, not only is the spatial compressibility of the sub-pad
704
altered about its periphery, the variation in compressibility is non-uniform about the periphery, as highlighted at reference numerals
810
a
,
810
b
, and
810
c.
FIG. 9A
is a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad
900
in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. The polishing pad
900
is a composite of a top pad
902
and a sub-pad
904
secured to each other via an adhesive (not shown). The top pad
902
is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, cast polyurethane, foam, and the like and the sub-pad is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, foam, polyester cast with a polyurethane resin, and the like. Generally, the top pad
902
is more rigid than the sub-pad
904
so as to provide a sufficiently rigid polishing surface. The sub-pad
904
is generally less rigid and has greater compressibility than the top pad
902
.
An important characteristic of the pad
900
is that overall compressibility of the pad
900
be substantially spatially uniform. The compressibility is largely a function of the sub-pad
904
, which remains substantially uniform, even after repeated use. The sub-pad
904
has edges
908
sealed with a liquid resistant material so that liquids and/or chemicals employed during planarization process do not substantially enter the sub-pad
904
along the pad edge, thereby avoiding loss of uniformity of spatial or radial compressibility. An adhesive layer
906
is formed on the sub-pad
904
to facilitate adhering the pad
900
to a platen (not shown) for use in a chemical mechanical planarization system (e.g., see FIG.
5
). The liquid resistant material can be an adhesive, such as the adhesive employed to attach the sub-pad
904
and the top pad
902
together or an adhesive employed in the adhesive layer
906
.
It is appreciated that employing the sealed edge
908
can reduce usable area of the overall pad
900
. Accordingly, the sealed edge
908
has a selected thickness that is thick enough to mitigate diffusion of liquids into the sub-pad
904
and yet that is thin enough to not substantially interfere with planarization processes performed with the pad. Generally, a certain portion, threshold, or ring around an outer edge of a pad is not employed during processing. As a result, a selected thickness for the sealed edge
908
that lies within the portion or ring not employed during processing is well suited. The selected thickness can be a function of polishing/planarization procedures to be performed, the size of the pad, and the liquids or slurry chemicals employed in the procedures. For example, a selected thickness of 0.4″ is suitable for some CMP processes and is thick enough to mitigate liquid diffusion.
FIG. 9B
is a schematic diagram further illustrating the polishing pad
900
in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. Here, an exemplary target wafer
909
is depicted on or near the pad
900
. The target wafer
909
has a diameter
910
less than a diameter
912
of the polishing pad
900
. An exemplary value for the target wafer diameter
910
is about 8 inches and an exemplary value for the polishing pad diameter
912
is about 20 inches. However, other suitable values can be employed and still be in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 9C
is a detailed view schematic diagram further illustrating the polishing pad
900
(i.e., the edge portion of the pad) in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. Adhesive layers of a first type
922
, mylar interposer layers
924
, and an adhesive layer of a second type
926
are depicted to illustrate a typical, exemplary construction of the pad
900
.
One of the mylar interposer layers
924
is sandwiched between two adhesive layers of the first type
922
and employed to attach the top pad
902
to the sub-pad
904
. The other myler interposer layer
924
is sandwiched between an adhesive layer of the first type
922
and the adhesive layer of the second type
926
, which can be used to attach the pad
900
to a platen. The first and/or second type of adhesive can be employed for the edge sealing mechanism
908
.
FIG. 10A
is a schematic diagram illustrating a polishing pad
1000
in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. The polishing pad
1000
is a composite of a top pad
1002
and a sub-pad
1004
secured to each other via an adhesive (not shown) and in this configuration is referred to as an edge groove pad. The top pad
1002
is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, cast polyurethane, foam, and the like and the sub-pad is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, foam, polyester cast with a polyurethane resin, and the like. Generally, the top pad
1002
is more rigid than the sub-pad
1004
so as to provide a sufficiently rigid polishing surface. Typically, stiffness provides better within-die uniformity. Accordingly, the sub-pad
1004
is generally less rigid and has greater compressibility than the top pad
1002
.
To facilitate planarization and/or polishing, it is desirable that the overall compressibility of the pad
1000
be substantially spatially uniform. The compressibility is largely a function of the sub-pad
1004
, which remains substantially uniform, even after repeated use because the sub-pad
1004
has edges or grooves
1008
sealed or filled with a liquid resistant material so that liquids and/or slurry chemicals employed during planarization process do not substantially enter the sub-pad
1004
thereby avoiding loss of uniformity of compressibility. As one of many possible ways, the groove
1008
is cut into the sub-pad
1004
after the sub-pad
1004
is adhered to the top pad
1002
. Then, the groove
1008
is filled with the liquid resistant material so as to prevent or mitigate liquid from entering the inner portion of the sub-pad
1004
. An adhesive layer
1006
is formed on the sub-pad
1004
to facilitate adhering the pad
1000
to a platen (not shown) for use in a chemical mechanical planarization system (e.g., see FIG.
5
). The liquid resistant material can be an adhesive, such as the adhesive employed to attach the sub-pad
1004
and the top pad
1002
together or an adhesive employed in the adhesive layer
1006
.
The filled groove
1008
has a selected thickness that is thick enough to mitigate diffusion of liquids into the sub-pad
1004
and yet that is thin enough to not substantially interfere with planarization processes performed with the pad. Generally, a certain portion, threshold, or ring around an outer edge of a pad is not employed during processing. As a result, a selected thickness for the filled groove
1008
that lies within the portion or ring not employed during processing is well suited. The selected thickness can be a function of polishing/planarization procedures to be performed, the size of the pad, and the liquids or slurry chemicals employed in the procedures. For some CMP processes, the closest wafer edge to pad edge distance is about 0.4 inches. Thus, an exemplary groove thickness can range from about 0.1 inches to about 0.2 inches.
FIG. 10B
is a schematic diagram further illustrating the polishing pad
1000
in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. Here, an exemplary target wafer
1009
is depicted on or near the pad
1000
. The target wafer
1009
has a diameter
1010
less than a diameter
1012
of the polishing pad
1000
. An exemplary value for the target wafer diameter
1010
is about 8 inches and an exemplary value for the polishing pad diameter
1012
is about 20 inches. However, other suitable values can be employed and still be in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 10C
is a detailed view schematic diagram further illustrating the polishing pad
1000
(i.e., the edge portion of the pad) in accordance with an aspect of the present invention. Adhesive layers of a first type
1022
, mylar interposer layers
1024
, and an adhesive layer of a second type
1026
are depicted to illustrate a typical, exemplary construction of the pad
1000
.
One of the mylar interposer layers
1024
is sandwiched between two adhesive layers of the first type
1022
and employed to attach the top pad
1002
to the sub-pad
1004
. The other myler interposer layer
1024
is sandwiched between an adhesive layer of the first type
1022
and the adhesive layer of the second type
1026
, which can be used to attach the pad
1000
to a platen. The first and/or second type of adhesive can be employed for the edge sealing mechanism
1008
.
It is appreciated that other suitable mechanisms in addition to those described in
FIGS. 9A
,
9
B,
9
C,
10
A,
10
B, and
10
C can be employed to mitigate liquid migration into a sub-pad in accordance with the present invention. Additionally, the liquid resistant material can be a suitable material other than an adhesive so long as the liquid resistant material mitigates liquid migration (e.g., water, slurry, and the like).
As discussed supra, the present invention contemplates variations of the aspects discussed with respect to
FIGS. 9A and 10A
. One such exemplary variation is a pad that has an edge sealing mechanism at the edge of the sub-pad as described in FIG.
9
A and also includes one or more concentric rings of grooves filled with a liquid resistant material similar to the filled groove described in FIG.
10
A.
In view of the foregoing structural and functional features described supra, methodologies in accordance with various aspects of the present invention will be better appreciated with reference to
FIGS. 11-12
. While, for purposes of simplicity of explanation, the methodologies of
FIGS. 11-12
are depicted and described as executing serially, it is to be understood and appreciated that the present invention is not limited by the illustrated order, as some aspects could, in accordance with the present invention, occur in different orders and/or concurrently with other aspects from that depicted and described herein. Moreover, not all illustrated features may be required to implement a methodology in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
Turning now to
FIG. 11
, a flow diagram illustrating a method
1100
of fabricating a polishing pad in accordance with an aspect of the present invention is presented. The method
1100
fabricates a polishing pad that includes a sealing mechanism that mitigates liquid penetration of a sub-pad.
Beginning at block
1102
, a top pad having a substantially circular shape is formed. Additionally, the top pad is formed so as to have a selected porosity, a selected compressibility, and a selected hardness with a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, cast polyurethane, foam, cast polyurethane foam with fillers, polyurethane impregnated felts, and the like. A sub-pad also having a substantially circular shape is formed at block
1104
. The sub-pad is comprised of a suitable material such as plastic, polyurethane, foam, polyester cast with a polyurethane resin, cast polyurethane foam with fillers, polyurethane impregnated felts, and the like. The sub-pad is formed so as to have a selected porosity, a selected, uniform compressibility, and a selected hardness. Generally, the top pad is formed to be more rigid or hard than the sub-pad so as to provide a sufficiently rigid polishing surface. Generally, stiffness provides better within-die uniformity. Accordingly, the sub-pad is generally less rigid than the top pad, is relatively compressible, and has greater compressibility than the top pad.
Continuing at block
1106
, a layer of adhesive is applied to the top pad. The adhesive can be any suitable adhesive, but is generally liquid resistant. Subsequently, the sub-pad is adhered to the top pad by the layer of adhesive at block
1108
. A groove of a fixed width is selectively removed from the sub-pad near an outer edge at block
1110
. It is appreciated that the groove can be located at the outer edge. Then, the groove is filled with a liquid resistant material at block
1112
, which can be the same material employed in the layer of adhesive.
The pad fabricated by this method
1100
can then be affixed to a platen and employed in a chemical mechanical planarization process. The groove filled with the liquid resistant material acts as a sealing mechanism and mitigates liquid penetration of the sub-pad and can maintain uniformity of compressibility of the sub-pad.
FIG. 12
is a flow diagram illustrating a method
1200
of performing a chemical mechanical planarization process in accordance with an aspect of the present invention.
A target wafer is affixed to a polishing head at block
1202
. Typically, a vacuum is employed to initially secure the wafer. Then, a pocket (e.g., wafer retaining ring) or other structure in the polishing head holds the wafer on the polishing head. At block
1204
, an edge-sealed polishing pad is affixed to a platen. The edge-sealed polishing pad comprises a top pad and a sealed sub-pad that includes a sealing mechanism. The edge-sealed polishing pad can be fabricated via method
1100
of FIG.
11
and/or variations thereof. Generally, the edge-sealed polishing pad is affixed to the platen by way of an adhesive.
The polishing head is rotated about a first axis in a first direction and at a first velocity at block
1206
. The platen is rotated about a second axis in a second direction and at a second velocity at block
1208
. The second axis is substantially parallel to the first axis. The first and second directions are clockwise or counter-clockwise. Additionally, both the first and the second directions can be the same or opposite.
A slurry composition is introduced onto the edge sealed polishing pad at block
1210
. The slurry composition comprises a chemical component and abrasive particles that facilitate planarization. The target wafer, while rotating, is urged against the edge-sealed pad, also rotating, causing the slurry to polish/planarize a surface of the wafer at block
1212
.
The method
1200
can be repeated with the same or varied slurry so as to achieve a desired planarization. Additionally, a cleaning process which employs water or another cleaning solution can be performed to remove any unwanted residual particles or materials from the wafer surface.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain aspect or various aspects, it is obvious that equivalent alterations and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described components (assemblies, devices, circuits, etc.), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such components are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any component which performs the specified function of the described component (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein illustrated exemplary embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been disclosed with respect to only one of several aspects of the invention, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other aspects as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application. Furthermore, to the extent that the term “includes” is used in either the detailed description or the claims, such term is intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising.”
Claims
- 1. A polishing pad comprising:a top pad having a substantially circular shape, wherein the top pad is comprised of a relatively rigid top polishing surface; a sealed sub-pad having a substantially circular shape, wherein a top surface of said sealed sub-pad is affixed to a bottom surface of said top pad; and, a groove cut into a bottom surface of said sealed sub-pad near an outside edge of said sealed sub-pad wherein said groove is filled with a liquid resistant material that mitigates liquid from entering an inner portion of said sealed sub-pad.
- 2. The pad of claim 1, wherein the top pad is comprised of a material selected from the group comprising polyurethane, cast polyurethane, and foam.
- 3. The pad of claim 1, wherein the sealed sub-pad is comprised of a material selected from the group comprising plastic, polyurethane, foam, and polyester cast with a polyurethane resin.
- 4. The pad of claim 1, wherein the liquid resistant material is a liquid resistant adhesive.
- 5. The pad of claim 1, wherein the liquid is H2O.
- 6. The pad of claim 1, wherein the liquid is a slurry.
- 7. The pad of claim 1, wherein the sealed sub-pad remains substantially spatially uniform after repeated use.
- 8. A polishing system for performing chemical mechanical planarization comprising:a platen rotatable about a first axis; a pad attached to the platen comprising: a top pad having a substantially circular shape, wherein the top pad is comprised of a relatively rigid top polishing surface; a sealed sub-pad having a substantially circular shape, wherein a top surface of said sealed sub-pad is affixed to a bottom surface of said top pad; and a groove cut into a bottom surface of said sealed sub-pad near an outside edge of said sealed sub-pad wherein said groove is filled with a liquid resistant material that mitigates liquid from entering an inner portion of said sealed sub-pad; a drive mechanism coupled to the platen to impart rotational movement to the platen and the pad in a first direction and at a first velocity; a polishing head mounted above the platen and the pad and rotatable about a second axis, wherein the second axis is parallel to the first axis; and a polishing head displacement mechanism coupled to the polishing head to impart rotational movement to the polishing head in a second direction at a second velocity.
- 9. The system of claim 8, wherein the first direction is clockwise and the second direction is counter-clockwise.
- 10. The system of claim 8, wherein polishing head holds a target wafer.
- 11. The system of claim 10, further comprising a chemical supply system that introduces a slurry of a desired concentration.
- 12. The system of claim 11, wherein the polishing head is operable to apply a controlled pressure behind the target wafer urging the wafer against the pad.
US Referenced Citations (11)