The invention relates to a method for the electrical measurement of the thickness of semiconductor layers and an arrangement associated therewith, which may be used as a test structure that is or may be fabricated during the standard device process of semiconductor structures by using conventional test systems. The arrangement formed as a test structure, for instance in an annular configuration, enables a reliable measurement and the suppression of interfering interactions with neighbouring structures.
The measurement techniques used so far do not meet the requirements with respect to a simple and reliable routine measurement within the electrical process control as an automatic measurement during the ongoing manufacturing process flow.
Conventional electrical methods are based on a 4-point measurement for determining the specific resistance of the semiconductor layer and are based on the measurement of the propagation resistance by two probe tips. From this the sheet resistance and the layer thickness may be calculated. The approach disclosed in JP-A 57 037 846 uses this combination of the two measurement techniques with a 4-probe tip arrangement, which contacts the semiconductor layer to be measured during the time of measurement by means of measurement tips. This method is a process usable in a laboratory but is not appropriate for routine operation in production.
JP-A 10 154 735 discloses a special method for measuring thin SOI layers by silicided areas. The method requires specific technological steps and may not be used in a general manner and is not provided or appropriate for semiconductor layers of increased thickness and for epi layers and membranes.
Further possibilities for thickness measurements of layers in semiconductors reside in the usage of other physical active principles, which are typically not available as routine techniques during the semiconductor production process and which would cause additional costs for the semiconductor production. In this respect the following citations may be mentioned, which, however, are not related to an electrically measuring method in a substantial manner.
It is the purpose of the present invention to realize a measurement method for determining the thickness of semiconductor layers during the semiconductor production process by using automatic test systems. The method should be applicable in a general manner, for instance for the thickness measurement of active semiconductor layers on, e.g., SOI wafers, of epi (epitaxial) layers of inverse conductivity type and for the measurement of a membrane thickness.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an electrical method for measuring the thickness of semiconductor layers, wherein the measurement contacting is accomplished by a commonly used probe card, since usual test systems detect electrical measurement values only. For the reason of space saving an electrical isolation of other test elements located in the neighbourhood is desirable. In this case it is of great importance to find a solution without additional technological steps for realizing the test structure.
The object is solved by the features defined in claims 1 and 6.
Claims 1 and 6 provide the advantages that for the fabrication of the contacts on the semiconductor layer that are required for the application of the method no additional process steps are necessary and the specific test structure may be used in a test field for the measurement of parameters by means of automatic test systems. Moreover, only 6 contacts instead of 8 contacts are necessary for two required quadrupole measurements. The six contact regions are, however, positioned side by side, but they are also convoluted with each other.
The invention will be explained and completed by means of embodiments while using the drawings, in which
In
During a measurement the two contact regions C1 and D1 positioned “in the centre” are each used twice, first, for applying the measurement current and second, for potential measurement. The measurement distances of the two measurements to be performed sequentially are B1-C1 and D1-E1. The same conditions are valid for the contact regions in
The index “i” used in the following relates to the contact regions in three described different contact arrangements on the surface and varies for the regions A to F with respect to three different arrangements of the contact regions.
All of the three different arrangements (contact region geometries or arrangements) have the common feature that the distances between Ai and Bi, Ci and Di, Ei and Fi are always minimal. However, the distance between the contacts Bi and Ci is the greater distance compared to the smaller distance Di and Ei. Di and Ei are positioned “in the centre”, that is, between the region pair Ai, Bi, on the one hand, and Ei, Fi, on the other hand.
The wiring of the individual contact regions is the same for each of the three arrangements. The respective measurements tips for current and voltage are not specifically illustrated, but will be appreciated by the skilled person without an illustration.
For the quadrupole measurement at the greater distance Bi-Ci the current injection (by means of tips) is accomplished at Ai and Di, while the potential drop caused by the current flow is measured (also by means of tips) across Bi and Ci. For the quadrupole measurement at the smaller distance Di-Ei the current is injected between Ci and Fi, while the potential difference is measured between Di and Ei, also using tips (measurement tips).
For electrical shielding with respect to other test elements in the vicinity a frame S2, S3 is provided for the respective test structure. The 6 contact regions of the double quadrupole arrangement may be embodied as a metal-semiconductor contact or as a diffusion region having as high a conductivity as possible that is then also connected via metal contacts.
The geometric arrangement of the six contact regions may preferably be annular and in this case an additional shielding is not required, as shown in
A corresponding method for the electrical measurement of the thickness of a semiconductor layer 10, 11, 12 by means of the two convoluted quadrupole arrangements is accomplished in two steps. During the one measurement of the structure having the greater distance the measurement result is substantially determined by the sheet resistance of the semiconductor layer 11 to be measured. On the other hand, during the other measurement of the quadrupole arrangement having the smaller contact distance preferable the specific resistance of the semiconductor layer 12 to measured is determined. This may be referred to as first/second measurements, without indicating a specific order. The second measurement may as well be performed first.
Depending on the layer thickness of the semiconductor layer (10, 11, 12 form the same layer comprising different area-like sections) to be measured, the distances of the quadrupole arrangements may be adapted so as to achieve a resolution as high as possible, thereby resulting a high measurement accuracy within the range of layer thicknesses under consideration. Since both measurements include the influence of both parameters, the influence of the sheet resistance (and thus of the layer thickness) and the respective influence of the specific resistance, known interrelations of a complex mathematical relation that includes the geometry factors may be used for the evaluation. For this reason a mathematical modelling of the actual geometry makes sense and associated therewith a non-recurring calibration of at least two points for the further model adaption is performed.
The method for measuring the two quadrupole arrangements may likewise be applied to at least three types of contact regions, which are here illustrated as annular arrangement in the form of six circular-shaped concentric contact regions, six rectilinear parallel contact strips and six point-like contacts arranged in a line.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 055 181.2 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE05/02063 | 11/16/2005 | WO | 00 | 11/26/2007 |