1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates, in general, to chemical vapor deposition (CVD) apparatus and processes and, more particularly, to a high throughput method and apparatus for filling gaps and vias for interlayer dielectric (ILD) films in multi-layer metal (MLM) structures.
2. Statement of the Problem
Integrated circuit technology has advanced through continuing improvements in photolithographic processing so that smaller and smaller features can be patterned onto the surface of a substrate spaces or gaps exist between these patterned features. Integrated circuit surfaces also contain trench or via structures protruding down into the surface. The lateral dimension of such structures is hereafter referred to as the width of the gap, trench or via; the vertical dimension of such structures is referred to as the depth. The aspect ratio is the ratio of depth to width.
The smaller features, with smaller spaces between features, result in high aspect ratio gaps, trenches and vias. These high aspect ratio structures must be filled with an appropriate material before continued processing. This problem is acute in the case of multi-layer metal (MLM) designs where dielectric must be deposited after each metal layer is formed and patterned before a subsequent metal layer can be formed and patterned.
When a deposited film is used to completely fill the high aspect ratio structure three different results can emerge. In one case, the deposited material fills the trench without leaving a seam or void. In a second case, a seam arises from the point where the sidewall layers merge during deposition. In a third case, a void arises if the deposition produces re-entrant profiles at earlier stages of the filling process. The first creates the highest reliability integrated circuits. The seams and voids are undesirable, since chemicals or materials may be present in the seam or void to corrode or degrade the structure. Moreover, voids are, rarely hermetically sealed, so subsequent exposure to chemicals or materials deposition can alter the material structure substantially.
Deposition onto trench and via structures is commonly practiced at several stages in the fabrication of semiconductor devices and interconnections. Most often the objective is to provide rather highly conformal films or void-free (and preferably seam-free) filling. Low pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) and plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) are widely used to provide conformal deposition of thin films over three dimensional features. Physical vapor deposition techniques (evaporation, sputter-deposition) are typically limited to low aspect ratio structures. LPCVD processes offer better conformality and filling properties.
A number of chemical vapor deposited (CVD) films are currently used at various steps of integrated circuit manufacturing processes. Typically, sidewall coverage is not uniform along the height of a trench or via. A tapered shape has thicker sidewall coverage toward the bottom of the sidewall than toward the top, while the situation is reversed for a re-entrant shape Generally speaking the tapered shape is more desirable than the re-entrant, because the overhang of deposited material near the top of the trench shadows the region below, and the consequences of subsequent deposition can be ill-defined.
CVD processes operate by confining one or more semiconductor wafers in a chamber. The chamber is filled with process gases comprising one or more reactant species. Energy is supplied within the chamber and particularly to the reactant species near the wafer surface. The energy activates the process gases to deposit from the reactant species a film onto the heated substrate. Such chemical vapor deposition of a solid onto a surface involves a heterogeneous surface reaction of the gaseous species that adsorb onto the surface. The rate of film growth and the quality of the film depend on the wafer surface temperature and on the gas species available.
More recently, low temperature plasma-enhanced deposition and etching techniques are used to form diverse materials, including metals such as aluminum and tungsten, dielectric films such as silicon nitride and silicon dioxide and semiconductor films such as silicon. The plasma used in the plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition process (PECVD) is a low pressure plasma that is developed in an RF field. The RF plasma results in a very high electron temperature making possible the deposition of dense, good quality films at lower temperatures and faster deposition rates than are typically possible using purely thermally activated CVD processes.
Current CVD processes have important limitations. With higher integration levels or higher performance structures, higher aspect ratios are required, stretching the ability of known CVD processes. Re-entrant profiles, seams, and voids all endanger the manufacturability of the semiconductor product due to yield and reliability problems. Where higher growth temperatures improve conformality or profiles, other properties of the 3-D structure may be degraded (e.g., abrupt doping profiles due to diffusion). Alternatively, lower reaction probabilities (“reactive sticking coefficient”) for well-chosen CVD chemistries can yield higher conformality, but throughput is degraded, making the approach less competitive.
Also, conformality is improved by including film etching by physical (i.e. sputtering) or chemical (HCl) etchants in the reactor during the deposition. Simultaneous etching/deposit, however, provides low net deposition rates. Thus, conventional CVD processes may not be capable of efficiently providing the filling characteristics needed for next-generation technologies.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,182,221 issued to Sato on Jan. 26, 1993 describes a bias ECR-CVD process in which etching and deposition are simultaneously performed. In one embodiment, the Sato deposition process is performed in a single step with carefully controlled conditions to provide a ratio of vertical to horizontal deposition rates that will fill high aspect ratio trenches. In another embodiment, the Sato process is performed in multiple steps by changing the reactant species between the steps. This allows control of the deposited film topography, but sacrifices control over film composition. The Sato processes afford control at reduced deposition rates.
Step coverage and filling of high aspect ratio gaps with CVD films is a continuing problem in the IC manufacturing industry. Decreasing costs for most IC products forces increasingly efficient production and higher throughput at film deposition processes. What is needed is a method and apparatus for highly conformal CVD deposition with high throughput.
3. Solution to the Problem
The present invention solves the above problems by providing a high throughput CVD process offering controlled deposited layer thickness over high aspect ratio three-dimensional patterned features. The present invention provides the ability to control how the thickness of the deposited layer varies along bottom, sidewall, and top surfaces of high aspect ratio features patterned on an integrated circuit. The invention permits controlled shaping of thin film layers including, for example, (1) tapered rather than re-entrant shapes (i.e., thicker at the bottom rather than at the top), (2) enhanced sidewall and/or bottom coverage of trench structures, (3) voidless, seamless filling even at high aspect ratio with improved deposition rate for high throughput and low cost.
Briefly stated, the present invention involves a method for making an integrated circuit including steps of forming a pattern defining a gap on a surface of a substrate. The substrate is placed in a plasma reactor. A plasma is generated of process gases including silicon and oxygen components. A bias supply provides a controllable, variable bias between the substrate and the plasma. The plasma causes the product gases to react and deposit onto the substrate and concurrently etch the deposited film. The bias level is varied to continuously control net deposition rate and topography of the deposited film. During an initial stage, the net deposition rate is kept low to improve filling of the high aspect ratio features, while during one or more later stages the net deposition rate is increased to provide a more conformal film at a higher throughput.
a-
1. Overview.
The present invention relates to a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor 100 shown in
Process gases supplied to wafer 102 include a reactant species from process gas supply 111. The quantity of process gas supplied is regulated by flow controller 113. In a particular example, the reactant species include a silicon species and an oxygen species that can react to deposit a silicon dioxide film. Examples of silicon species include:
An etchant gas is also supplied to reactor 100. In a preferred embodiment, the etchant comprises inert gas from inert gas supply 112 such as argon that serves both as a carrier for the reactant species and to allow sputter etching within reactor 100. Alternatively, chemical etchants such as CF4, CHF3, NF3 can be included at controlled rates to provide etching. Flourinated hydrocarbons can also result in deposition of fluorine doped SiO2 which is desirable due to low dielectric constant.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the flow rate of etchant species provided by inlet gas manifold 103 is controllable by flow controller 114 so that it can be increased or reduced during the deposition process. Chamber 101 also incorporates a pumping system (not shown) for exhausting spent gases from chamber 101 through exhaust port 104.
CVD reactor 100 includes means for supplying energy to the reactant species in the process gases on the surface of the wafer 102. The supplied energy causes the reactant species to react or decompose and deposit a thin film onto an upper surface of wafer 102. Common means for supplying the energy include thermal energy supplied by heat lamps (not shown). Alternatively, susceptor 107 can be heated by heat lamps 106 and wafer 102 heated by conduction from susceptor 107.
In the preferred embodiment, reaction energy is supplied by creating an inductively coupled plasma within reactor 100. As shown in
AC generator 108 creates an RF bias field between the plasma and substrate 102. This bias field serves to control the energy with which ionized species from the plasma within chamber 101 impact wafer 102. In the preferred embodiment, AC generator 108 is controllable so that a bias potential appearing on wafer 102 can be controlled throughout the deposition process independently of any self bias created by RF supply 118. Alternatively, AC generator 108 may be replaced by a magnetic field bias that serves essentially an equivalent purpose to the electric field bias illustrated as the preferred embodiment.
CVD reactor 100 is illustrated as a single wafer reactor, but it should be understood that the present invention is applicable to batch reactors of conventional designs. The preferred embodiment includes plasma reactors as these allow lower temperature film deposition and are preferable in the semiconductor industry. However, some reactant species in the process gases may deposit at low temperatures using only thermal energy or other energy source well known in the industry. Hence, the present invention encompasses reactor designs using energy sources including either thermal heating, inductively coupled RF plasma, capacitively coupled RF plasma, or the like.
Although the preferred embodiment is described in terms of a SiH4+O2 deposition, the teachings of the present invention are applicable to any reagent gas. These and other variations of the specific embodiments described herein are considered equivalent to the claimed invention.
2. Method of Operation.
Prior art CVD processes are used to provide a high quality low temperature thin film on a substrate. CVD processes are preferred, as set out hereinbefore, because of their ability to conformally deposit onto complex three-dimensional structures formed on an integrated circuit surface. Prior art systems typically deposit a CVD thin film in a single step using a single, known gas chemistry and plasma conditions. The single step deposition offers the advantage of consistency and simplicity.
The method of the present invention involves concurrent etching and deposition to coat high aspect ratio devices. In order to coat high aspect ratio structures, the deposition rate is reduced by including an etching means (i.e., sputtering or chemical etching) during the deposition process. In accordance with the present invention, varying substrate bias, power, reagent gas partial pressure, and inert gas partial pressure the deposition rate and conformality can be varied significantly.
In accordance with the present invention, the etch rate during the deposition is varied so as to increase the net deposition rate as the high aspect ratio gaps are filled. As the gaps are filled during an initial stage, deposition rate at the base of gaps is much greater than the deposition rate on the sidewalls. This is a known feature of concurrent etch/deposition processes. In accordance with the present invention, as the gap fills, the aspect ratio is reduced. The present invention takes advantage of this occurrence by reducing the etch rate, thereby increasing the net deposition rate when the aspect ratio is at a point where increased conformality can be tolerated.
The effect of the present invention is to increase the average deposition rate for the entire process to a level approaching that for purely conformal coatings. Hence, the method in accordance with the present invention provides the advantages of concurrent etch/deposit processes, while achieving the high deposition rate of conventional conformal deposition processes.
In accordance with the present invention, a substrate is processed through conventional integrated circuit steps to form devices and/or device structures into semiconductor wafer 102 (shown in
As shown in
In accordance with the present invention, when the interlayer dielectric has filled to the preselected level shown in
When the concurrent etch is reduced or eliminated, the deposition of interlayer dielectric 20-202 becomes more conformal. That is to say, that the growth rate or deposit rate on the sidewalls becomes close to the deposition rate at the base of the gap. Although such deposition conditions are unacceptable for the initial high aspect ratio structure, it can be seen from a comparison of
The high conformality deposition continues in the second stage as the gap fills as indicated in
The etch rate can be reduced in a single step, or in multiple steps as the gap fills and layer 202 increases in thickness. Alternatively, the etch back ratio or the etch back rate can be reduced continuously beginning either at the beginning of the process, or at some point when the ILD layer 202 has reached a predetermined thickness inside the well. These and similar variations of the basic teaching of the method and apparatus of the present invention are considered equivalents to preferred embodiments described herein.
Methods of reducing the etch rate are well known, and include altering the bias on wafer 102 (shown in
By now it should be appreciated that an improved method for deposition of interlayer dielectrics having a high deposition rate is provided. While the specific embodiment involves deposition of an interlayer dielectric between patterned features of a patterned metal layer, it will be apparent that the teachings of the present invention can be applied to other structures and CVD depositions processes used in integrated circuit manufacturing. The preferred embodiment uses an oxide deposition, but its teachings are applicable to concurrent etch/deposit systems for other materials, including silicon nitride, metals, and semiconductor layers. While the preferred embodiment uses plasma etching as the variable etch rate feature, other etch systems are known including chemical etching. These and other alternatives are equivalent to the apparatus and method described herein and are within the scope and sprit of the present invention and claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09754440 | Jan 2001 | US |
Child | 10470618 | Jan 2003 | US |
Parent | 08813135 | Mar 1997 | US |
Child | 09754440 | Jan 2001 | US |
Parent | 08472329 | Jun 1995 | US |
Child | 08813135 | Mar 1997 | US |