The present disclosure relates to heater systems and their related controls, and in particular, heater systems that can deliver a precise temperature profile to a heating target during operation in order to compensate for heat loss and/or other variations, in such applications as chucks or susceptors for use in semiconductor processing.
The statements in this section merely provide background information related to the present disclosure and may not constitute prior art.
In the art of semiconductor processing, for example, a chuck or susceptor is used to hold a substrate (or wafer) and to provide a uniform temperature profile to the substrate during processing. Referring to
During all phases of processing of the substrate 26, it is important that the temperature profile of the electrostatic chuck 12 be tightly controlled in order to reduce processing variations within the substrate 26 being etched, while reducing total processing time. Improved devices and methods for improving temperature uniformity on the substrate are continually desired in the art of semiconductor processing, among other applications.
The present disclosure provides a thermal system comprising an array of heating resistor circuits and a plurality of nodes. Each of the heating resistor circuits have a first termination end and a second termination end, and the plurality of nodes connect to the array of heating resistor circuits at each of the first and second termination ends. The thermal system further comprises a plurality of power wires to provide power to the array of heating resistor circuits and a plurality of signal wires to sense a temperature of each of the heating resistor circuits. Each of the plurality of nodes is connected to a power wire from among the plurality of power wires and to a signal wire from among the plurality of signal wires. The number of heating resistor circuits is greater than or equal to the number of power wires and to the number of the signal wires.
In one form, the thermal system further comprises a control system coupled to the plurality of power wires and configured to provide power to at least one of the heating resistor circuits by way of the power wires. The control system may also be configured to selectively apply power or a ground signal to the plurality of nodes by way of the power wires.
In another form, the control system is coupled to the plurality of signal wires and configured to measure a resistance of each of the heating resistor circuits by way of the signal wires, and calculate the temperature of each of the heating resistor circuits based on the measured resistance.
The number of heating resistor circuits, power wires, and signal wires may vary and in one form, the number of heating resistor circuits is six, and the number of power wires and signal wires is four. In another form, the number of heating resistor circuits is three, and the number of power wires and signal wires is three.
In yet another form, the thermal system further comprises a first auxiliary signal wire connected to the heating resistor circuit at a location between the first and second termination ends of the heating resistor circuit to sense the temperature of a portion of the heating resistor circuit between the first auxiliary signal wire and the signal wires. In this form, the thermal system may further include a second auxiliary signal wire connected to the heating resistor circuit at a second location between the first and second termination ends of the heating resistor circuit to sense the temperature of a portion of the heating resistor circuit between the first auxiliary signal wire and the second auxiliary wire.
In another form, the thermal system further comprises a heater secured to a heating target and at least one tuning layer disposed proximate the heater, wherein the heater and the tuning layer includes at least one heating resistor circuit.
The present disclosure further provides a thermal system comprising an array of heating resistor circuits and a plurality of nodes. Each of the heating resistor circuits have a first termination end and a second termination end, and the plurality of nodes that connect to the array of heating resistor circuits at each of the first and second termination ends. The thermal system further comprises a plurality of power wires, a plurality of signal wires, and a control system. Each of the plurality of nodes is connected to a power wire from among the plurality of power wires and to a signal wire from among the plurality of signal wires. The control system is coupled to the plurality of power wires and the plurality of signal wires. The control system is configured to selectively supply power to the plurality of nodes by way of the power wires and to sense a temperature of the heating resistor circuits by way of the signal wires.
In one form, a number of power wires, and a number of the signal wires is equal to a number of the nodes, and the number of a heating resistor circuits is greater than or equal to the number of the nodes.
The number of heating resistor circuits, power wires, signal wires and nodes may vary and in one form, the number of heating resistor circuits is six, and the number of power wires, signal wires, and nodes is four. In another form, the number of heating resistor circuits is three, and the number of power wires, signal wires, and nodes is three.
In another form, control system is configured to determine a set point for each of the heating resistor circuits and control power to the heating resistor circuits based on the set point.
In yet another form, the control system is configured to measure a resistance of each of the heating resistor circuits by way of the signal wires, and calculate the temperature of each of the heating resistor circuits based on the measured resistance. In this form, the control system may further be configured determine a resistance set point for each of the heating resistor circuits and control the power to the heating resistor circuits based on the resistance set point.
In one form, the control system is configured to determine a time window for each of the heating resistor circuits, where the time window is a time period allotted to power the heating resistor circuit.
In another form, the thermal system further comprises a first auxiliary signal wire connected to the heating resistor circuit at a location between the first and second termination ends of the heating resistor circuit to sense the temperature of a portion of the heating resistor circuit between the first auxiliary signal wire and the signal wires.
In yet another form, the thermal system further comprises a second auxiliary signal wire connected to the heating resistor circuit at a second location between the first and second termination ends of the heating resistor circuit to sense the temperature of a portion of the heating resistor circuit between the first auxiliary signal wire and the second auxiliary wire.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. It should be understood that the description and specific examples are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
In order that the disclosure may be well understood, there will now be described various forms thereof, given by way of example, reference being made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
For example, the following forms of the present disclosure are directed to chucks for use in semiconductor processing, and in some instances, electrostatic chucks. However, it should be understood that the heaters and systems provided herein may be employed in a variety of applications and are not limited to semiconductor processing applications. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
Referring to
In another form, rather than providing fine tuning of a heat distribution, the tuning layer 60 may alternately be used to measure temperature in the chuck 12. This form provides for a plurality of area-specific or discreet locations, of temperature dependent resistance circuits. Each of these temperature sensors can be individually read via a multiplexing switching arrangement to allow substantially more sensors to be used relative to the number of signal wires required to measure each individual sensor, such as shown in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/598,956, which is commonly assigned with the present application and the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. The temperature sensing feedback can provide necessary information for control decisions, for instance, to control a specific zone of backside cooling gas pressure to regulate heat flux from the substrate 26 to the chuck 12. This same feedback can also be used to replace or augment temperature sensors installed near the base heater 50 for temperature control of base heating zones 54 or balancing plate cooling fluid temperature (not shown) via ancillary cool fluid heat exchangers.
In one form, the base heater layer 50 and the tuning heater layer 60 are formed from enclosing heater circuit 54 and tuning layer heating elements 62 in a polyimide material for medium temperature applications, which are generally below 250° C. Further, the polyimide material may be doped with materials in order to increase thermal conductivity.
In other forms, the base heater layer 50 and/or the tuning heater layer 60 are formed by a layered process, wherein the layer is formed through application or accumulation of a material to a substrate or another layer using processes associated with thick film, thin film, thermal spraying, or sol-gel, among others.
In one form, the base heating circuit 54 is formed from Inconel® and the tuning layer heating elements 62 are a Nickel material. In still another form, the tuning layer heating elements 62 are formed of a material having sufficient temperature coefficient of resistance such that the elements function as both heaters and temperature sensors, commonly referred to as “two-wire control.” Such heaters and their materials are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,196,295 and 8,378,266, which are commonly assigned with the present application and the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
With the two-wire control, various forms of the present disclosure include temperature, power, and/or thermal impedance based control over the layer heating elements 62 through knowledge or measurement of voltage and/or current applied to each of the individual elements in the thermal impedance tuning layer 60, converted to electrical power and resistance through multiplication and division, corresponding in the first instance, identically to the heat flux output from each of these elements and in the second, a known relationship to the element temperature. Together these can be used to calculate and monitor the thermal impedance load on each element to allow an operator or control system to detect and compensate for area-specific thermal changes that may result from, but are not limited to, physical changes in the chamber or chuck due to use or maintenance, processing errors, and equipment degradation. Alternatively, each of the individually controlled heating elements in the thermal impedance tuning layer 60 can be assigned a setpoint resistance corresponding to the same or different specific temperatures which then modify or gate the heat flux originating from corresponding areas on a substrate through to the base heater layer 52 to control the substrate temperature during semiconductor processing.
In one form, the base heater 50 is bonded to a chuck 51, for example, by using a silicone adhesive or even a pressure sensitive adhesive. Therefore, the heater layer 52 provides primary heating, and the tuning layer 60 fine tunes, or adjusts, the heating profile such that a uniform or desired temperature profile is provided to the chuck 51, and thus the substrate (not shown).
In another form of the present disclosure, the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of the tuning layer heating elements 62 is matched to the CTE of the tuning heating layer substrate 60 in order to improve thermal sensitivity of the tuning layer heating elements 62 when exposed to strain loads. Many suitable materials for two-wire control exhibit similar characteristics to Resistor Temperature Devices (RTDs), including resistance sensitivity to both temperature and strain. Matching the CTE of the tuning layer heating elements 62 to the tuning heater layer substrate 60 reduces strain on the actual heating element. And as the operating temperatures increase, strain levels tend to increase, and thus CTE matching becomes more of a factor. In one form, the tuning layer heating elements 62 are a high purity Nickel-Iron alloy having a CTE of approximately 15 ppm/° C., and the polyimide material that encloses it has a CTE of approximately 16 ppm/° C. In this form, materials that bond the tuning heater layer 60 to the other layers exhibit elastic characteristics that physically decouple the tuning heater layer 60 from other members of the chuck 12. It should be understood that other materials with comparable CTEs may also be employed while remaining within the scope of the present disclosure.
Referring now to
A tuning heater 90 is disposed on top of the substrate 88 and is secured to a chuck 92 using an elastomeric bond layer 94, as set forth above. The chuck 92 in one form is an Aluminum Oxide material having a thickness of approximately 2.5 mm. It should be understood that the materials and dimensions as set forth herein are merely exemplary and thus the present disclosure is not limited to the specific forms as set forth herein. Additionally, the tuning heater 90 has lower power than the base heater 84, and as set forth above, the substrate 88 functions to dissipate power from the base heater 84 such that “witness” marks do not form on the tuning heater 90.
The base heater 84 and the tuning heater 90 are shown in greater detail in
The present disclosure also contemplates that the base heater 84 and the tuning heater 90 not be limited to a heating function. It should be understood that one or more of these members, referred to as a “base functional layer” and a “tuning layer,” respectively, may alternately be a temperature sensor layer or other functional member while remaining within the scope of the present disclosure.
As shown in
Referring to
Each of the six resistor circuits 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112, have two termination ends at opposite ends of each of the resistor circuits 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112. More specifically, resistor circuit 102 has termination ends 122 and 124. Resistor circuit 104 has termination ends 126 and 128. Resistor circuit 106 has termination ends 130 and 132. Resistor circuit 108 has termination ends 134 and 136. Resistor circuit 110 has termination ends 138 and 140. Finally, resistor circuit 112 as termination ends 142 and 144.
In this example, termination end 124 of resistor circuit 102, termination end 138 of resistor circuit 110, and termination end 128 of resistor circuit 104 are connected to node 114. Termination end 122 of resistor circuit 102, termination end 144 of resistor circuit 112, and termination end 136 of resistor circuit 108 are connected to node 122. Termination end 132 of resistor circuit 106, termination end 140 of resistor circuit 110, and termination end 134 of resistor circuit 108 are connected to node 118. Finally, termination end 122 of resistor circuit 102, termination end 144 of resistor circuit 112, and termination end 136 of resistor circuit 108 are connected to node 120.
Each of the nodes 114, 116, 118, and 120, have two wires protruding therefrom. One of the wires is a power wire that provides a voltage to the node, while the other wire is a signal wire for receiving a signal indicative of the resistance across the resistor circuits 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112. The resistance across the circuits 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112, can be used to determine the temperature of each of the resistor circuits. The signal wires may be made of a platinum material.
Here, node 114 has a power wire 146 and a signal wire 148 protruding therefrom. Node 116 has a power wire 150 and a signal wire 152 protruding therefrom. Node 118 has a power wire 154 in a signal wire 156 protruding therefrom. Finally, node 126 has a power wire 158 and a signal wire 160 protruding therefrom. All of these wires may be connected to a control system which will be described later in this description.
By selectively providing either a power or ground signal to the power wires 146, 150, 154, and 158, a current can be transmitted through each of the resistor circuits 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112, thereby creating heat when the current passes through the resistor circuits 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112.
The table below illustrates each combination of power or ground signal provided to the power lines 146, 150, 154, and 158 of nodes 114, 116, 118, and 120, respectively. As shown in the table, there flexibility with controlling which heating circuits provides heating the thermal array system.
Referring to
The system 200 includes nodes 220, 222, and 224. Connected to node 220 are termination ends 208 and 218 of resistor circuits 202 and 206, respectively. Connected to node 222 are termination ends 210 and 212 of resistor circuits 202 and 204, respectively. Finally, connected to node 224 are termination ends 214 and 216 of resistor circuits 204 and 206, respectively. Like the example described in
As such, a control system can provide a power or ground signal to each of the power wires 226, 230, and 234 in a selective manner. Similarly, the control system could measure the resistance between any of the resistor circuits 202, 204, and/or 206, by selectively measuring the resistance between the nodes 220, 222, and 224 by using signal wires 228, 232, 236. As stated before, measuring the resistance across the resistor circuits 202, 204, and 206 is useful in determining the temperature of the resistor circuits 202, 204, and/or 206.
The table below illustrates each combination of power or ground signal provided to the power lines 226, 230, 234 to nodes 220, 222, 224, respectively. As shown in the table, there flexibility with controlling which heating circuits provides heating the thermal array system.
It should be understood that any one of a number of different combinations of nodes and resistor circuits could be utilized. As stated before, the examples given in
Generally, the plurality of resistor circuits defines a number of resistor circuits Rn. The plurality of nodes defining a number of nodes Nn. The plurality of power wires are connected to each of the plurality of nodes to provide power to the plurality of resistor circuits, wherein the plurality of power wires defining a number of power wires Pn. A plurality of signal wires connects to each of the plurality of nodes to sense the temperature of each of the plurality of resistor circuits. The plurality of signal wires defining a number of signal wires S. The number of power wires Pn and the number of signal wires Sn is equal to the number of nodes Nn, and the number of resistor circuits Rn is greater than or equal to the number of nodes Nn.
Referring to
These functions may include providing power to the power lines 146, 150, 154, and/or 158 of the thermal system 100 or taking measurements of the signal lines 148, 152, 156, and/or 160. The control system may also include a sensing element connected to the signal wires, wherein the sensing element is a thermocouple or a resistance temperature detector.
In this example, the power lines 146, 150, 154, and 158 as well as the signal lines 148, 152, 156, and 160 are directly connected to the control system 300 and therefore are in communication the processor 302 of the control system 300 for receiving power or measuring signals. Of course, it should be understood that the instructions configuring the processor 302 may be stored within the processor or at a remote storage location and not necessarily the memory 304.
Referring to
Referring to
The system 500 includes nodes 520, 522, and 524. Connected to node 520 are termination ends 508 and 518 of resistor circuits 502 and 506, respectively. Connected to node 522 are termination ends 510 and 512 of resistor circuits 502 and 504, respectively. Finally, connected to node 524 are termination ends 514 and 516 of resistor circuits 504 and 506, respectively. Like the embodiment described in
As such, a control system can provide a power or ground signal to each of the power wires 526, 530, and 534 in a selective manner, as shown in the table above for system 200. Similarly, the control system could measure the resistance between any of the resistor circuits 502, 504, and/or 506, by selectively measuring the resistance between the nodes 520, 522, and 524 by using signal wires 528, 532, 536. As stated before, measuring the resistance across the resistor circuits 502, 504, and 506 is useful in determining the temperature of the resistor circuits 502, 504, and/or 506.
However, system 500 may also include and auxiliary signal wire 538 connected to resistor circuit 502. The auxiliary signal wire 538 can be connected to the control system described in this specification and would allow for measurements of resistance, and therefore temperature, in a zone of interest 540. Additionally, or alternatively, one or more auxiliary signal wires may be connected to any of the resistor circuits so as to monitor the temperature in any one of a number of different zones of interest. For example, system 500 may also include auxiliary signal wires 542 in 544 connected to resistor circuit 506. These auxiliary signal wires 542 and 544 may be connected to a control system, which allows the measurement of temperature in a zone of interest 546, which is between the nodes 520 and 524.
As such, any one of a number of different auxiliary wires may be connected to the resistor circuits to allow monitoring of the temperature of multiple zones of interest. Further, the use of one or more auxiliary wires may be used in any example described herein, such as the example shown in
Now referring to
In block 616, the controller determines if the end of the time window has been reached for the current resistor circuit. If the end of the time window had been reached for the current resistor circuit, the method follows line 620 to block 622. In block 622, the controller increments to the next resistor circuit within the array and proceeds to block 616 where the process continues. If the end of the time window has not been reached the method follows line 618 to block 624. In block 624, the controller may simultaneously provide power to the resistor circuit and measure electrical characteristics of the resistor circuit. In block 626, the controller determines if the resistor circuit has exceeded the resistor circuit set point based on the measured characteristics. If the set point has been exceeded, the method may wait until the timing window is complete or, after some delay, proceed along the line 628 to block 622. In block 622, the resistor circuit is incremented to the next resistor circuit and the process proceeds to block 616. If the resistor circuit has not exceeded the set point based on the measured characteristics, the process follows line 630 block 616 where the process continues.
Any of the controllers, control systems, or engines described may be implemented in one or more computer systems. One exemplary system is provided in
As a person skilled in the art will readily appreciate, the above description is meant as an illustration of implementation of the principles this invention. This description is not intended to limit the scope or application of this invention in that the invention is susceptible to modification, variation and change, without departing from the spirit of this invention, as defined in the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/925,330, filed on Oct. 28, 2015. The disclosures of the above applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14925330 | Oct 2015 | US |
Child | 15817573 | US |