This invention relates to an ion implantation apparatus and an ion implantation method and, in particular, relates to an ion implantation apparatus and an ion implantation method for use in the manufacture of semiconductor devices such as ICs or LSIs. Further, this invention relates to a semiconductor device such as an IC or LSI, particularly to a MOS transistor formed on an SOI substrate.
As shown in Non-Patent Document 1, plasma-based ion implantation is a technique that produces a plasma using a gas containing atoms to be implanted and, by applying a negative voltage to a workpiece substrate to be processed, accelerates positive ions in the sheath to carry out ion implantation into the workpiece substrate.
As compared with a conventional ion implantation method using an ion beam, the plasma-based ion implantation is at a low cost and further can produce a large amount of ions with a low energy of 10 keV or less, and therefore, it is advantageous when forming a shallow source/drain layer of a MOS transistor.
In the plasma-based ion implantation disclosed in the above-mentioned Non-Patent Document, a negative high-voltage DC pulse of normally several tens of μs is applied to an electrode provided in a holding stage holding a workpiece substrate so that ions are accelerated and implanted into the workpiece substrate by an electric field that is transiently generated on a surface of the workpiece substrate immediately after the application of the DC pulse.
However, since the transient phenomenon is used in this method, the time constant of the transient phenomenon changes depending on the conductivity and permittivity of the workpiece substrate and thus it is difficult to precisely control the ion acceleration energy. As a consequence, it is also difficult to control the ion implantation distribution. In particular, in order to form a shallow source/drain junction in a MOS transistor manufacturing process, it is necessary to suppress diffusion of implanted impurity ions so that activation annealing at a low temperature of 600° C. or less is required. That is, an implantation distribution uniformalizing effect due to diffusion in high-temperature annealing cannot be used and thus there is required an ion implantation method that can precisely control the implantation distribution.
According to a first aspect of this invention, there is provided an ion implantation apparatus, comprising:
a processing chamber which is evacuated,
plasma exciting means for exciting a plasma in the processing chamber and,
a holding stage provided in the processing chamber and holding a substrate to be processed,
wherein an RF power is applied to the holding stage to generate a self-bias voltage on a surface of the substrate so that positive ions in the plasma are accelerated and implanted into the substrate,
wherein the RF power has a frequency of 4 MHz or more and is applied in the form of pulses so that ion implantation is dividedly carried out a plurality of times.
According to a second aspect of this invention, there is provided the ion implantation apparatus according to the first aspect, wherein the plasma exciting means comprises;
means for causing an electromagnetic wave having a frequency selected from a range of 100 MHz to 3 GHz to propagate as a metal surface wave into the processing chamber, and
means for introducing a gas for plasma excitation into the processing chamber.
According to a third aspect of this invention, there is provided the ion implantation apparatus according to the first or second aspect, wherein the holding stage has an electrostatic chuck function,
a gas is filled into a space between the holding stage and the substrate by the electrostatic chuck function,
a filling pressure of the gas is set higher than a pressure in the processing chamber, and
a shield plate is provided around the holding stage for preventing the gas leaking from the space from entering a plasma exciting region.
According to a fourth aspect of this invention, there is provided an ion implantation method that carries out ion implantation using the ion implantation apparatus according to any one of first to third aspects.
According to a fifth aspect of this invention, there is provided the ion implantation method according to the fourth aspect, wherein the ion implantation is carried out using at least a plurality of self-bias voltages by changing the RF power to be applied to the holding stage.
According to a sixth aspect of this invention, there is provided the ion implantation method according to the fifth aspect, wherein the surface of the substrate comprises a semiconductor crystal containing silicon, the method comprising a step of carrying out the ion implantation while amorphizing the semiconductor crystal by at least a first self-bias voltage, and a step of causing an ion implantation density of an outermost surface of the semiconductor crystal to be at least 1×1020 cm−3 or more by a second self-bias voltage.
According to a seventh aspect of this invention, there is provided the ion implantation method according to any one of forth to sixth aspects, wherein the gas for plasma excitation is a gas of a fluoride of an implantation atom.
According to an eighth aspect of this invention, there is provided the ion implantation method according to any one of claims fourth to seventh aspects, wherein the gas for plasma excitation is at least one gas selected from the group comprising BF3, PF3, and AsF3.
According to a ninth aspect of this invention, there is provided a semiconductor device, comprising:
a substrate having at least a first semiconductor region, a buried insulator layer formed on the first semiconductor region, and a second semiconductor region formed on the buried insulator layer,
wherein the second semiconductor region comprises a channel region and source/drain regions, and
a thickness of a layer of the second semiconductor region is such that a thickness of the layer of the source/drain regions is set to be twice or more that of the layer of the channel region.
According to a tenth aspect of this invention, there is provided the semiconductor device according to the ninth aspect, wherein the semiconductor device has an accumulation mode in which the channel region, the source region, and the drain region are of the same conductivity type.
According to an eleventh aspect of this invention, there is provided a semiconductor device manufactured using the ion implantation apparatus according to any one of the first to third aspects.
According to a twelfth aspect of this invention, there is provided a semiconductor device manufactured using the ion implantation method according to any one of forth to eighth aspects.
According to a thirteenth aspect of this invention, there is provided a semiconductor device manufacturing method, comprising:
a step of carrying out ion implantation by the ion implantation method according to any one of forth to eighth aspects.
According to this invention, there are obtained an ion implantation method and an ion implantation apparatus that can precisely control the ion acceleration energy and that can accurately control the implantation distribution when forming a shallow junction in a semiconductor.
A first embodiment of this invention is shown.
Normally, for stable plasma excitation, it is desirable to dilute a material gas with a noble gas such as Ar. However, in the case of carrying out ion implantation by plasma doping, if a material gas is diluted with a gas such as Ar, Ar ions are also implanted into a substrate, and therefore, it is desirable to carry out plasma excitation only with the material gas.
As the material gas, there is, for example, BF3, PF3, AsF3, or the like. However, if such a gas is formed into a plasma, since F has a very large electronegativity, electrons tend to adhere thereto and thus a large amount of F− ions are produced, resulting in a reduction in the electron density. Therefore, it is desirable to use a conductor surface wave (metal surface wave) excitation method that can stably maintain plasma excitation even at low electron density.
Taking this into account, the conductor surface wave (metal surface wave) method using a 915 MHz microwave is employed in this embodiment. Although a gas containing hydrogen, such as B2H6, can also be cited as a material gas, since hydrogen is a light atom, it is implanted into a substrate while being accelerated to very high energy, thus serving as a factor to cause damage. Therefore, it is desirable not to use the gas containing hydrogen.
Herein, referring to
The conductor surface wave (metal surface wave) type plasma processing apparatus for use in this invention is a plasma processing apparatus comprising a processing vessel made of metal for placing therein a substrate to be subjected to a plasma treatment (plasma doping in this invention), a means for introducing into the processing vessel a gas necessary for exciting a plasma, and an electromagnetic wave source for supplying an electromagnetic wave necessary for exciting the plasma, and further comprising, on a lower surface of a cover of the processing vessel, a plurality of dielectrics partially exposed to the inside of the processing vessel for introducing the electromagnetic wave supplied from the electromagnetic wave source into the processing vessel. Further, the apparatus is configured such that metal electrodes are respectively provided on lower surfaces of the dielectrics so that the electromagnetic wave emitted from exposed portions of the dielectrics exposed between the metal electrodes and the lower surface of the cover propagates as a metal surface wave along the metal surfaces of both the metal electrodes and the lower surface of the cover, thereby exciting the above-mentioned gas to produce a plasma.
According to this structure, a plasma which is excited in the processing vessel by a conductor surface wave due to a microwave having a relatively low frequency of, for example, 915 MHz becomes uniform. As a result, the entire treatment surface of the substrate can be uniformly treated. Further, since it is possible to excite the plasma using the electromagnetic wave (conductor surface wave) propagating along the surface wave propagating portions arranged around the dielectrics, the amount of use of the dielectric can be largely reduced. Further, by reducing the exposed area of the dielectric exposed to the inside of the processing vessel, damage, etching, and so on of the dielectric due to overheating of the dielectric can be suppressed and, further, the occurrence of metal contamination from the inside of the processing vessel can be prevented. In particular, as compared with the case of using a microwave having a frequency of 3 GHz or more, the lower limit of the electron density for obtaining a stable, low electron temperature plasma can be set to about 1/7 (in the case of 915 MHz) and thus the plasma suitable for a plasma treatment can be obtained under conditions of a wider range which cannot be used so far. As a consequence, it is possible to significantly improve the flexibility of the processing apparatus.
A susceptor 202 as a placing stage for placing thereon a semiconductor substrate 206 is provided in the processing vessel 201. The susceptor 202 is made of, for example, aluminum nitride and is provided therein with a power feed portion 11 for applying a predetermined bias voltage to the substrate. A high-frequency power supply portion 203 for bias application provided outside the processing vessel is connected to the power feed portion 11. The illustrated high-frequency power supply portion 203 comprises a high-frequency power supply 13 and a matching device 14 having a capacitor and so on.
At the bottom of the processing vessel 201, an exhaust port 20 is provided for evacuating the inside of the processing vessel by the use of an exhaust device such as a vacuum pump (not illustrated) provided outside the processing vessel. Further, a baffle plate 21 is provided in the processing vessel 201 around the susceptor 202 for controlling the gas flow in a preferable state.
Four dielectrics 25 made of Al2O3, for example, are attached to a lower surface of the cover 3. A dielectric material such as, for example, fluororesin or quartz can alternatively be used as the dielectrics 25. As shown in
A metal electrode 27 is attached to a lower surface of each dielectric 25. The metal electrode 27 is made of a material having conductivity, for example, an aluminum alloy. Like the dielectric 25, the metal electrode 27 is formed into a square plate shape. The width N of the metal electrode 27 is slightly smaller than the width L of the dielectric 25. Therefore, seeing from the inside of the processing vessel, the dielectric 25 is exposed around the metal electrode 27 in the state where the peripheral portion of the dielectric 25 appears with its square contour. Further, seeing from the inside of the processing vessel, the dielectrics 25 are disposed so that the vertices of the square contours formed by the peripheral portions of the dielectrics 25 are adjacent to each other.
The dielectrics 25 and the metal electrodes 27 are attached to the lower surface of the cover 3 by means of connecting members 30 such as screws.
A vertical gas flow path 40 is provided in each connecting member 30 at its central portion while lateral gas flow paths 41 are respectively provided between the dielectrics 25 and the metal electrodes 27. A plurality of gas ejection holes 42 are dispersedly opened at a lower surface of each metal electrode 27. A predetermined gas supplied into a space portion 32 in the cover 3 passes through the gas flow paths 40 and 41 and through the gas ejection holes 42 so as to be dispersedly supplied into the processing vessel 4.
As shown in
As shown in
During a plasma treatment, a microwave propagating to the respective dielectrics 25 from a microwave supply device 85 propagates from the peripheral portions, exposed at the lower surface of the cover 3, of the dielectrics 25 along the lower surface of the metal cover 45, the lower surfaces of the metal electrodes 27, and a lower surface of a side cover inner portion 58. In this event, grooves 56 and 57 serve as a propagation barrier portion for preventing the microwave (conductor surface wave), propagating along the lower surface of the side cover inner portion 58, from propagating to the outside (side cover outer portion 59) beyond the grooves 56 and 57. As a consequence, the lower surface of the metal cover 45, the lower surfaces of the metal electrodes 27, and the lower surface of the side cover inner portion 58, which are regions surrounded by the grooves 56 and 57 at the lower surface of the cover 3, serve as surface wave propagating portions.
A side cover 55 is attached to the lower surface of the cover 3 by means of connecting members 65 such as screws. Lower surfaces 66, exposed to the inside of the processing vessel, of the connecting members 65 are flush with a lower surface of the side cover 55. A vertical gas flow path 70 is provided in each connecting member 65 at its central portion while a lateral gas flow path 71 is provided between the lower surface of the cover 3 and the side cover 55. A plurality of gas ejection holes 72 are dispersedly opened at the lower surface of the side cover 55. The predetermined gas supplied into the space portion 32 in the cover 3 passes through the gas flow paths 70 and 71 and through the gas ejection holes 72 so as to be dispersedly supplied into the processing vessel 4.
A coaxial tube 86 is connected to an upper surface of the cover 3 at its center for transmitting a microwave supplied from the microwave source 85 disposed outside the processing vessel 4. The coaxial tube 86 comprises an inner conductor 87 and an outer conductor 88. The inner conductor 87 is connected to a branching plate 90 disposed in the cover 3.
As shown in
As a microwave having a frequency of 3 GHz or less, a microwave having a frequency of, for example, 915 MHz is introduced into the coaxial tube 86 from the microwave supply device 85. As a consequence, the 915 MHz microwave is branched by the branching plate 90 so as to be transmitted to the respective dielectrics 25 (
A gas pipe 100 is connected to the upper surface of the cover 3 for supplying the predetermined gas necessary for the plasma treatment. Further, a coolant pipe 101 is provided in the cover 3 for supplying a coolant. The predetermined gas supplied through the gas pipe 100 from a gas supply source 102 disposed outside the processing vessel 4 is supplied into the space portion 32 in the cover 3 and then passes through the gas flow paths 40, 41, 50, 51, 70, and 71 and through the gas ejection holes 42, 52, and 72 so as to be dispersedly supplied into the processing vessel 4.
Referring to
On the other hand, in order to generate a substrate bias, in this embodiment, 4 MHz RF power was applied with a pulse width of 10 μs and at an interval of 90 μs instead of using a DC pulse. That is, in this embodiment, use was made of RF power pulses in which the pulse width is shorter than the pulse stop period (herein, RF power pulses with a duty cycle of 1/10).
First, pulse application was carried out 70,000 times by setting the self-bias voltage to −5 kV and, successively, ion implantation was carried out 30,000 times by setting the self-bias voltage to −0.3 kV. The total implantation amount was set to 3×1014 cm−2. Distribution thereof is shown in
It is generally known that when RF power is applied to a workpiece substrate through an electrode in a plasma to accelerate and implant positive ions into the workpiece substrate, the positive ion energy has a distribution.
(e.g. M. A. Lieberman and A. J. Lichtenberg, Principles of Plasma Discharges and Materials Processing Second Edition, Wiley Interscience, 2005)
That is, assuming that the incident ion energy is given by E and the energy distribution thereof is given by f(E), the following formula 1 is obtained.
Herein, e is the elementary charge and VDC the self-bias voltage generated on the workpiece substrate. Further, ΔE is the energy spread and is expressed by the following formula 2.
Herein, VRF is the amplitude of the RF voltage on the workpiece substrate surface, ω the angular frequency of the RF power, d the thickness of a sheath formed between the workpiece substrate surface and a plasma, and mi the mass of an incident ion. As seen from the formula (1), the incident ion energy has an energy spread of 2ΔE and is distributed from the minimum energy eVDC−ΔE to the maximum energy eVDC+ΔE with sharp peaks at the minimum energy and the maximum energy. However, since ΔE is inversely proportional to the frequency of the RF power and to the square root of the ion mass mi, the energy spread decreases as the frequency increases or when heavier ions are used. As a result, in this embodiment, the energy distribution of BF2+ ions reaching the substrate surface was as shown in
It is known that when monoenergetic ions are implanted into silicon, the energy has a Gaussian distribution with a width ΔRp around the average implantation depth Rp. That is, assuming that the dependence of the implanted ion density on the depth x direction, i.e. the implantation depth distribution, is given by n(x), the following formula 3 is obtained.
N0 is the total implantation amount expressed in unit of cm−2. Rp and ΔRp depend on the incident ion energy and exhibit the dependences for BF2+, PF2+, and AsF2+ as shown in
In this embodiment, first, BF2+ ions were implanted while being accelerated to 5 keV by generating the self-bias voltage of −5 kV, thus forming a region of 1×1020 cm−3 or more to a depth of about 13 nm as shown in
Next, using
Next, a description will be given of one example of a method of setting the pulse width, the pulse interval, and the ion current density. In the ion implantation, ions having a positive charge are implanted while secondary electrons having a negative charge are forced out, and therefore, an ion implanted region is charged positive. In the case of source/drain region implantation, it is necessary to implant ions of about 1014 cm−2 as an ion dose. If about 10 secondary electrons are emitted due to one-time ion bombardment, large positive charges of 1×1015 cm−2 are accumulated. As a consequence, a strong electric field is generated on a gate insulating film to cause charge-up damage. In order to prevent the generation of the strong electric field, it is preferable to carry out the ion implantation by dividing it into a plurality of times using pulses. That is, it is possible to suppress the generation of the strong electric field by neutralizing the charge-up between the pulses using electrons that are diffused from a plasma exciting region.
For example, a description will be given of the case where ion implantation is carried out while being divided into 100,000 times. That is, when the substrate RF power is applied in the form of pulses while exciting a microwave plasma, the self-bias voltage is generated only when the RF power is turned on so that ion implantation is carried out. When the RF power is off, charge-up is removed by electrons in the plasma. Since the total dose is 3×1014 cm−2, the one-time dose is 3×109 cm−2. The time for neutralizing, by the use of electrons, the charge which is charged positive on a wafer by a one-time pulse, i.e. the pulse interval, was set to be 10 times the pulse width. More generally, with respect to the pulse width and the pulse interval, if the pulse interval is longer than the product of an inverse number of the ratio of electrons to the total number of ion charges in a unit volume in the plasma, a secondary electron emission coefficient of the workpiece substrate, and the pulse width, it is possible to sufficiently remove the charge-up.
In order to process one wafer in 10 seconds, the pulse width for applying the substrate RF power was set to 10 μs while the time for neutralization by electrons was set to 90 μs. Since almost all ions irradiated to the wafer were BF2+, the necessary ion current density J was set to the following formula 4.
Since the current density is proportional to the plasma density if the electron temperature is constant, the current density may be controlled by changing the plasma density using the plasma excitation microwave power or by adjusting the distance between the workpiece substrate and the plasma exciting region. Since the non-application time was 10 times the RF application time, it was possible to carry out the ion implantation without causing charge-up. More generally, the necessary ion current density J is given by the following formula 5.
Herein, D is the dose, e the elementary charge, N the number of times of pulses, and Δt the pulse width. It is assumed herein that the implantation ions are ionized to be monovalent. On the other hand, if multivalent ions are present, the elementary charge e may be multiplied by valences to derive the current densities for the ions with the respective valences, thereby setting the sum value as a current density.
Next, a description will be given of implantation of PF2+ ions for forming an n+-Si source/drain region. Explanation of portions overlapping the first embodiment will be omitted.
The total implantation amount was set to 5×1014 cm−2. Since a PF2+ ion has a larger size and mass as compared with a BF2+ ion, both Rp and ΔRp become smaller with the same implantation energy as shown in
When forming, by plasma doping, the highly doped source/drain layer having a thickness equivalent to that of the silicon of the channel region 704, the implantation front becomes about twice the channel region. Therefore, in order to obtain a sufficiently small series resistance of the source/drain and further to prevent the occurrence of noise, the thickness of the silicon of the source/drain regions 703 should be set to be twice or more that of the silicon of the channel region 704.
As shown in
A fourth embodiment of this invention is shown using
The conductive ceramic 811 has a resistivity controlled to about 1010 Ωcm at room temperature and a thickness of 1 mm. The insulating ceramic 812 has a relatively large thickness of 2 cm to thereby make small the capacitance between the ground plate 813 and the substrate electrode 804.
With this structure, when the RF power is applied to the substrate electrode 804, it is possible to efficiently generate a self-bias. The substrate electrode 804 uses a bipolar chuck so that, by applying +500V to an electrode on one side and −500V to the other electrode from the DC power supplies 808, the silicon wafer 803 is attracted. Using the bipolar chuck, both charges cancel each other out in the wafer. Accordingly, no voltage due to the DC power supplies occurs in the wafer 803 so that it is possible to control the self-bias voltage only by the RF power applied from the RF power supply 807. The DC power supplies 808 are connected to the substrate electrode through the parallel resonant filters 809, respectively. In the parallel resonant filters 809, the resonant frequency is set to the frequency of the RF power so that the impedance takes an extremely large value at that frequency. As a consequence, the RF power is prevented from being supplied to the DC power supply 808 sides. Between the wafer and the conductive ceramic, a He gas is filled through the He gas introducing portion 802 and the pressure is set to 10 Torr by adjusting the He gas flow rate. This makes it possible to ensure the thermal conductivity between the wafer and the conductive ceramic and thus to efficiently remove the heat generated during ion implantation. If the He gas returns to a plasma exciting region, the He gas is ionized to He ions. The He ions are very light and thus are accelerated by the self-bias voltage so as to be implanted at high energy into the wafer, thus serving as a factor to cause damage.
In order to prevent it, the He gas control plate 801 is disposed around the conductive ceramic. By this control plate, the He gas leaking from the outer periphery of the wafer is exhausted from the inner exhaust port 805. This makes it possible to prevent the He gas from returning to the plasma exciting region and thus to prevent ionization of the He gas. A plasma excitation gas is exhausted from both the inner exhaust port 805 and the outer exhaust port.
While the invention made by the present inventors has been described in detail with reference to the embodiments, it is needless to say that this invention is not limited to the above-mentioned embodiments and can be changed in various ways without departing from the gist of the invention.
This invention is not only applicable to the manufacture of semiconductor devices, but also applicable to the manufacture of various electronic devices such as flat display devices.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-319269 | Dec 2008 | JP | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13139335 | Jun 2011 | US |
Child | 14172091 | US |