This invention relates generally to the field of semiconductor devices and more specifically to maintaining a reactor chamber of a chemical vapor deposition system.
Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor chambers are used to form layers on semiconductor wafers according to a chemical vapor deposition procedure. During the procedure, an accumulation may be deposited on an inner surface of a reactor chamber. The accumulation may be removed with a cleaning process. According to known techniques for maintaining a reactor chamber, however, the cleaning process may result in an undesirable amount of particles in the chemical vapor deposition reactor chamber. Consequently, known techniques for maintaining a chemical vapor deposition reactor chamber may be unsatisfactory in certain situations.
In accordance with the present invention, disadvantages and problems associated with previous techniques for maintaining a chemical vapor deposition reactor chamber may be reduced or eliminated.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, maintaining a reactor chamber of a chemical vapor deposition system includes depositing layers on an inner surface of the reactor chamber, where the layers form an accumulation layer. When the accumulation layer reaches a specified thickness, a plasma clean cycle is performed. The volume of the cleaning gas used during one or more plasma clean cycles is calculated, where the volume indicates the volume of cleaning gas introduced into the reactor chamber. A notification is provided when the volume of the cleaning gas used during the plasma clean cycles has reached a predetermined volume.
Certain embodiments of the invention may provide one or more technical advantages. A technical advantage of one embodiment may be that the volume of cleaning gas introduced into a reactor chamber during one or more cleaning cycles may be used to schedule chamber maintenance. The volume of cleaning gas may provide a relatively accurate estimate of when the reactor chamber may need chamber maintenance.
Certain embodiments of the invention may include none, some, or all of the above technical advantages. One or more other technical advantages may be readily apparent to one skilled in the art from the figures, descriptions, and claims included herein.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention and its features and advantages, reference is now made to the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Embodiments of the present invention and its advantages are best understood by referring to
According to one embodiment, system 10 may be used to perform a chemical vapor deposition procedure in order to deposit layers of a material outwardly from an outer surface of a target such as a semiconductor wafer. The deposited layer may have a thickness ranging from, for example, 1.8 kiloAngstroms to 12.5 kiloAngstroms. During the process, a carrier chemical that includes atoms of the material to be deposited on the wafer reacts with another reactant chemical, depositing the product of the chemical reaction on the wafer. Unwanted byproducts of the reaction may be removed through subsequent process steps.
The relative concentration of the carrier chemical and the reactant chemical within reactor chamber 22 may be varied. Other parameters within reactor chamber 22 may also be varied, for example, the temperature and pressure inside of reactor chamber 22 and the time that the wafer is exposed to the chemicals. Examples of deposition procedures performed by system 10 may include fluorinated silicate glass (FSG), shallow trench isolation (STI), undoped silicate glass (USG), phosphoric silicate glass (PSG), or silicone nitride procedures.
According to the illustrated embodiment, chemical vapor deposition system 10 includes reactor chamber 22, an inlet 24, an electrostatic chuck 26, a plasma clean apparatus 28, and a radio frequency power generating system 30 coupled as shown in
As chemical vapor deposition system 10 deposits layers on wafer 44, an accumulation 48 may be deposited outwardly from inner surface 40 of reactor chamber 22. Accumulation 48 may comprise, for example, an oxide formed as the reactant chemical reacts with inner surface 40 of reactor chamber 22. If accumulation 48 becomes too thick, for example, greater than four microns such as six microns, accumulation 48 may start to flake and create defects at wafer 44. Before accumulation 48 reaches a thickness at which it is prone to flaking, reactor chamber 22 may be cleaned to remove accumulation 48. As an example, during fluorine doped silicate glass deposition, reactor chamber 22 may be cleaned when accumulation 48 reaches a thickness of approximately six microns. According to one embodiment, plasma clean apparatus 28 may include components operable to introduce cleaning chemicals into reactor chamber 22.
Plasma clean apparatus 28 performs a cleaning process in order to substantially remove accumulation 48. The cleaning process may comprise any process suitable for substantially removing accumulation 48 from reactor chamber 22, for example, a plasma clean process such as a fluorine-based plasma clean process. Plasma clean apparatus 28 introduces a cleaning gas 56 into reactor chamber 22 in order to substantially remove accumulation 48. Cleaning gas 56 may include a cleaning agent such as fluorine (F). Cleaning gas 56 reacts with accumulation 48 to substantially remove accumulation 48, and may also overetch surface 40, which may produce particles. As an example, overetching of an aluminum oxide coating of surface 40 with a fluorine-based cleaning gas may yield aluminum fluoride (AlF3) particles.
According to the illustrated embodiment, plasma clean apparatus 28 includes a processor 50, a cleaning gas supply 52, and a mass-flow controller 54 coupled as illustrated in
Processor 50 may manage the flow of cleaning gas 56 into reactor chamber 22, and may comprise any device operable to process input according to predefined rules to generate output such as a tool computer or external computing device. Cleaning gas 56 may comprise, for example, an ionized fluorine compound such as nitrogen trifluoride (NF3) or other suitable chemical operable to remove accumulation 48. The volume of cleaning gas 56 introduced into reactor chamber 22 during the cleaning process typically affects the appropriate amount of cleaning of reactor chamber 22. If too little cleaning gas 56 is introduced into reactor chamber 22, accumulation 48 may remain disposed outwardly from surface 40. If too much cleaning gas 56 is introduced into reactor chamber 22, too many aluminum fluoride (AlF3) particles may be generated, which may result in defects with the deposited layer.
Processor 50 may measure the volume of cleaning gas 56 introduced into reactor chamber 22 by, for example, establishing the volume of cleaning gas flowing per time unit, and then measuring the time in order to determine the volume of cleaning gas 56 introduced into reactor chamber 22. Other parameters that are substantially proportional to the volume of cleaning gas 56 introduced into reactor chamber 22 may be used to measure the volume of cleaning gas. As an example, a silane (SiH4) plasma clean process time may be used.
Radio frequency power generating system 30 includes a radio frequency source 60 and a match 62. Radio frequency power generating system 30 generates radio frequency waves supplied to coil 42 of reactor chamber 22. Match 62 tunes the radio frequency to the appropriate frequency. The appropriate frequency is the frequency that may ionize the cleaning agent of cleaning gas 56 in order to remove accumulation 40 deposited outwardly from an inward surface of reactor chamber 22.
The cleaning process may result in the formation of particles such as aluminum fluoride (AlF3) particles that may increase inline oxide defect density trends and chamber failures. Chamber maintenance may be performed. For example, parts of chemical vapor deposition systems such as aluminum oxide parts may be replaced in order to reduce or avoid these failures.
A technique for maintaining a reactor chamber 22 determines when chamber maintenance should be performed based on the number of wafers 44 processed by chemical vapor deposition system 20. The number of wafers, however, may not provide an accurate measure of the amount of cleaning performed or the total thickness of accumulation 48 cleaned by the process. As an example, thickness of an fluorinated silicate glass deposition may range from 1.5 kiloAngstroms to 12.5 kiloAngstroms. Typically, there is a cleaning cycle for every six micrometers of deposition. Accordingly, relying on the number of wafers processed may result in more inline oxide defect density trends and chamber failures.
The total volume of cleaning gas 56 introduced into reactor chamber 22 after one or more cleaning cycles may be used to schedule chamber maintenance that may be performed to reduce or avoid inline oxide defect density trends and chamber failures. When a predetermined volume of cleaning gas has been introduced into reactor chamber 22, chamber maintenance for maintaining and replacing parts may be scheduled. The predetermined volume may be determined from experimental results measuring how wafer quality, reflected by particle or defect densities, change with respect to the volume of cleaning gas. As an example, the predetermined volume may correspond to a maximum volume that may be introduced before wafer quality falls below a certain level. The chamber maintenance specification may be determined in accordance with device requirements in order to achieve certain target inline oxide defect densities and yield goals. As an example, larger semiconductor chips may require lower defect densities, so a tighter maintenance specification may be applied.
Modifications, additions, or omissions may be made to system 10 without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, system 10 may have more, fewer, or other modules. Moreover, the operations of system 10 may be performed by more, fewer, or other modules. For example, the operations of cleaning gas supply 52 and mass-flow controller 54 may be performed by one module, or the operations of processor 50 may be performed by more than one module. Additionally, functions may be performed using any suitable logic comprising software, hardware, other logic, or any suitable combination of the preceding. As used in this document, “each” refers to each member of a set or each member of a subset of a set.
Wafer 44 is received at step 104. System 10 deposits a layer on wafer 44 at step 106. The layer may have a thickness of, for example, six kiloAngstroms. Wafer 44 is removed at step 108. The accumulation counter is updated at step 110 to reflect the thickness of the layer deposited on reactor chamber 22.
Processor 50 determines if the accumulation counter has reached a predetermined limit at step 112 that indicates that a plasma clean is to be performed. The maximum thickness may be approximately six microns, or any other thickness suitable for indicating that a plasma clean is to be performed. If the maximum thickness has not been reached, the method returns to step 104, where a next wafer 44 is received. If the maximum thickness has been reached at step 112, the method proceeds to step 114, where a plasma clean is performed. The accumulation counter is reset at step 116.
Processor 50 determines the volume of cleaning gas 56 that has been used to clean reactor chamber 22 and updates the cleaning gas counter at step 120. The volume of cleaning gas may be determined by, for example, the duration of the plasma clean and the volume of cleaning gas per time unit flowing into reactor chamber 22. Processor 50 determines if the cleaning gas counter indicates that the appropriate volume of cleaning gas has been reached at step 122. If the appropriate volume has not been reached at step 122, the method returns to step 104, where a next wafer 44 is received. If an appropriate volume has been reached at step 122, the method proceeds to step 124, where the chamber maintenance is scheduled. During the chamber maintenance, parts such as aluminum oxide parts of reactor chamber 22 may be replaced in order to reduce or eliminate particles that may result in wafer defects. After scheduling maintenance, the method terminates.
Modifications, additions, or omissions may be made to the method without departing from the scope of the invention. Additionally, steps may be performed in any suitable order without departing from the scope of the invention.
Certain embodiments of the invention may provide one or more technical advantages. A technical advantage of one embodiment may be that the volume of cleaning gas introduced into a reactor chamber during one or more cleaning cycles may be used to schedule chamber maintenance. The volume of cleaning gas may provide a relatively accurate estimate of when the reactor chamber may need chamber maintenance.
Although an embodiment of the invention and its advantages are described in detail, a person skilled in the art could make various alterations, additions, and omissions without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.