Metal-insulator-metal capacitor

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6635527
  • Patent Number
    6,635,527
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, May 26, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, October 21, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
An interconnection wiring system incorporating two levels of interconnection wiring separated by a first dielectric, a capacitor formed by a second dielectric, a bottom electrode of the lower interconnection wiring or a via and a top electrode of the upper interconnection wiring or a separate metal layer. The invention overcomes the problem of leakage current and of substrate stray capacitance by positioning the capacitor between two levels of interconnection wiring.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to capacitors formed on electronic devices and more particularly to capacitors formed between interconnection wiring layers on semiconductor chips to form integrated circuits.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Various approaches have been tried to form parallel plate capacitors in interconnection wiring by using the metal of two adjacent wiring layers and the interlevel dielectric material between. Another approach has been to form capacitors between the substrate typically of silicon, a dielectric of thermal oxide and a top electrode of poly-silicon or metal. These capacitors are especially suited for substrate decoupling capacitors and may be fabricated in the front-end of the line processing.




In the field of analog and mixed signal design, capacitors are required as a passive element in the design of bandpass filters. Analog and mixed signal circuits are designed to operate at higher frequencies than decoupling capacitors to service the wireless communications markets. Decoupling capacitors formed over the substrate or close thereto suffer from capacitive losses to the substrate, resulting in poor bandpass filter operation.




Another problem in forming a stack capacitor in the interconnection wiring layers is that if the capacitor plates are etched at one time by reactive ion etching (RIE) a debris is deposited on the dielectric on the sidewall between the parallel plates causing shorting between the plates.




Another problem has been that when the capacitor plates are not planar and parallel to one another, the capacitor value varies.




It is therefore desirable to form capacitors in the interconnection wiring that are physically isolated from the substrate.




It is further desirable to form capacitors in the interconnection wiring that are inherently reliable via a manufacturing method.




It is further desirable to form capacitors in the interconnection wiring of a semiconductor chip with clean dielectric to dielectric interfaces, free of debris from processing, between the capacitor dielectric and the interlevel wiring dielectric to prevent high leakage currents and shorts and to provide very low leakage currents.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




An interconnection wiring system containing at least one capacitor is described comprising a substrate having a planar upper surface of insulating and conductive regions therein, a first level of interconnection wiring thereover interconnecting the conductive regions, the first level of interconnection wiring further including a patterned region to form the lower electrode of a capacitor, a first dielectric layer formed over the lower electrode, a top electrode formed over the first dielectric layer to form the top electrode of the capacitor, the top electrode having a perimeter interior to the perimeter of the first dielectric layer, a second dielectric layer formed over the first level of interconnection wiring over the first dielectric layer and over the top electrode, the second dielectric layer being substantially thicker than the first level of interconnection wiring, the first dielectric layer and the top electrode, the second dielectric layer having an upper surface and having vias therein filled with conductive material to the upper surface, the vias being in contact with regions of the first level of interconnection wiring and the top electrode, and a second level of interconnection wiring interconnecting the vias.




The invention further provides an interconnection wiring system containing at least one capacitor comprising a substrate having a planar upper surface of insulating and conductive regions therein, a first level of interconnection wiring thereover interconnecting the conductive regions, a first dielectric layer formed over the first level of interconnection wiring, the first dielectric layer having an upper surface and having vias filled with conductive material to the upper surface and in contact with regions of the first level of interconnection wiring, at least one the vias having a patterned region to form the lower electrode of a capacitor, a second dielectric layer formed over the lower electrode and extending beyond the perimeter of the lower electrode, and a second level of interconnection wiring interconnecting the vias filed with conductive material and formed over the second dielectric layer to form the top electrode of the capacitor.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING




These and other features, objects, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention when read in conjunction with the drawing in which:





FIG. 1

is a cross-section view of one embodiment of the invention.





FIG. 2

is an enlarged cross-section view, not to scale, of a portion of

FIG. 1

illustrating the capacitor.





FIGS. 3-11

illustrate various processing steps in the fabrication of an embodiment of the invention similar to

FIG. 1

; and





FIG. 12

is a cross-section view of a second embodiment of the invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




Referring to

FIG. 1

, an interconnection wiring system


9


is shown formed on substrate


10


which may be a semiconductor material such as silicon, silicon germanium, gallium arsenide, etc. containing electronic devices such as n and p channel field effect transistors (not shown). Above substrate


10


may be several layers of interconnection wiring separated by respective layers of dielectric material which may be for example silicon dioxide, spin-on glass, polyimide, diamond-like carbon etc. In

FIG. 1

, a capacitor


20


is formed between a first level of interconnection wiring


12


and a second level of interconnection wiring


11


. Vias


36


electrically connect capacitor


20


to interconnection wiring


11


.




First level of interconnection wiring


12


is used as the bottom electrode of capacitor


20


. Interconnection wiring


12


is connected to vias


30


below. Vias


30


are formed in dielectric


25


to interconnect conductive regions below (not shown). Vias


30


may have a liner (not shown) and may be filled with tungsten, AlCu, Al2Cu, Cu etc. The upper surface of dielectric layer


25


and vias


30


are polished such as by chemical mechanical polishing to form a coplanar surface


31


of insulating and conductive regions.




Capacitor


20


is composed of the layers: interconnection wiring


12


, dielectric layer


14


and an upper or counter electrode


16


. The interconnection wiring


12


forming base electrode


12


is generally thicker than layers


14


an


16


and can be represented by any wiring metal layer structure fabricated in a CMOS, PMOS, or NMOS back-end-of-line technology manufactured by, for example, International Business Machines Corporation.




Referring to

FIG. 2

, a detailed view of capacitor


20


is shown. Base electrode


12


comprises a surface layer


13


which is typically used for an anti-reflective coating in subsequent lithographic processing. Surface layer


13


is composed of a metal layer, and is deposited subsequent to the base electrode


12


material. Dielectric layer


14


has a thickness in the range from a few hundred Angstroms to a few thousand Angstroms, depending on the specific application of capacitor


20


, its expected operating voltage and the deposition capabilities for the fabrication line to manufacture it. Dielectric layer


14


may be composed of a single or a plurality of composition and thickness of the single or multiple layers determines the capacitance value of capacitor


20


. Layer


16


forming the upper electrode comprises an optional bottom conducting layer


17


, a bulk conducting layer


18


and a surface layer


19


formed over layer


18


which is typically used for an anti-reflective coating, similar to surface layer


13


of the base electrode. The optional bottom layer


17


of the upper electrode


16


thickness may be either nonexistent or up to a few hundred Angstroms. The bulk conducting layer


18


may be a few thousand Angstroms thick.




Surface layer


13


may be for example titanium nitride. Dielectric layer


14


may be for example a single silicon dioxide layer a few hundred Angstroms thick. Upper electrode


16


may be prepared with a bottom surface layer


17


composed of titanium nitride a few hundred Angstroms thick. Bulk conducting layer


18


may be a metal and may be for example a few thousand Angstroms thick and upper surface layer


19


may be for example titanium nitride a few hundred Angstroms thick.




Referring to

FIGS. 3-11

, various process steps are shown. In

FIG. 3

, base electrode


12


is formed on top of interlevel dielectric


25


, into which interlevel vias


30


are formed to connect the formed base electrode


12


to the previously defined wiring level which is below (not shown), to the substrate or to transistors or other components (not shown). Base electrode


12


may be the first or nth level of metal wiring. The topology of the wafer is planar. The planarity of the surfaces, and in particular surface


31


, is a key attribute in the reliability of capacitor


20


. Subsequent dielectric and metal films which are deposited or formed on surface


31


and/or base electrode


12


may have poor conformality properties, yet still be viable candidates as new processes and deposition materials are developed.





FIG. 4

shows a thin dielectric layer


14


formed over base electrode


12


. Dielectric layer


14


may be a single layer of silicon dioxide and formed by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposited Tetra-Ethyl Ortho-silicate (PECVD TEOS). The thickness of dielectric layer


14


may be measured directly on base electrode


12


using conventional ellipsometric tools. The thickness of dielectric layer


14


may be in the range from 60 to 6,000 Angstroms. Other materials may be used for dielectric layer


14


such as silicon nitride, spin-on glass, diamond-like carbon, polyimide etc.





FIG. 5

shows an upper electrode


16


formed over dielectric layer


14


. Upper electrode


16


may be for example AlCu alloy metal capped with a titanium nitride anti-reflective coating


19


and an optional bottom layer of titanium nitride


17


. A preferred embodiment of this invention is to deposit the upper electrode


16


with a bottom surface layer


17


of titanium nitride a hundred Angstroms thick, and AlCu used for bulk conductor


18


which may be in the range from 500 to 3000 Angstroms thick. Anti-reflective layer


19


of titanium nitride may be for example in the range from about 40 to about 500 Angstroms thick. Layers


17


-


18


of upper electrode


16


may be deposited in a separate reactor, or in a multi-chamber reactor. A preferred embodiment of this invention is to deposit all upper electrode layers


17


-


19


in a single multi-chamber reactor typically found in semiconductor fabrication facilities. The presence of the lower surface layer


17


is a key attribute to the reliability of capacitor


20


.




Referring to

FIG. 6

, a layer of resist


23


is formed over upper electrode


16


. Resist


23


is patterned by conventional semiconductor lithography and the pattern is transferred into the upper electrode


16


by subtractive etching the material from the wafer surface as shown in FIG.


7


. The only upper electrode


16


material remaining is that which is protected by the lithographic patterned resist


23


. In this embodiment, upper electrode material


16


where not protected by resist


23


may be removed by means of reactive ion etching (RIE) Alternatively, wet etching may be used. The lithography pattern is stripped and the substrate is cleaned prior to further processing as shown in FIG.


7


. Other etching techniques involving plasma or wet chemical processes may also serve the same end result. A key attribute of this invention is the selectivity of the upper electrode


16


etch with respect to dielectric layer


14


. Selective etchants with respect to silicon oxide are well known. The high reliability of the capacitor


20


is realized by stopping the upper electrode


16


etch in the dielectric layer


14


as shown in FIG.


8


. Arrow


15


shows the depth of etching into dielectric layer


14


using a selective etchant. Typical metal plasma RIE processes produce polymers/passivation films during the etch composed of all of the elemental species present during the etch. Should the dielectric


14


be breached (etched through) during the upper electrode


16


etch, these passivating materials will coat the lower electrode


12


and the edge of dielectric


14


and upper electrode


16


, creating a natural current leakage path for electrons when capacitor


20


is functional i.e. is storing a charge. The leakage current across the edge of dielectric layer


14


is detrimental to the reliability of capacitor


20


.




In

FIG. 9

, the lithographic pattern


24


of developed resist defines the base electrode


12


and the interconnection wiring. A preferred embodiment of the invention is a two step RIE process, where the dielectric


14


is subtractively etched down to the base electrode


12


as shown in FIG.


10


. Using the same lithographic pattern, a subsequent subtractive etch is executed to define the base electrode


12


, illustrated in FIG.


11


. Lithographic pattern


24


is stripped and the substrate is cleaned prior to further processing. Other etching techniques involving plasma or wet chemical processes may also serve the same purpose.




Referring to

FIG. 1

, additional processing steps including deposition and planarization of an interlevel dielectric


35


, defining, etching and metal filling of inter-level vias


36


which connect to wiring layer


12


and upper electrode


16


of capacitor


20


. Next, a deposition and definition is made for another level of interconnect wiring


11


, which may be the final level or another wiring level, to satisfy functionality of the device.




Another practical embodiment of this invention is shown in FIG.


12


. In

FIG. 12

, capacitor


50


is shown in an alternate configuration where the lower electrode


51


above interconnection wiring layer


12


is developed from the interlevel via process. First a dielectric layer


35


is deposited and planarized. Then vias


36


and lower electrode


51


are formed in dielectric layer


35


by opening or drilling holes followed by filling with metal. The upper surface


37


is planarized to form a coplanar surface of vias


36


, lower electrode


51


and dielectric layer


35


.




As shown in

FIG. 12

to make capacitor


50


, dielectric


14


is deposited on top of the bottom or lower electrode


51


in a process such as shown in FIG.


4


. Dielectric layer


14


covers lower electrode


51


and is defined lithographically for etching. Dielectric layer


14


is etched by time, based on the thickness and film composition. The remaining dielectric


14


must be cleared from the other interlevel vias


36


so as not to impart a high resistance contact to the subsequent wiring level


11


. After dielectric


14


is etched, the subsequent metal wiring


11


is deposited, lithographically defined and etched to form both local wiring lines


45


and the upper electrode


40


of capacitor


50


. The reliability of capacitor


50


as shown in

FIG. 12

is inferior at the present time to the preferred embodiment, described in FIG.


1


.




Capacitor devices were tested as shown in

FIGS. 1 and 12

at 25 volts at 140° C. for 500 hours and the leakage across the capacitor was monitored continuously. The definition of a failure was when the leakage current of a capacitor became greater than 2×10


−7


Amps at the stress voltage. A capacitor according to

FIGS. 1 and 12

with no dielectric overetch, a TEOS dielectric with 450 Angstroms thickness, and a TiN liner provides a capacitor of about a 10 year extrapolated lifetime. A capacitor as above with no TiN liner had a 11% failure rate, 13 failures from 96 capacitors, at 0 hours, 2 failures from 81 capacitors during a 500 hour test. A via or stud, dielectric and plate as shown in

FIG. 12

with no TiN lining had a 45% failure rate at 0 hours, 38 failures from 96 capacitors, 14 failures from 57 capacitors during a 500 hour test.




While there has been described and illustrated a capacitor device containing a bottom electrode, dielectric and top electrode wherein one electrode is part of the wiring layer and one or more vias are used as the other electrode or to make electrical contact to the other electrode, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that modifications and variations are possible with out deviating from the broad scope of the invention which shall be limited solely by the scope of the claims appended hereto.



Claims
  • 1. A method for forming an interconnection wiring system containing at least one capacitor comprising the steps of:(a) forming a first level of interconnection wiring positioned atop a planar surface of a substrate; (b) forming a first dielectric layer over said first level of interconnection wiring; (c) forming an upper electrode layer for said at least one capacitor over said first dielectric layer; (d) etching a portion of said upper electrode layer selective to said first dielectric layer to form an upper electrode for said at least one capacitor; (e) etching said first dielectric layer selective to said first level of interconnection wiring to form a dielectric for said at least one capacitor; (f) etching said first level of interconnection wiring to form a base electrode for said at least one capacitor; and (g) depositing a second dielectric layer atop said upper electrode and atop said dielectric and over said upper electrode.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, further comprising the steps of:(h) forming vias in an upper surface of said second dielectric layer down to region of said upper electrode and filling said vias with a conductive material; and (i) forming a second level of interconnection wiring atop said second dielectric layer, interconnecting said vias filled with said conductive material.
  • 3. The method of claim 1 wherein step (d) further comprises applying a layer of resist atop said upper electrode layer, where regions of said upper electrode layer protected by said layer of resist remain to form said upper electrode, while regions of said upper electrode layer not protected by said layer of resist are etched.
  • 4. The method of claim 1 wherein step (e) further comprises applying a lithographic pattern atop said upper electrode and atop a portion of said first dielectric layer, where said lithographic pattern protects underlying regions from said etching while exposed regions are removed to form said dielectric for said at least one capacitor.
  • 5. The method of claim 1 wherein step (f) further comprises utilizing a lithographic pattern to etch said first level of interconnection wiring to form a base electrode for said at least one capacitor, where said lithographic pattern aligns said base electrode to said dielectric.
  • 6. The method of claim 1 wherein said upper electrode is etched to have a perimeter interior to the perimeter of said first dielectric.
  • 7. The method of claim 1 wherein said planar surface of said substrate comprises an insulating layer, wherein the insulating layer includes conductive regions.
  • 8. The method of claim 1 wherein said planar substrate is comprised of silicon, silicon germanium, or gallium arsenide.
  • 9. The method of claim 7 where said insulating layer is comprised of silicon dioxide, spin-on glass, polymide, or diamond like carbon.
  • 10. The method of claim 1 wherein said base electrode has an upper surface of titanium nitride.
  • 11. The method of claim 5 wherein said upper electrode has a bottom surface of titanium nitride.
  • 12. The method of claim 11 wherein said upper electrode has an upper surface of titanium nitride.
  • 13. The method of claim 1 wherein said base electrode is planar.
  • 14. The method of claim 1 wherein said vias are filled with tungsten, AlCu, Al2Cu, or Cu.
  • 15. The method of claim 1 wherein said upper electrode comprises an AlCu metal capped with a titanium nitride and a bottom layer of titanium nitride.
Parent Case Info

This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 08/626,310, filed Apr. 1, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,926,359.

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Entry
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