The present invention relates to a method for etching a substrate by means of a plasma in which a plasma is generated by means of a plasma source and said substrate is subjected to an etching agent by means of said plasma.
In physics and chemistry, a plasma is typically an ionized gas, and is usually considered to be a distinct phase of matter in contrast to solids, liquids and gases. “Ionized” means that at least one electron has been dissociated from a proportion of the atoms or molecules of said gas. The free electric charges make the plasma electrically conductive so that it responds strongly to electromagnetic fields. The same free electric charges also make the plasma chemically highly reactive. As a result specific treatments may be carried out on the substrate which would otherwise be practically impossible or would have a considerable lower reaction rate. Because of the latter, plasma processing has been given increasing interest in for instance semiconductor technology for the manufacture of semiconductor devices and solar cells. It has been found that, with the aid of a reactive plasma, compounds may be deposited and substrate surfaces may be oxidized, etched, textured or otherwise modified with a very high degree of precision, detail and control, which explains the significance plasma processing has gained in nowadays semiconductor technology and related technical fields.
Conventional processes are using RF plasmas. In general, there are two different RF plasma configurations, namely capacitively coupled RF plasmas and inductively coupled RF plasmas. A capacitively coupled plasma system, is a system in which electrical power is capacitively coupled into the plasma. An example of a typical configuration of such a system is shown in
The ever decreasing dimensions in semiconductor devices demand an ever increasing precision of the processes to be used. Present lithographic techniques are in the far sub-micron range and other techniques used in the course of a semiconductor process are required to follow this trend. An important aspect in this respect is etching. Especially for attaining high packing densities, so called vias, trenches and other recesses at a substrate surface need to be etched with steep, preferably vertical walls in order to gain precision and to waist only a minimum of surface area. For this purpose an etching technique needs to be highly anisotropic, contrary to isotropic etching techniques like wet etching. The common plasma techniques, described above, however offer only a limited anisotropy which poses a barrier to diminishing feature size. Apart from that, the common plasma techniques suffer from a relatively poor ionization degree and flux, resulting in a relatively poor process rate, which renders these techniques commercially less attractive.
It is an object of the present invention to offer a method and device for localized etching a substrate by means of a plasma, which offers an improved precision and controllability together with a significant plasma density, such that aspect ratios and process rates beyond those of existing plasma techniques are attainable.
In order to achieve this object, the present invention provides for a method for etching a substrate by means of a plasma, wherein a plasma is generated and accelerated between a cathode and an anode of a plasma source in at least one channel of system of at least one conductive cascaded plate between said cathode and anode at substantially sub-atmospheric pressure, said plasma is released from at least one plasma source to a treatment chamber through a constricted passage opening, said substrate is exposed in said treatment chamber to an etching agent by means of said plasma, while said treatment chamber is sustained at a reduced, near vacuum pressure and a negative alternating bias voltage is applied between said substrate and said plasma during said exposure.
According to the invention a plasma is generated using a cascaded arc which is drawn, during operation, between the cathode and anode through the system of at least one cascaded plate. A direct current is drawn between cathode and anode. The generated plasma leaves the plasma source and flows to the substrate. The pressure in the central core of the cascaded arc is relative high (sub atmospheric), rendering plasma generation very effective. The ionization degree maybe up to typically 5-10%. This high density, highly ionized plasma is injected into the treatment chamber and is expanding towards the substrate. Due to the high velocity of the expanding plasma, the ionization degree is frozen in, while the pressure reaches the near vacuum process pressure, which is required for most etching processes. Typical plasma properties of the plasma source used in the method according to the invention are as follows:
The inventors have recognized that a further important parameter is the electron temperature. The moderate electron temperature of the plasma according to the invention, resulting from the specific plasma source used, allows a precise and relatively easy control of the ion and radical kinetics. Accordingly, the kinetic plasma properties near the substrate surface, like the ion/radical energy and direction, may be precisely tailored by applying a suitable bias voltage. This may advantageously be used for specifically anisotropically localized etching of a recess in a substrate.
For anisotropic plasma etching, for instance, ion bombardment perpendicular to the substrate is needed. This may be induced by applying a negative bias potential compared to plasma to the substrate. Such negative bias potential leads to acceleration of the positive charged ions towards the substrate. An alternating potential applied to the substrate attracts, depending on the sign of the potential, electrons or ions. Alternating this potential at high frequencies (MHz), the light and therefore highly mobile electrons as compared to the relative heavy and slow ions, create a time average negative potential at the substrate as the time average flux of electrons to the substrate must equal the time average flux of ions. As a result, a plasma sheath layer is formed between the plasma and the negatively biased substrate. Ions that enter the sheath layer are accelerated to the negative biased substrate that results in an ion bombardment.
Nevertheless, the time average current of the alternating bias signal is at least substantially zero so that no net current is drawn through the substrate, which could otherwise harm electrical or mechanical features already provided in said substrate. The bias voltage is externally induced, using a suitable source, in a suitable form. In order even more protect the substrate against such damage, a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention is characterized in that, at least upon the application of said bias voltage, said substrate is isolated for a direct electrical current, particularly by connecting a capacitor between said substrate and ground potential. This isolation prevents a direct current to be drawn through the substrate, which could otherwise harm delicate structures already provided for in said substrate. Moreover a capacitively coupled substrate allows a fine adjustment of the bias voltage. The bias voltage will directly impose a mobility difference between the relatively fast electrons and relatively slow ions/radicals in the plasma, because the net current is maintained nil, which hence may be strictly controlled and tailored. Moreover, unintended charging of the non-conducting substrate will be prevented by a capacitor coupled to said substrate due to charge leveling imposed by the latter.
A first specific embodiment of the method according to the invention is characterized in that an oscillating bias voltage is applied between said substrate and said plasma. At very high frequencies, an ion needs many oscillation periods to cross the sheath layer, which results in ion energies closely around the time averaged field. At relative low radio frequencies, the time that an ion needs to cross the sheath layer is short compared the oscillation period. So the final energy of an ion varies depending on the time the ion entered the sheath. Ions entering the sheath when the sheath voltage is high gain more energy than ions entering the sheath when the sheath voltage is low. This results in a broad double-peaked Ion Energy Distribution Function (IEDF), which is shown schematically on the right in
The time needed for an ion to cross the sheath layer is called the transit time. The transit time of an ion is determined by:
where s is the time averaged sheath thickness, Mion is the ion mass, and Vs is the average potential drop in the sheath layer, i.e. the average between the plasma and the substrate potential during the bias oscillations, which is indicated in
In order to obtain a relatively narrow IEDF, a further specific embodiment of the method according to the invention is characterized in that a high frequency alternating bias voltage is applied having a frequency of the order of between 100 kHz and 100 MHZ and an amplitude of up to 500 V, particularly of the order of between 10 and 250 V. If, for instance, an oscillation frequency is used of about 13.5 MHz and the bias voltage is in the range of 10-250 V, the sheath layer thicknesses will typically be of the order of a few tenth of a millimetre to a few millimetre, which appears sufficiently small to attain the desired directional behaviour of the plasma
As shown in
Just as with an oscillating bias voltage, the time average current is zero, which means that the time average flux of ions must equal the time average flux of electrons. To achieve this, relatively short positive pulses are applied over time to momentarily collect the highly mobile electrons despite the overall negative substrate potential with respect to the plasma, attracting positively charged ions. During operation the substrate is dc isolated, particularly by connecting a capacitor between the substrate and ground potential, in order to block the dc component of the bias voltage. The ion current charges the capacitor, but, by slowly ramping down, the voltage compensates the increase of the potential difference over the capacitor. The charge loading capacity of the capacitor together with the amount of ramping determines the minimum frequency that can be used. The frequencies used in this embodiment of the method according to the invention can be in range of only a few hundred kHz. In silicon etch processes, the inventors have recognized that such a pulsed bias voltage moreover improves the etch selectivity of the etch plasma of silicon over silicon dioxide.
The present invention moreover relates to a device for etching a substrate with the aid of a plasma. According to the invention such a device is characterized by comprising at least one plasma source for generating a plasma, having a cathode and an anode, separated by a system of at least one conductive cascaded plate, comprising at least one substantial straight plasma channel between said cathode and said anode, a constricted release opening in open communication with said at least one plasma channel for releasing said plasma, a treatment chamber for receiving said plasma from said release opening, and a substrate holder in said treatment chamber for holding said substrate, at least during operation, in which said substrate holder is connected to a voltage source capable of applying a negative alternating bias voltage between said substrate holder and said plasma.
The invention will now be explained with reference to a number of exemplary embodiments and a drawing, wherein:
It is noted that the drawings are purely schematically and not drawn to scale. In particular, some dimension may be exaggerated to more or less extent to more clearly express specific features. Corresponding features are provided with a same reference sign throughout the figures.
According to the invention a plasma is generated using a cascaded arc plasma source of the type as shown in
A schematic drawing of an embodiment of a device according to the invention for etching a substrate with a Expanding Thermal Plasma (ETP) is given in
The plasma source discharges the plasma through a constricted release opening. A few centimetre behind this release opening, a precursor or etching gas may be injected into the plasma by means of a ring 7 which is provided around the plasma jet 4. The precursor or etching gas will react with the argon ions in the reactor chamber. Charge transfer and dissociative recombination reactions produce reactive species from the precursor gas. Further downstream, the reactive species hit the substrate 9, which is placed on a substrate holder 10, comprising a mechanical chuck of aluminum or copper. With a heating element 11 and a duct 12, carrying liquid nitrogen through the chuck 10, the temperature of the substrate may be controlled.
A capacitor, not shown, is connected between the chuck 10 and ground potential, which is usually applied to the stainless steel walls of the treatment chamber 2, to electrically isolate the substrate 9 for DC electric currents. Because the substrate 9 is DC insulated, a bias power can safely be applied to the substrate. An external alternating bias voltage source, not shown, is connected between the substrate holder 10 and the reactor wall to induce an appropriate alternating bias voltage on the substrate 9 in accordance with the present invention.
For convenient exchange, the substrate 9 is provided on a substrate carrier, not shown, which is mechanically clamped to the chuck 10. A helium gas flow or thermally conducting paste in between the chuck and the substrate carrier provides for enhanced heat conduction between these two members. The substrate carrier, with the substrate 9 on it, can quickly be loaded and unloaded in the reactor via a load-lock chamber 13.
The device of
A specific example of this first embodiment of the method according to the invention will be explained hereinafter. In this example sulphurhexafluoride (SF6) and fluorobutane (C4F8) are used as the first and second agent respectively on a silicon substrate. During an etch step, there may be a significant amount of isotropic etching as a result of the etch chemistry of fluorine with silicon in a SF6 plasma. However, before an etch step reaches a too high degree of lateral etching, it is interrupted by a passivating step.
During a passivating step, a C4F8 plasma deposits a, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) like, fluorocarbon polymer on the surface of the silicon, which is protecting the silicon against fluorine. During a subsequent etch step, the ionic bombardment by the plasma, which is perpendicular to the substrate surface, is etching the polymer layer at the bottom of the hole and silicon etching can proceed in this vertical direction. Both etch mechanisms (polymer and silicon etching) take place during the etch step.
The first eight steps of this process, corresponding to four cycles, are schematically presented in
1. anisotropic fluorocarbon polymer etching in a SF6 plasma;
2. isotropic silicon etching in the same SF6 plasma; and
3. fluorocarbon polymer deposition in a C4F8 plasma.
A specific setup for carrying out the process of
The system has been expanded by two supplies for the first and second agent respectively. The first supply 21 carries the SF6, whereas the second supply 22 is uses to feed C4F8 to the treatment chamber. For a proper gas flow control system, fast-response mass flow controllers 22,23, a short gas line 24 between the mass flow controllers and the ring 7 in the process chamber and an automatic operation system (software) are provided for. The substrate temperature may be controlled and kept constant during operation with the temperature control means 11,12 described with reference to
The etch results for 15 minutes etching as a function of substrate temperature are shown in
A further preferred embodiment of this first method according to the invention is characterized in that during the introduction of said second agent an oscillating bias voltage is applied between said substrate and said plasma, particularly in range between −150 and −170 Volt, more particularly of around −160 Volt.
Etch results as a function of different SF6 flows are shown in
Etch results as a function of the argon flow are shown in
Etch results as a function of both argon and SF6 gas flow are shown in
Thus the absolute partial pressures are kept unchanged. By increasing the argon flow and keeping the arc current constant, the power input of the arc is increased by 600 W from 4125 to 4725 W. The etch rate increases from 6.5 μm/min at low flows to 7.8 μm/min at high flows. However, also the lateral etching is increased by the increased flows. Accordingly an optimal result is obtained around a relative flow of 50:5 sccs between the argon and the fluorine.
Etch results as a function of etch time per cycle are shown in
SEM pictures of etched holes with different passivation times per cycle during an overall process time of 15 minutes are shown in
Based on the above figures a further preferred embodiment of the first method according to the invention is characterized in that said first and second agent are introduced during alternating time intervals, a first time interval for introduction of said first agent being about between 6 and 10 seconds and a second time interval for introduction of said second agent being about between 4 and 6 seconds. Further investigation of the etch and passivation times reveals that the total process time should preferably be less than about 15 minutes in order to maintain an optimal vertical etch rate and to avoid a severe surface roughness within the holes.
SEM pictures of etched holes with different pressures are shown in
In practice, especially favourable results are obtainable when conducting the preceding process with inter alia the following process parameters:
These values are indicated by the frames around the applicable SEM pictures in the drawings.
A second method for locally etching a recess in a substrate with the aid of said plasma and an etching mask is, according to the invention, characterized in that concurrently a first active agent and a second active agent are introduced in the plasma, the first agent being capable of etching the substrate and the second agent being capable of creating a protective layer on said substrate which is partly resistant to said first agent in said plasma. A particular example of this second method will be described hereinafter, with reference to the drawings, which example is, according to the invention, characterized in that said substrate comprises a silicon substrate, in that a fluorine containing compound is applied as said first agent, particularly sulphurhexafluoride (SF6), and in that an oxidizing agent is applied as said second agent, in particular oxygen, and in that said substrate is maintained at a cryogenic temperature during operation.
In contrast to the previous process, this cryogenic etching process is continuous in that a first and second agent are applied concurrently, each having its own function. This has two major advantages, namely smooth sidewalls by the absence of the scallops which characterize the first process at each transition of the first to the second agent, and no process time loss due to separate passivation steps. In this example the process is used for cryogenic silicon etching and to this end uses a plasma composed of a SF6/O2 gas mixture.
At room temperature, this plasma mixture results in isotropic etching of the silicon caused by the normal isotropic etch behaviour of sulphurhexafluoride (SF6). At low temperatures, particularly below −80° C., oxygen is starting to occupy more and more silicon sites in a competition with fluorine. These chemically attached oxygen atoms at the silicon surface form a silicon-oxide like passivation layer, which prevents fluorine radicals to etch the silicon such that silicon etching is reduced or even stopped. However, ion bombardment perpendicular to the substrate, induced by the substrate bias voltage according to the invention, removes the passivation layer at the bottom of the recess and etching proceeds primarily in the vertical direction only.
SEM pictures of holes, etched at different temperatures using this process, are shown in
Etching as a function of an oscillating RF bias voltage has been investigated at two different substrate temperatures, i.e. at −120° C. and at −80° C. The results with a substrate temperature of −120° C. are shown in
From these results it occurs that the best results are obtainable with a RF bias voltage roughly between −40 Volt and −90 Volt, specifically −73 Volt at −120° C. substrate temperature. When the bias voltage and therefore the ion-impact energy is too low, the de-passivation will stop. At a bias voltage of −90 V the etch rate is reduced to 4.7 μm/min. This is probably a result of more lateral etching and collar formation. Accordingly a further preferred embodiment of this second method according to the invention is characterized in that during the introduction of said first and second agent an oscillating bias voltage in range between −70 and −100 Volt, particularly of around −73 Volt, is applied between said substrate and said plasma.
Instead of an oscillating RF bias voltage, also a pulsed bias voltage may be applied. Etch results as a function of the pulsed bias voltage are shown in
The carrier gas argon as well as the precursor SF6 and O2 gas flows have been increased separately in order to determine their effect on the etch rate and profile. A pulsed bias source is used for applying a pulsed bias voltage between the substrate and the plasma. The results of these tests are shown in
Based on the above tests, particularly favourable results may be obtained with the second embodiment of the method according to the invention applying the following process parameters:
The method and device according to the invention may advantageously be used for etching for instance holes, trenches or other recesses in a substrate body.
Although the invention has been described with reference to merely a limited number of embodiments, it will be appreciated that the invention is by no means limited in its application to the examples given. On the contrary many more variations and embodiments are feasible for a skilled person without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. As such more than one plasma source may be used concurrently to increase the process rate and/or the surface area which may be etched and substrate other than silicon or semiconductor substrates may be treated, notably glass substrates and polymeric films.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006/000355 | Jul 2006 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL07/50348 | 7/12/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/3/2009 |