1. Field of the Invention
Embodiments of the invention relate to the field of device manufacturing. More particularly, the present invention relates to a method, system and structure for patterning a substrate for manufacturing a device.
2. Discussion of Related Art
In forming electronic devices, patterning processes are widely used. As known in the art, there exist various types of patterning processes. One example of the process is a photolithographic patterning process by which a pattern of desired resolution is transferred optically from an optical mask to a photoresist layer deposited onto the substrate and, ultimately, to the substrate. In one example, patterning has been used on a substrate to form the gate of a field effect transistor.
With continuing miniaturization of electronic devices, there is an increased need for a patterning process capable of achieving finer resolution. However, limitations in forming a mask with a desired resolution and having compatibility with the properties (e.g. wavelength) of the radiation used in the patterning process have led to difficulties in achieving patterns with the desired resolution. To overcome such difficulties, several techniques have been proposed. One of such techniques proposes using an electron beam to write the pattern directly onto the photoresist without using a mask. Although the technique is capable of forming the patterns with fine resolution, the process is very time consuming and costly. Other techniques propose using soft x-rays or extreme UV radiation, both examples of radiation with shorter wavelength than the currently used UV wavelengths, in order to form the mask having desired pattern resolution and/or to transfer the pattern from the mask to the photoresist layer. However, soft x-rays or extreme UV radiation are difficult to manipulate using mirrors and/or optical lenses. In addition, using soft x-rays or extreme UV radiation to pattern a substrate may have undesirable optical effects (e.g. self-interference) and may affect the definition of the pattern of the photoresist layer, thus adversely affecting the resolution of the patterned substrate.
Other techniques that are proposed to address the need for improved patterning processes include a self-aligned double patterning lithographic (SADPL) process. Referring to
A layer of hard mask film 108 may be deposited onto the substrate 108. On top of the hard mask film 101, a first amorphous carbon layer (ACL) film 110 may be deposited. Thereafter, a first SiON film 112 may be deposited. A second ACL film 114 may be deposited on the first SiON film 112. On the second ACL film 114, a second SiON film 116 may be deposited. Thereafter, a layer of photoresist film 118 may be deposited. After depositing the photoresist film 118, a primary lithographic process may be performed to pattern the photoresist film 118. As illustrated in
Referring to
Following the removal of the patterned photoresist islands 118 from the second SiON film 116, the second ACL film 114 may be etched, and the pattern of the second SiON film 116 may be transferred to the second ACL film 114 (
The patterned second ACL film 114 may then be removed (
The conventional SADPL method, although adequate, has several shortcomings. For example, the etch trim process used in the conventional SADPL process to trim the patterned photoresist 118 may not be precise and may be difficult to control. In addition, the conventional SADPL process requires multiple deposition steps to deposit multiple layers of ACL and SiON films and multiple etching steps to etch the films. The technique, therefore, is costly and inefficient. Such inefficient processes may place undue financial burden on the manufacturers of the devices and, ultimately, the consumers. Accordingly, new techniques for patterning a substrate are needed.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to methods and structures for patterning a substrate. In an exemplary embodiment, a method of patterning a substrate comprises providing an array of resist features defined by a first pitch and a first gap width. Particles are introduced into the array of resist features, wherein the array of resist features becomes hardened. The particles may be energetic charged or neutral species, and may be either atoms or molecules or subatomic species. Sidewalls are provided on side portions of the hardened resist features, and the hardened resist features are subsequently removed, leaving an array of isolated sidewalls disposed on the substrate. The array of sidewalls is used to form an array of features in the substrate such that the substrate array has a pitch that is half that of the array of resist features. In some embodiments of the present invention, the critical dimension of the resist features may also be adjusted by controlling parameters such as particle dose, particle energy, substrate tilt and substrate twist.
a is a schematic cross-section of a substrate having a known stack of patterning layers designed for self-aligned double patterning.
b is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
c is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
d is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
e is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
f is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
g is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
h is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
i is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
j is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
k is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
a is a schematic cross-section of a substrate having a stack of patterning layers including a top, patterned photoresist layer, in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure.
a
1 is a schematic cross-section of a substrate having a stack of patterning layers including a top, patterned photoresist layer, and a bottom antireflection coating, in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure.
b is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
c is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
d is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
e is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
f is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
g is a schematic cross-section of the substrate of
a is a schematic cross-section of a substrate that illustrates an exemplary resist island structure formed using the process generally illustrated in
b is a schematic cross-section of a substrate that illustrates an alternate exemplary resist island structure formed using the process generally illustrated in
The present disclosure will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments are shown. This disclosure, however, may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. In the drawings, like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
To solve the deficiencies associated with the methods noted above, novel and inventive techniques for patterning a substrate are introduced. For purposes of clarity and simplicity, the present disclosure focuses on techniques to pattern a substrate for forming transistors.
In particular, the present disclosure focuses on techniques involving SADPL processes for forming gates of transistors. However, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the techniques disclosed herein are not limited to SADPL process. Instead, the present disclosure may be equally applicable to other types of patterning process.
In particular, novel methods, systems, and structures for performing self aligned double patterning of substrates using hardened and optionally trimmed photoresist features are disclosed herein. However, the present invention covers other patterning processes that can employ hardened and/or trimmed photoresist.
In addition, those of ordinary skill in the art should also recognize that the present disclosure is not limited to patterning a substrate for forming gates of the transistors. Instead, the present disclosure may be equally applicable to techniques for patterning a substrate for forming other parts of the transistors and/or other types of devices. For example, the techniques may be equally applicable to techniques for patterning a substrate to form a patterned magnetic bit data storage media. Accordingly, the term “substrate” used herein is not limited to semiconductor wafer. Herein, the term may be applicable to thermally and/or electrically conductive, insulating, semiconducting, substrates. The substrate may also be a doped or undoped substrate. In addition, the substrate may be a single element substrate, and/or a compound or an alloy based substrate. The substrate may also be applicable to that which may or may not exhibit external magnetism. Further, the substrate may be a single or multi-layer substrate. If the substrate is a multi-layer substrate, each layer may be thermally and/or electrically conductive, insulating, semiconducting; doped or undoped; comprising a single element and/or a compound or an alloy; and/or may or may not exhibit external magnetism.
The present disclosure may also describe the techniques using the term “particles” for purpose of simplicity and clarity. As used herein, the term “particles” refers to species that may be charged or neutral, sub-atomic, atomic, or molecular. Further, the techniques of the present disclosure may be described in context of a beam-line ion implantation system. However, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize other systems capable of adding particles or material to the substrate may also be applicable. For example, a doping system including, but not limited to, a plasma assisted doping (PLAD) or plasma immersion ion implantation (PIII) system, or other types of doping system may also be used. Other types of processing systems capable of adding particles may also be used. Examples of such systems may include a furnace, chemical vapor deposition (CVD) system, plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) system, atomic layer deposition (ALD) system, molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) system etc.
Referring to
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
As with islands 118 depicted in
As depicted in
In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, the structure depicted in
Referring to
In one embodiment, the particles 224 are preferably introduced in a form of an ion beam or a charged particle beam. In other embodiments, the particles 224 may be introduced in other forms (e.g. via deposition followed by thermal diffusion). If the particles 224 are introduced in the form of an ion or charged particle beam, the dose and energy of the particles may be tailored to control properties of islands 218. For example, it may be desirable to harden resist islands 218 in order to provide a resist that can withstand elevated temperatures without substantial distortion, melting, or chemical decomposition. Alternatively, or in addition, it may be desirable to provide a resist with increased resistance to wet chemical etching or plasma-induced etching or decomposition that can occur in a RIE chamber.
In examples discussed in more detail below, islands 218 may be subjected to particle bombardment of sufficient energy and dose to provide islands 218 with a hardened portion that is effective in withstanding elevated temperatures and/or chemical attack and/or etching by reactive ions or other similar mechanisms.
In an exemplary method, resist islands 218a are formed by selecting an appropriate energy and dose of particles to harden the entire island. For example, if the width 228a, 228b, and height (not indicated) of resist islands 218a is about 100 nm, a user can chose an appropriate particle energy of the particle species to be used to harden the resist islands, such that particles 224 penetrate throughout resist islands 218a. The particle range may be measured or calculated according to simulation programs. Similarly, an appropriate dose of particles can be selected to provide substantial hardening throughout each resist island 218a. Alternatively, it may be desirable to provide hardening only in an outer portion 218d of resist islands, as illustrated in
In the present invention, exemplary particle doses range from about 1×1010 to about 5×1017 particles/cm2, preferably from about 7.5×1014 to about 1.0×1016 particles/cm2. In addition, the dose of the particles may be uniform or varied. The optimum particle dose for hardening a resist island may vary in accordance with the particle mass, particle charge, energy, and other parameters of particles 224. However, in some embodiments, exemplary particle energies range between about 700 eV and 8 KeV. The optimum dose, energy, and particle species may also vary according to the type of photoresist and the exact formulation of the photoresist.
The optimum particle exposure for hardening resist features also can be tailored in accordance with island width and/or height. Resist island heights may be, for example, about 90 to 120 nm. As illustrated in the examples below, for a give final target CD, e.g., 25 nm, the particle energy and/or dose may be adjusted depending upon the starting CD of resist islands. Thus, a higher energy/dose combination may be selected in the case of 50 nm starting CD than for 30 nm starting CD. In one example using the same species —Ar— and a fixed dose in the low E15 ions/cm2 range, for resist islands having a height of about 100 nm and starting CD value of about 50 nm, particle energies in the range of about 5 keV to 8 keV may be effective to achieve a final CD of 25 nm, while for starting CD values of about 30 nm particle energies in the range of about 1 keV to 3 keV may be effective to achieve a final CD of 25 nm for the same starting resist materials. In other examples, lower mass or higher mass particle species may be used, resulting in a relatively higher particle dose or a relatively lower particle dose, respectively, to cause the same reduction in resist island CD for a given particle energy.
As illustrated generally in
For example, the particles 224 may be introduced at one or more tilt angles ranging from about 0° (normal to top surface of the substrate 201) to about 90° (parallel to the top surface of the substrate 201), preferably from about 45° to 70. While introducing the particles 224, the incident angle may be maintained uniform or varied. If the beam-line ion implanter is used to introduce the particles 224, the substrate 201 may be tilted respect to the particle beam, or vice versa, to control the incident angle. In addition to tilting, the substrate may be rotated with respect to the beam, or vice versa. For example, the particle may be introduced from a first direction. Thereafter, the substrate may be rotated with respect to the first direction at a twist angle ranging from greater than 0° to about 90° so as to introduce the particles from a second direction. After introducing the particles from the second direction, the substrate may be rotated with respect to the first direction at a twist angle ranging from greater than 0° to about 90° so as to introduce the particles from a third direction. The process may be repeated until complete 360° rotation of the substrate.
As illustrated in
Referring again to
By choosing the correct combination of particle energy, particle flux, substrate tilt, and substrate twist, the final resist structure can be varied between that of islands 218a and that of islands 218c. For example, to form islands 218c, islands 218 of
In the present invention, the temperature of the resist 218 may also be controlled while introducing the particles 224. In one embodiment, the temperature of the resist 218 may be maintained at uniform or varied temperature that is below room temperature, preferably below 273° K. In another embodiment, the temperature of the resist 218 may be maintained at uniform or varied temperature that is above room temperature, but below the temperature at which the resist 218 begins to disintegrate or flow. Those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the temperature of the resist 218 may be controlled by controlling the temperature of, among others, the base 202.
Preferably, the particles 224 introduced to the resist 218 are those containing inert species, for example, Helium (He), Neon (Ne), Argon (Ar), Krypton (Kr), Xenon (Xe), Radon (Rn), Nitrogen (N), Carbon (C) and Oxygen (O). However, in other embodiments, particles containing other species may also be used. The particles containing other species may include those containing Silicon (Si), Boron (B), Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Iron (Fe), Lithium (Li), Chromium (Cr), Nickel (Ni), etc. In addition to elemental species, particles can be molecular species, such as carborane.
After introducing the particles 224 to form resist islands 218 having desired properties and feature size, spacer material 222 may be deposited onto the resist islands 218 and SiON film 212 (
After depositing the spacer material 222, the substrate 201 may be etched back, such that the spacer material 222 is disposed along the sidewall of the resist 218 (
To ensure producing the optimum sidewall structure of
Thereafter, the resist 218 is removed (
Thereafter, the hard mask layer 208 and the polycrystalline or metal gate layer 206 of the substrate 201 may be etched so as to transfer the double pitch pattern of the sidewalls into layer 206, as shown in
The exemplary structures and processing steps, such as those generally illustrated in
In another example, a user may enter an actual CD of resist islands before particle exposure. For example, after lithography steps are performed to pattern the photoresist into islands, the actual CD may be greater or less than the nominal CD due to errors in the lithography process. A user could use an in-line CD measurement tool to measure actual island CD. The program invoked then outputs an appropriate combination of parameters to be used in the particle exposure step based upon the actual CD, rather than a nominal CD, which may result in a slightly different particle dose, particle energy, etc., as compared to if the nominal CD were used. The present invention thus affords the ability to make real-time adjustments to particle exposure “recipes” so that a more accurate resist trim process can be performed that takes into account variability is the lithography process used to define the resist islands.
In another example, resist hardening may be required without any resist trimming. Accordingly, the same CD value is entered for fields corresponding to the before-particle-exposure CD and the after-particle-exposure CD. The program then outputs a recipe that can include a particle dose, particle energy, tilt angle, etc., which recipe is configured to provide resist hardening without substantial reduction in CD of the resist islands. In this example, the before-exposure and after-exposure values of CD can be based upon nominal or actual measured CD values, as discussed above.
In another example, a computer system may be configured to output a set of particle exposure parameters based upon the resist thermal budget. For example, a menu is provided to accept a value of a sidewall deposition temperature and duration for a sidewall deposition process that is to be performed subsequent to particle exposure, as discussed above with respect to
The present technique for patterning the substrate may provide several advantages. For example, by controlling how the particles 224 are introduced to the resist 218, the properties of the resist 218 may be precisely controlled. By introducing the particles 224, the present technique may harden the resist 218 and enable the resist 218 to withstand extreme conditions associated with etching and deposition, processes involved in manufacturing the device. In addition, the angle by which the particles 224 are introduced to the resist islands 218, the properties of the patterned resist islands 218 may be altered symmetrically or asymmetrically. For example, the incident angle of the particles 224 may be controlled such that the resist 218 may preferentially shrink laterally, that is, so the resist exhibits a greater decrease in width than in height. For example, if a top surface imaging resist or a top coated resist is used, the sides of the resist may be different, which, in turn may be implanted in a way to cause a lateral shrink that is more than a vertical shrink. In some embodiments, by using a series of four particle exposures, the top of the resist effectively “sees” four exposures, while the sidewall sees only two exposures. In cases in which a substrate twist is utilized, two exposures may be employed to expose all four sides of a resist islands 218 (back sides of resist islands 218 are not shown). In the case of using two particle exposures to expose all sides of resist islands 218, the tops top see both exposures, while each resist sidewall sees only one exposure. If the tilt angle is high enough, the relative etch rate of the top surface may be substantially different than the sidewall etch rate, leading to differential lateral shrinkage of islands 218 noted above. If desired, the incident angle may be also be controlled to induce asymmetrical hardness.
Moreover, if non-electrically active or inert particles are introduced, properties of the resist islands 218 may be altered without adversely affecting the electrical properties layers below the resist 218. In addition, by carefully managing the interaction between the polymer in the resist 218 and the particles 224, the resist 218 may be used as the critical dimension shrinking process instead of one or more etch trimming steps as is traditionally used. Further, adverse optical affects associated with EUV or soft x-ray photolithographic process may be avoided. In the processes described hereinabove, a much more uniform resist island 218 structure may be formed. Further, numerous deposition and etch processes associated with conventional SADPL process may be avoided with the present technique. As such, the present invention offers a more simple integration flow and also a lower cost implementation.
Herein, a novel and inventive technique for patterning process is disclosed. The present disclosure is not to be limited in scope by the specific embodiments described herein. Indeed, other various embodiments of and modifications to the present disclosure, in addition to those described herein, will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from the foregoing description and accompanying drawings. For example, although embodiments of the present invention described hereinabove have been generally directed to a stack of processing layers that includes ACL and SiON layers, the present invention can be implemented without said layers or with additional layers. Thus, such other embodiments and modifications are intended to fall within the scope of the present disclosure. Further, although the present disclosure has been described herein in the context of a particular implementation in a particular environment for a particular purpose, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that its usefulness is not limited thereto and that the present disclosure may be beneficially implemented in any number of environments for any number of purposes. Accordingly, the claims set forth below should be construed in view of the full breadth and spirit of the present disclosure as described herein.
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/235,383, filed Aug. 20, 2009, and incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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