Aspects of example embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the following description of example embodiments given in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Hereinafter, aspects of example embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings so that they can be readily implemented by those skilled in the art.
A first electrode 304 made of metal such as aluminum is placed at an upper portion of the chamber 300 to help gas injected into the chamber 300 to evenly spread onto a batch of substrates (i.e., wafers 302) and to transfer RF power. The first electrode 304 is connected to a first RF power generator 305.
A second electrode 308 made of metal such as aluminum is faced toward the first electrode 304 and placed at a lower portion of the chamber 300 to generate plasma. The second electrode 308 is connected to a second RF power generator 306.
A transferring unit 310 can move the second electrode 308 up and down. A heater 314 may be mounted under the second electrode 308 to heat the wafer 302. The heater may be a high-intensity lamp or resistive heater.
A shower head 316 and an exhaust pipe 318 may be equipped to inject and remove gas in the chamber 300. The shower head 316 may have a plurality of holes to inject gas into the chamber 300, and/or it may be integrated with the first electrode 304. The gas injected into the chamber 300 through the shower head 316 is well mixed and spread onto top surfaces of the wafer 302. Afterwards, remaining or newly formed gas may be exhausted to the outside through the exhaust pipe 318.
First, before a wafer deposition process, pre-coating may be performed by depositing a silicon nitride film on the inner surface of the chamber 300 at step S400. Such silicon nitride film pre-coating prevents particle sources from being generated during the RF plasma cleaning and prevents the first wafer effect. (As discussed in the background section above, the first wafer effect may cause a difference in deposition rates for a first batch of wafers as compared to subsequent batches of wafers due to a difference of deposition rates on the inner surface of the chamber 300.)
Then, a batch of wafers 302 on which a silicon nitride film is to be deposited is inserted into the chamber 300, and a PECVD silicon nitride film deposition process is performed at step S402.
In the afore-mentioned PECVD silicon nitride film deposition process according to the related art, as the number of batches of wafers on which silicon nitride film deposition is performed increases, the silicon nitride films deposited on the wafers after the RF plasma cleaning process decrease in thickness, as shown in the graph of
According to the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, however, as the number of batches of processed wafers increases, the silicon nitride film deposition time is gradually adjusted to be longer as each batch of wafers is processed, as shown in
The silicon nitride deposition time is automatically adjusted to maintain the thickness of the silicon nitride film on each batch of wafers from the time of an initial wafer batch process occurring after a first RF plasma cleaning process to the time prior to a next RF plasma cleaning. The silicon nitride deposition time SDT may be calculated by the following Equation 1.
SDT=(10*T)/(bX2+cX+d) (Equation 1)
In Equation 1, the variable X is an index that starts at 1 and is incremented for each calculation of SDT until a predetermined number of wafers (or batches of wafers) are processed, b is ranged from 0.0001 to 0.0003, c is ranged from −0.03 to −0.01, d is ranged from 5 to 15, and T is a standard deposition time per wafer. Herein, it is most preferable that b is 0.0002, c is −0.02 and d is 10.
Referring again to
In the cleaning process, all the wafers are removed out of the chamber, and a cleaning gas such as HF, SiF4, and Ar may be injected to remove the silicon nitride film formed on the inner surface of the chamber, heater 314, and shower head 316.
After the RF plasma cleaning process, a pump/purge process in the chamber may be repeated several times to remove the remaining gas in a gas line and impurities such as particles generated during the cleaning process, at step S406.
While the invention has been shown and described with respect to the preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2006-0072668 | Aug 2006 | KR | national |