The invention relates to characterization techniques of semiconductor wafers, and more particularly to a method for determining the original position of the wafers in the ingot from which they originate.
After a semiconductor ingot has been crystallised, it is diced into a plurality of wafers or substrates. These wafers are then sold in batches to be used in fabrication of integrated circuits or of solar cells.
The manufacturers of such components set up identification solutions for monitoring the wafers throughout the fabrication process. These solutions, along with a suitable management software tool, enable them to record information concerning the wafer or the corresponding batch, for example the historical account of the fabrication steps.
In general, integrated circuit or solar cell manufacturers do not have any knowledge of the original position of the wafers in their ingot. This information is not communicated by the ingot manufacturer, essentially for economic and traceability reasons. However, this information is crucial for the wafer user, as the defects and impurities are not uniformly distributed in a semiconductor ingot. For example, the top part of the ingot, solidified first when the ingot is pulled, contains a large quantity of oxygen. The bottom part of the ingot, which is solidified last, is rich in metallic impurities. This results in the electric and mechanical properties of the wafers varying considerably from one portion of the ingot to another.
At the present time, the initial position of the wafers in the ingot cannot be determined without indications from the ingot manufacturer. Even when such information is available, the latter may be partial or even erroneous.
A requirement therefore exists to provide a method for subsequent determination of the original position of a wafer in an ingot made from semiconductor material.
According to the invention, this requirement tends to be satisfied by providing the following steps:
According to a development of the invention, the thermal donor concentration is determined from two resistivity values measured in said area of the wafer before and after heat treatment performed for the purposes of destroying the thermal donors.
According to another development, which is compatible with the previous development, the interstitial oxygen concentration is determined from two resistivity values measured in said area of the wafer before and after an additional thermal donor formation anneal.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the thermal donor destruction heat treatment is performed after the additional thermal donor formation anneal.
The original position of the wafer can be determined by means of an abacus, established according to the following steps:
The minimum and maximum effective time values are preferably associated with original positions equal to 5% and 85% of the total height of the ingot.
Other advantages and features will become more clearly apparent from the following description of particular embodiments given for non-restrictive example purposes only and illustrated by means of the appended drawings, in which:
Silicon ingots obtained by conventional crystallisation techniques, for example by the Czochralski process for monocrystalline silicon and the Bridgman process for polycrystalline silicon, contain oxygen. The oxygen atoms in particular occupy interstitial positions in the crystal lattice(s).
During crystallisation of silicon, the temperature of the ingot decreases slowly, going from 1414° C. (melting temperature of silicon) down to ambient temperature (about 25° C.). However between 350° C. and 500° C., the oxygen in interstitial position forms clusters called thermal donors (TD). The thermal donors have the particularity of generating free electrons. They therefore have a doping nature and influence the electric properties of the silicon.
Thermal donors therefore exist in an ingot on completion of solidification of the latter, and they consequently exist in the wafers which originate from this ingot. The thermal donor concentration is however not uniform over the height of the ingot. This is due to the fact that the different portions of the ingot are not cooled at the same rate and that they do not contain the same interstitial oxygen content.
As illustrated by
On account of these different cooling kinetics, the head of the ingot spends more time than the foot of the ingot in the temperature range corresponding to the formation of thermal donors. In the example of an ingot of
The intermediate portions of the silicon ingot, i.e. those situated between the head and the foot, see their temperature decrease at a rate comprised between the two curves. Consequently, the time during which these portions have a temperature comprised in the 350° C.-500° C. range is situated between 80 min and 600 min.
The effective formation time teff of thermal donors during solidification of a portion of the ingot therefore depends on the position h of this portion in the ingot. It is further observed that the function teff(h) is strictly increasing or decreasing depending on whether the foot or the head is considered as being the origin of the positions in the ingot. In other words, a bijection relation exists between the time teff and the position h in the ingot: there is a single time teff corresponding to each portion of the ingot.
This observation is put into application in the following to determine the origin of a silicon wafer in the ingot. The effective formation time teff of the thermal donors (between 350° C. and 500° C.) is determined from readings of the interstitial oxygen concentration and of the thermal donor concentration initially present in the wafer.
In F1, the interstitial oxygen concentration, noted [Oi], is determined in at least one area of the wafer. The concentration [Oi] can in particular be measured by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) or by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The latter technique enables the absorption of an infrared radiation in semiconductor material versus the wavelength of this radiation to be measured. As the interstitial oxygen contributes to this absorption, it is possible to deduce the concentration [Oi] from the absorption measurement.
Step F2 consists in determining the initial thermal donor concentration [TD]i in the same area or areas of the wafer. As indicated in the foregoing, these thermal donors appeared during cooling of the ingot, between 350° C. and 500° C.
Again, the FTIR technique can be used for measuring the concentration [TD]i, as the thermal donors also have an influence on absorption of the infrared radiation. Like oxygen, the thermal donors make characteristic peaks appear in the absorption spectrum. A family of thermal donors corresponds to each peak (a total of 16 families identified, all having the same donor behaviour). The thermal donor concentration [TD]i is calculated by converting the amplitude of the absorption peaks and by adding the values obtained.
Thus, on completion of step F2, one or more pairs of the values [Oi] and [TD]i have been defined.
In step F3, the effective time teff of the heat treatment between 350° C. and 500° C. that enabled formation of the thermal donors with the concentration [TD]i is determined from the oxygen content [Oi].
The effective time teff is preferably calculated from the values of [Oi] and [TD]i measured in steps F1 and F2 by means of a relation taken from the article [“Formation kinetics of oxygen thermal donors in silicon”, Wijaranakula C. A. et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 59 (13), pp. 1608, 1991]. This article describes the formation kinetics of the thermal donors in silicon by an anneal at 450° C.
The time teff is then considered to be equivalent to the duration of an anneal at 450° C. which would have had to be used to obtain a thermal donor concentration equal to [TD]i, from an oxygen concentration equal to [Oi].
According to the above-mentioned article, the concentration [TD]i, the concentration [Oi] and time t of the anneal at 450° C. are linked by the following relation:
with Do the diffusion coefficient of the interstitial oxygen at 450° C. (Do=3.5*10−19 cm2/s).
The equivalent time t thus calculated constitutes a good approximation of the effective time teff, i.e. the time the wafer spent in the 350° C.-500° C. temperature range when solidification of the ingot took place.
To calculate the time teff, relation (1) above is privileged as the temperature of 450° C. is that at which the thermal donor formation kinetics are best documented. Annealing at 450° C. has been the subject of numerous studies, as it constitutes a good trade-off between thermal donor formation rate and the maximum concentration obtained.
Alternatively, the effective time teff can be determined by means of abacuses giving the thermal donor concentration [TD]i versus the time t of the annealing at 450° C. for different values of the oxygen concentration [Oi].
The effective time teff can also be calculated considering a different reference temperature from 450° C. Relation (1) and the abacuses will then be adapted in particular on account of the teachings of the article [“Effect of oxygen concentration on the kinetics of thermal donor formation in silicon at temperatures between 350 and 500° C.”, Londos C. A. et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 62 (13), pp. 1525, 1993]. This article also describes the formation kinetics of thermal donors in silicon, but for annealing temperatures comprised between 350° C. and 500° C.
Finally, when several pairs of values [Oi] and [TD]i are available for the same silicon wafer, a mean annealing time tmean at 450° C. can be calculated. This mean will then constitute a better indicator of the effective time teff.
Step F4 of
Advantageously, the position h is determined by means of an abacus representative of the function h(teff). Such an abacus enables the position h of the ingot corresponding to a value of the effective time teff calculated in step F3 to be read easily and quickly. Preferably, this abacus is constructed making the assumption that the function h(teff) is an affine function. The curve of the abacus is therefore a straight line.
To establish the abacus, a plurality of wafers originating from the same ingot are available. The wafers are preferably taken randomly from the batches corresponding to the ingot. Furthermore, as is often the case of substrates intended for the photovoltaic industry, the wafers of the ingot were not subjected to heat treatment with the aim of destroying the thermal donors.
The concentrations [Oi] and [TD]i are first measured for each wafer, and the different effective time values teff are then calculated. The steps can be performed as described in the foregoing, with relation with
Among the set of effective time values teff, it is assumed that the highest value, noted teff(max), corresponds to the part solidified first, i.e. the top of the ingot (head), and that the lowest value, teff(min), corresponds to the bottom part (foot), which was solidified last.
On completion of pulling, ingot manufacturers usually discard the bottom and top portions situated at the ends of the ingot, as they contain large quantities of impurities. They are unusable and consequently scrapped. In general these bottom and top portions represent respectively 15% and 5% of the total height of the ingot.
Thus, the highest effective time value teff(max) corresponds to a position in the ingot of about 5% of the total height, and the lowest effective time value teff corresponds to a position in the ingot of about 85% (the origin of this relative height corresponding to the head of the ingot).
Starting from this assumption, the line h(teff) can be plotted on the abacus by placing two points, one at 5% and the other at 85% of the total height of the ingot. The abacus thus obtained can be used for all the ingots which was solidified under similar conditions. An abacus is advantageous constructed for each ingot manufacturer and for each pulling method (Czochralski, Bridgman . . . ). For the same pulling technique and the same manufacturer, several abacuses may be necessary if the operating conditions varied sufficiently to modify the cooling profiles of the ingots.
For example purposes, the effective time teff was measured for 6 Czochralski single-crystal silicon wafers originating from the same ingot. The results are given in table 1 below:
The maximum and minimum effective time values teff are obtained respectively for wafer n° 3 and wafer n° 6. Wafers 3 and 6 therefore correspond to the fractions respectively situated at 5% and 85% of the height of the ingot.
This line or its equation will enable the original position h of any subsequent wafer, originating from the same ingot or from an equivalent ingot, to be calculated from the effective time value calculated for this wafer.
With the other values of teff of table 1, it is possible to verify that the assumption of an affine function is justified. For this, it is however necessary to be in possession of information provided by the ingot manufacturer enabling the heights of wafers 1, 2, 4 and 5 to be determined precisely.
According to the manufacturer data, the position h of wafers 1, 2, 4 and 5 is respectively equal to 0.253, 0.162, 0.636 and 0.560. Transferring these values onto the abacus of
This abacus construction method is quick and easy to implement. For more precision, it is preferable to select a large number of wafers in order to come as close as possible to the maximum and minimum values effectively corresponding to the ends of the ingot. In
The FTIR technique, used in steps F1 and F2 for measuring the concentrations [Oi] and [TD]i, requires a wafer with a thickness of more than 300 jam, and optic polished surface state (“mirror” finish) and perfectly parallel surfaces. Consequently, this technique is unsuitable for the photovoltaic industry which uses the substrates originating directly from dicing and with a thickness of less than 200 μm. Furthermore, a FTIR measurement to determine [TD]i is generally made at very low temperature (4 K) in order to reduce the background noise caused by the absorption of phonons. It is therefore difficult to apply this technique on a large scale.
Thus, to remedy the shortcomings of the FTIR technique, alternative techniques were implemented to determine the concentrations [Oi] and [TD]i. These variants of steps F1 and F2 are described in the following in relation with
In
In the above expression, q is the elementary charge (q=1.6*10−19 C) and [B] is the dopant concentration (e.g. boron), μ designates the mobility of the charge carriers which, according to the teachings of Patent FR2964459, depends on the concentration [TD]i, in addition to the dopant concentration [B].
The wafer is then subjected to annealing so as to form additional thermal donors (sub-step F11). The temperature of this annealing is preferably comprised between 350° C. and 500° C., for example 450° C. The annealing time can vary from about ten minutes to a few hours. The purpose of this annealing is to form new thermal donors, in addition to those formed during solidification of the ingot.
After annealing F11, a new value ρ2 of the electric resistivity is measured, preferably in the same area of the wafer (sub-step F12). The resistivities ρ1 and ρ2 are for example measured by the four-point probes method, the Van der Pauw method or by Foucault current.
The variation of the resistivity ρ2-ρ1 is attributable to the formation of the new thermal donors, when the anneal is performed F11. The resistivity values ρ1 and ρ2 enable the thermal donor concentration [TD]450 to be calculated in a sub-step F13.
More particularly, the resistivity ρ2 is written:
In this expression, in comparison with that of the resistivity ρ1, the concentration [TD]450 of thermal donors formed during the anneal F11 is added to the initial thermal donor concentration [TD]i.
As in Patent FR2964459, the initial concentration [TD]i can be assumed to be much lower than the concentration [TD]450 of thermal donors formed during the anneal F11 ([TD]i<<[TD]450, and than the dopant contents, in the example of boron as dopant [TD]i<<[B]). The dopant concentration [B] is then taken from the resistivity value ρ1 measured before the anneal F11, and the concentration [TD]450 is calculated from the resistivity value ρ2, knowing the dopant concentration.
The initial quantity [TD]i of thermal donors that was measured in step F2 can also be taken into account in calculating [TD]450. This calculation mode is the most precise and will therefore be preferentially used.
Finally, in F14, the oxygen concentration [Oi] in the silicon wafer is determined from the concentration [TD]450 and from the annealing time F11. A mathematical equation, for example relation (1) above, or other abacuses giving the oxygen concentration for different annealing times and temperatures, can be used for this purpose.
During solidification of the ingot, between 500° C. and 350° C., and during annealing F11, the interstitial oxygen concentration hardly varies as the effective time teff and the annealing time are short. The value measured in F14 therefore truly represents the quantity of oxygen initially present in the portion of the ingot (i.e. before cooling of the latter).
The value ρ3 measured after the anneal F21 is the resistivity of the wafer devoid of thermal donors. Consequently, it only depends on the dopant concentrations. In the example of boron as the only dopant, its expression is the following:
The value ρ1 measured before the anneal F21 represents the state of the wafer as it is delivered by the ingot manufacturer. As indicated previously, it takes account of the dopants and of the thermal donors formed during solidification of the ingot, in concentration [TD]i.
Thus, in a step F23, the dopant contents are calculated from the resistivity ρ3, and the concentration [TD]i is then calculated from the resistivity ρ1 and from the dopant concentrations.
The measuring techniques of
Steps F1 and F2 of
When steps F1 and F2 of
Furthermore, when step F2 follows on from step F1, the thermal donor destruction annealing F21 is performed after the thermal donor formation annealing F11. There will therefore no longer be any thermal donors in the wafer on completion of the process. This sequencing of steps is therefore advantageous if it is desired to circumvent the thermal donors, for the subsequent electronic or photovoltaic component fabrication steps.
If on the contrary it is desired to take advantage of the electric properties conferred by the thermal donors, the initial thermal donor concentration [TD]i of the wafer can be measured (step F2-
In other words, the wafer localisation method is not limited to any order of steps F1 and F2.
As indicated in the above, it is preferable to know the initial thermal donor concentration [TD]i before measuring the interstitial oxygen concentration [Oi]. Measurement of [Oi] is in fact more precise, taking account of the initial thermal donors in calculation of the concentration [TD]450 (step F13—from the expression of ρ2). Performing annealing at high temperature F21 after the annealing F11 at 450° C. also enables a better precision to be obtained on the measurement of [Oi]. In the reverse order, the anneal F21 can influence the thermal donor formation kinetics when the next anneal is performed F11 and therefore distort measurement of the interstitial oxygen concentration [Oi].
Thus, in a preferred embodiment, the steps of
Although the method has been described in relation with a Cz monocrystalline silicon wafer, it could be applied to other forms of silicon (quasi-monocrystalline or polycrystalline structure) and other semiconductor materials. Germanium is for example a potential candidate, as oxygen-base thermal donors are also formed when crystallisation of the latter takes place. Finally, the ingot from which the wafers originate can be crystallised by means of pulling techniques other than the Czochralski or Bridgman processes, provided that the different portions of the ingot are subjected to different cooling kinetics.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1301875 | Aug 2013 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2014/000179 | 8/1/2014 | WO | 00 |