(a) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing a semiconductor device having a stepped contact hole and, more particularly, to an improvement in forming a contact hole having a stepped structure including a top portion and a bottom portion having different diameters in a semiconductor device.
(b) Description of the Related Art
In a semiconductor device such as a DRAM device, an anisotropic etching process is generally used for forming a contact hole exposing the top of an underlying contact plug in contact with a diffused region of a semiconductor substrate. The contact hole to be formed by the anisotropic etching may be desired to have a stepped structure including a top portion having a large diameter and a bottom portion having a small diameter. The purpose for forming the small-diameter bottom portion is to allow the bottom portion to pass through a gap between adjacent interconnect lines, whereas the purpose for forming the large-diameter top portion is to assure a larger alignment margin between the contact plug filling the contact hole and an overlying interconnect or electrode.
An example of the stepped contact hole is described in Patent Publication JP-1992-125925A.
Thereafter, the etching process is changed into a deposition process in the chamber by raising the internal gas pressure and the gas flow rate while reducing the applied RF power, thereby forming a specific deposited film 34 including carbon and hydrogen over the entire area of the semiconductor substrate 31, as shown in
Subsequently, the process condition is again changed into the original anisotropic dry etching condition, thereby etching the deposited film 34 by another anisotropic etching process on top of the photoresist mask 33 and bottom of the first contact holes 35. The anisotropic etching process further etches the bottom of the contact holes 35 configured by the remaining dielectric film 32 to form second contact holes 36 exposing therethrough a portion of the surface of the semiconductor substrate 31, and then etches the deposited film 34 remaining on the inner wall of the first contact holes 35 and the photoresist mask 33. Thus, stepped contact holes having a top portion configured by the first contact holes 35 and a bottom portion configured by the second contact holes 36 are formed to penetrate the dielectric film 32.
The process described in the patent publication is such that the first contact holes 35 are formed by using an etching gas including CF4, the inner wall of the first contact holes 35 is covered by the deposited film 34, the bottom of the first contact holes 35 is then etched by using the deposited film 34 as an etching mask to form the second contact holes 36 having a diameter smaller than the diameter of the first contact holes 35, and then the deposited film 34 is removed from the inner wall of the first contact holes 35.
Another technique for forming the stepped contact holes is described in Patent Publication JP-1999-260755A.
Subsequently, a planarizing dielectric film 44 is deposited on the interconnect lines 42a and the underlying structure 41. A second mask pattern 45 is formed on the planarizing dielectric film 44, followed by etching the planarizing dielectric film 44 by using the second mask pattern as an etching mask and a mixed gas including CHF3, C2HF5 and C4F8 as an etching gas to thereby form contact holes 46 therein, as shown in
The process described in JP-1999-260755 achieves the stepped structure including top and bottom portions having different diameters in a single etching step without using a dedicated deposition step. This stepped structure is suited to the contact holes which are formed in a gap between adjacent interconnect lines and have a larger marginal area for an electric contact with respect to overlying contact plugs.
The process for forming the contact holes in the technique described in JP-1992-125925 employs an anisotropic etching step using a CF4-containing etching gas. There is a problem in this anisotropic etching process, however, that the CF4-containing etching gas has a smaller etch selectivity between the mask pattern 33 and the dielectric film 32, whereby the top portion of the contact holes may have an excessively larger diameter or a distorted sectional structure. This problem is especially crucial when a thin film photoresist mask is used for forming small-diameter contact holes, and thus is difficult to employ if a plurality of small-diameter contact holes are arranged at a higher density.
The process for forming the contact holes in the technique described in JP-1999-260755 employs an etching step in which deposition of the specific film is concurrently performed. This process may involve an etch stop failure during the etching step due to the concurrent deposition step, and thus it is difficult to perform a stable etching therein.
In view of the above problems in the conventional techniques, it is an object of the present invention to provide a method for manufacturing a semiconductor device including a contact hole having a stepped structure, which is capable of etching a dielectric film with a higher etch selectivity, without involving an etch stop failure to thereby perform a stable etching.
The present invention provides a method for manufacturing a semiconductor device including: forming a dielectric film on an underlying structure including a semiconductor substrate; etching the dielectric film in a first anisotropic dry etching step using a first gas including rare gas, oxygen gas and carbon-rich gas, which is richer than CF4 to in carbon content, and a photoresist mask as an etching mask to a specified depth of the dielectric film, to thereby form a first contact hole in the dielectric film; depositing a specific film at least within the first contact hole by using a second gas as a source gas; etching a first potion of the specific film on a bottom of the first contact hole selectively from a second portion of the specific film on a sidewall thereof in a second anisotropic dry etching step using a third gas as an etching gas, to expose the dielectric film through the bottom of the first contact hole; etching the dielectric film exposed from the bottom of the first contact hole in a third anisotropic dry etching step using a fourth gas as an etching gas and the second portion of the specific film as an etching mask, to form a second contact hole extending stepwise from the first contact hole and exposing therefrom the underlying structure; and removing the second portion of the specific film on the sidewall of the first contact hole.
In accordance with the method of the present invention, the first gas including the carbon-rich gas, which is richer than CF4 gas in the carbon content, allows the first anisotropic dry etching step to achieve a higher etch selectivity of the dielectric with respect to the photoresist mask compared to the etch selectivity in the anisotropic etching step of the conventional process using the CF4 gas. This provides a stable diameter for the first contact holes substantially without involving an etch stop failure in the first anisotropic dry etching step or a taper in the first contact hole.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following description, referring to the accompanying drawings.
Now, the present invention is more specifically described with reference to accompanying drawings.
The second contact plugs 24 extend upward from the top of the first contact plugs 17, and intersect interconnect lines 19 formed on the second-layer dielectric film 18 which overlies the first contact plugs 17. The second contact plugs 24 have a stepped structure wherein the top portion has a larger diameter and the bottom portion has a smaller diameter. The second contact plugs 24 intersect the interconnect lines 19 at the bottom portion of the second contact plugs 24 while being insulated from the interconnect lines 19.
The second contact plugs 24 are in contact with the underling first contact plugs 17 at the small-diameter bottom portion of the second contact plugs 24, and in contact with the overlying bottom electrodes 26 of the cell capacitors 25 at the large-diameter top portion of the second contact plugs 24. Both the top and bottom portions of the second contact plugs 24 have a uniform diameter within each of the portions.
In the step of
The first contact plugs 17 penetrating through the first-level dielectric film 16 are formed between adjacent two of the gate electrode structures, by etching the first-layer dielectric film 16 in a self-alignment process to form contact holes, and then filling the resultant contact holes. The second-layer dielectric film 18, first-level interconnect lines 19 and planarizing third-layer dielectric film 20 are formed on the first-layer dielectric film 16. For example, the first-level interconnect lines 19 are 50 nm wide and 50 nm thick, and arranged at a pitch of 150 nm, and the third dielectric film 20 overlying the first-level interconnect lines is 200 nm thick.
The steps succeeding to the first step of
After the first step, a 50-nm-thick anti-reflection film 21 made of an organic material is formed on the third-layer dielectric film 20, followed by forming thereon a 450-nm-thick photoresist film. The photoresist film is then patterned using KrF excimer laser to form a mask pattern 22 having a 150-nm-wide opening, as shown in
The mask pattern 22 is then used as an etching mask for etching the anti-reflection film 21 and a portion of the underlying third-layer dielectric film 20 by using an anisotropic etching technique to obtain the structure shown in
The above etching conditions provide an etch selectivity of around 5 for the anti-reflection film 21 with respect to the resist mask pattern 22. This range of etch selectivity may take a considerable time length for etching the anti-reflection film 21, and thus, the etching of the anti-reflection film 21 may use an increased flow rate for the O2 and additional CF4 in the mixed gas, if necessary. This etching is stopped at a height of 501 nm above the top of the interconnect lines 19, or at an etching depth of 150 nm in the third-layer dielectric film 20, thereby preventing the etching from reaching the surface of the interconnect lines 19
Thereafter, as shown in
The specific film 23 is then selectively etched using a second anisotropic dry etching step, as shown in
Subsequently, as shown in
In the third anisotropic dry etching step, etching conditions similar to those of the first anisotropic dry etching step may be used, thereby obtaining a higher etch selectivity of the dielectric films 18, 20 with respect to the specific film 23. Thereafter, an ashing treatment and a cleaning process are performed to remove the photoresist mask pattern 22 and the specific film 23, to thereby obtain the structure of
In
As described above, the process of the present embodiment uses a single dry etching chamber, in which the first anisotropic dry etching step, deposition step of the specific film, second anisotropic etching step, and third anisotropic etching process are consecutively performed. The first anisotropic dry etching process uses carbon-rich gas such as C4F8, C5F8, C4F6, a higher etch selectivity of the dielectric film with respect to the photoresist mask pattern, a taper-less etching condition, wherein the etching does not reach top of the interconnect lines.
The specific film deposition step uses hydrogen-containing gas such as a gas selected from the group consisting of a mixed gas including CF4 and H2, a CH3F gas and a CH2F2 gas The second anisotropic dry etching process may use O2-containing gas, and removes the specific film at the bottom of the contact holes. The third anisotropic dry etching process may use a mixed gas similar to the mixed gas used in the first anisotropic dry etching process, and should use a higher etch selectivity of the dielectric film with respect to the specified film, and a taper-less condition.
In the first and third anisotropic dry etching steps of the above process, use of the carbon-rich gas such as C4F8, C5F8 and C4F6, which are richer than CF4 in the carbon content, provides a higher etch selectivity of the interlayer dielectric film with respect to the photoresist film such as KrF resist film and ArF resist film. This prevents the contact holes from having a larger diameter of the top opening thereof, or a distorted sectional structure thereof. The taper-less etching condition prevents an unstable etching such as an etch stop failure.
In the above embodiment, the first and third anisotropic dry etching processes used C5F8; however, other carbon-rich fluorocarbon gas such as C4F8 and C4F6 may be used to obtain a higher etch selectivity with respect to the resist film and to provide a taper-less etching. Although the specific film deposition step used CH3F, other gas such as a mixture of CF4 and H2, or CH2F2 may be used for depositing the specific film.
The exemplified process is used for forming a contact hole exposing the top of a contact plug; however, the contact hole formed by the present invention is not limited to such a contact hole, and may be such that formed on a diffused region.
In the above embodiment, a 200-nm-thick silicon oxide film 20 is formed on the interconnect lines 19, and etched by the first anisotropic dry etching step to a depth of 150 nm, to leave a portion of the silicon oxide film 20 having a thickness of 50 nm on the interconnect line 19, to thereby form a first contact hole. For improving the etch uniformity in the first anisotropic dry etching step, another film having a different material such as silicon nitride and a thickness of 10 nm, for example, may be formed in advance at a specified height above the top of the interconnect lines 19. In other words, the third-layer dielectric film 20 may have a three-layer structure including a 50-nm-thick silicon oxide layer, a 10-nm-thick silicon nitride layer and a 150-nm-thick silicon oxide layer, consecutively as viewed from the top of the interconnect lines 19, and the first anisotropic etching is stopped at the depth of the silicon nitride film.
Since the above embodiments are described only for examples, the present invention is not limited to the above embodiments and various modifications or alterations can be easily made therefrom by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-286728 | Sep 2005 | JP | national |