The present invention relates to a method of forming Cu plating, a method of manufacturing a Cu-plated substrate, and a Cu-plated substrate.
The process of forming Cu plating on a substrate by electrolytic plating broadly includes two steps. First, a metal thin film (seed layer) used for feeding power is formed in advance on a substrate (wafer) surface on which plating needs to be formed. Then, the substrate having the seed layer formed thereon is fixed to a jig for power feeding, and immersed in a plating solution. Then, power is fed to the seed layer, thereby forming plating (for example, PTD 1).
In PTD 1, oxygen plasma is applied to a resist opening in the seed layer formed on the substrate before plating (paragraphs [0008] to [0010]). This is for the purpose of forming a thin oxide film on the surface of the seed layer by applying oxygen plasma, to improve the wettability of the seed layer to the plating solution.
The seed layer is often fabricated at an elevated temperature inside a film forming chamber in order to obtain a film having bulk-like characteristics. However, when Cu is raised in temperature, its grain size is increased, thereby increasing its internal stress. Consequently, the warpage of the substrate having the Cu seed layer formed thereon is increased. When the warpage is increased, the plating comes around to the back surface of the substrate during plating, which leads to a decreased plating yield. Furthermore, when the substrate is reduced in thickness, the stress is increased, so that the plating yield is further decreased.
In light of the above-described problems, the present invention aims to provide a method of forming Cu plating with improved yield.
A method of forming Cu plating of the present invention includes: a first step of forming a Cu seed layer on a surface of a substrate such that an average grain size is 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less; a second step of forming an oxide film on a surface of the Cu seed layer in an oxygen atmosphere; a third step of removing a part of the oxide film; and a fourth step of feeding power to the Cu seed layer to form Cu plating on a surface on a side of the oxide film of the Cu seed layer by electrolytic plating.
According to the present invention, when the Cu seed layer is formed to have an average grain size of 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less, stress increase can be suppressed, and the warpage of the substrate can be reduced, thereby suppressing plating defects, with the result that the plating yield can be improved.
Embodiments of the present invention will be hereinafter described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which the same or corresponding components are designated by the same reference characters.
First, a substrate 1 on which Cu electrolytic plating is to be formed is prepared (
Then, a sputtering apparatus is used to form a Cu seed layer 2 (a power feeding Cu seed layer) on one of the surfaces of substrate 1 on which Cu plating is to be formed (
The room temperature of the film formation conditions used in the present embodiment means in a broad sense that the atmosphere temperature inside the chamber at the start of film formation is a room temperature (for example, 20° C. to 30° C.). Since the room temperature varies depending on the environment/the conditions of use, the temperature range is not limited to the above-described range. Even when the initial temperature inside the chamber is a room temperature, the temperature inside the chamber is raised with sputtering energy by forming a film. Thus, the actual film forming temperature may be equal to or higher than the room temperature (for example, 50° C. to 100° C.). Also, when film formation is continuously performed, the temperature inside the film forming chamber may remain at the same temperature as that during the previous film formation. Accordingly, even at the setting of the room temperature, this temperature inside the chamber may be still high at the start of film formation (for example, 30° C. to 80° C.). This situation also corresponds to film formation at the room temperature in the present embodiment as long as the initial temperature is set at the room temperature.
Then, a photoresist is used to form a resist 3 on the formed Cu seed layer 2 (
Then, by the etching treatment such as washing with dilute sulfuric acid, a part of oxide film 4 formed on the surface at the opening of Cu seed layer 2 is removed (
However, the oxide film cannot always be reduced in thickness by washing with dilute sulfuric acid (the third step). When the original oxide film is too thick, the removing effect cannot be achieved. Accordingly, in the oxygen plasma treatment in the second step, the oxide film to be formed needs to be controlled to have a film thickness falling within the range in which the effect of washing with dilute sulfuric acid (the third step) can be achieved. Also, by this third step, the surface state of oxide film 4 can be rendered suitable for formation of a plating film in the fourth step.
Examples of the method of removing the oxide film formed by the oxygen plasma treatment may be dry etching, wet etching, and the like. The type of gas for dry etching, the type of etching solution used for wet etching, and the like are not particularly limited, and any removing method may be employed as long as formation of Cu plating is not adversely affected. However, it is preferable to perform wet etching using dilute sulfuric acid and the like in order to enhance the effect of improving the wettability of the Cu seed layer by the oxygen plasma treatment.
Then, substrate 1 including Cu seed layer 2 and oxide film 4 from which a part thereof has been removed is immersed in a plating solution, and power is fed to Cu seed layer 2, so that a Cu plating 5 can be formed on the surface on the oxide film 4 side of Cu seed layer 2 (
As the step after formation of plating, substrate 1 having plating formed thereon may be washed by the washing treatment. Furthermore, an antioxidant may be applied in order to prevent oxidation of the surface of Cu plating 5.
In the present embodiment, a Cu-plated substrate can be manufactured as described above. The Cu-plated substrate includes at least a substrate and Cu plating formed on one of surfaces of the substrate.
Although the structure, the material, the shape and the like of substrate 1 (member to be plated) are not particularly limited, substrate 1 may be an insulator substrate, a semiconductor substrate (a semiconductor wafer), and the like, for example. Examples of the material of the semiconductor substrate may be Si, SiC, GaN, and the like.
Substrate 1 may be a semiconductor device or a semiconductor chip that are manufactured using a semiconductor substrate, for example. Examples of the type of the semiconductor device may be an insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT), a metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET), a diode, and the like. The substrate may be a member that is applicable to any intended uses other than a semiconductor device. Furthermore, the shape of the member to be plated (substrate) is not limited to a wafer, a chip and the like that are often used in a semiconductor device, but may be any size and shape as long as plating can be done.
Cu seed layer 2 is made of Cu. The thickness of Cu seed layer 2 is not particularly limited as long as electric charge can be supplied (power can be fed), and as long as Cu seed layer 2 can sufficiently function as a seed layer for electrolytic Cu plating. The thickness of Cu seed layer 2 is 300 nm, by way of example.
Furthermore, other than Cu seed layer 2, an adhesion layer may be formed between substrate 1 and Cu seed layer 2, for example, for the purpose of improving the adhesiveness between substrate 1 and Cu seed layer 2. In this case, the material of the adhesion layer can be selected in accordance with the purpose of forming an adhesion layer as long as no influence is exerted upon formation of Cu plating. Examples of the material of the adhesion layer may be Ti and the like.
Furthermore, the thickness of the adhesion layer is not particularly limited as long as this thickness falls within the range in which no influence is exerted upon formation of Cu plating. For example, when an adhesion layer is formed using Ti, the thickness of the adhesion layer is about 10 nm to 50 nm. Also, as to an adhesion layer formed between substrate 1 and Cu seed layer 2, two or more adhesion layers may be stacked as long as no influence is exerted upon formation of Cu plating.
In order to achieve the function as an adhesion layer, it is preferable to form an adhesion layer over the entire interface between substrate 1 and Cu seed layer 2. When the thickness of the adhesion layer is 10 nm or less, the adhesion layer cannot be formed over the entire interface, but a region partially lacking an adhesion layer may be formed. Accordingly, it is preferable that the thickness of the adhesion layer is more than 10 nm.
The upper limit value of the thickness of the adhesion layer may be set as appropriate. However, when the thickness of the adhesion layer is 100 nm or more, the function as an adhesion layer can be achieved, but an unnecessarily thickly formed film leads to an increase in resistance component, so that the device characteristics may be adversely affected. Thus, the thickness of the adhesion layer is preferably less than 100 nm, and more preferably 50 nm or less.
The resist material used for forming resist 3 may be any type of resist as long as no influence is exerted upon formation of Cu plating, and may be a positive-type or negative-type resist material. Also, when no resist needs to be formed, Cu seed layer 2 may be directly subjected to the oxygen plasma treatment in the next step without forming a resist.
When a photoresist (photosensitive resist material) is used as a resist material, for example, the following step is performed as a step of forming resist 3 on Cu seed layer 2. First, a photoresist is applied onto the surface of Cu seed layer 2 formed on substrate 1, and the applied photoresist is uniformly spread over the entire surface of Cu seed layer 2 by using a spin coater. Then, a photomask is placed on the photoresist uniformly spread over substrate 1, to which ultraviolet rays are applied using an exposure machine. Then, substrate 1 with a photoresist to which ultraviolet rays have been applied is immersed in a developing solution, to remove an unhardened resist. Thereby, resist 3 can be formed.
In this way, by forming a Cu seed layer at the room temperature, the grain sizes in the Cu seed layer can be reduced as compared with the case where the Cu seed layer is formed at an elevated temperature. Also, as a method of reducing the average grain size in the Cu seed layer, a Cu seed layer may be formed at the room temperature without using a temperature raising mechanism. Thus, not by using a temperature raising mechanism, the time period for film formation (the time period required for forming a Cu seed layer) can be shortened and facility investment can be reduced, so that Cu plating can be inexpensively and highly efficiently formed.
Furthermore, it turned out that Cu seed layer 2 also includes crystals having sizes other than the above, for example, crystals having sizes of 50 nm, 150 nm, 300 nm and the like, and having a maximum size of 300 nm. It is presumed that the grain sizes are various because, unlike the normal growth mode, certain energy is applied to cause coalescence of crystal grains, thereby forming a relatively large grain size.
Such coalescence of crystal grains depends also on the thickness of the Cu seed layer to be formed. Thus, as the Cu seed layer becomes thicker, the maximum grain size becomes larger. However, in the case where the Cu seed layer is formed at the room temperature as in the present embodiment, the growth rate of each crystal grain abruptly becomes slow when the thickness is 300 nm or more. Accordingly, it is considered that the upper limit of the grain size is about 300 nm. Also, when a film is formed (when a Cu seed layer is formed), and even if such film formation is done at the room temperature, crystals grow to a certain extent by applying sputtering energy to the film. Thus, it is considered that the lower limit of the grain size is about 50 nm. In view of the above, it is preferable that each grain size in the Cu seed layer is 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less.
The stress of the film (Cu seed layer) increases in inverse proportion to the square of thickness change of the substrate. For example, when the substrate is formed to have a thickness corresponding to one third of the thickness of the conventional substrate, the film stress is increased nine times as compared with the conventional substrate. Accordingly, when forming a film on a substrate reduced in thickness, it is more important to take measures for reducing the film stress.
As a way to reduce the stress resulting from Cu seed layer 2, the average grain size in the Cu film may be reduced. When the average grain size is small, grain boundaries are increased in number. Thus, the generated stress is alleviated in these grain boundaries, so that the stress in the entire film is reduced. On the other hand, when the average grain size is increased, grain boundaries are decreased in number, thereby reducing the effect of alleviating the stress, so that the stress in the entire film is increased. As an example that the film stress is changed in accordance with the average grain size in the Cu film, there may be a situation where the film stress is changed depending on whether the Cu film has been subjected to heat treatment or not.
On the Cu sheet layer (Cu film), heat application gives energy to the particles, thereby causing surface migration, so that the grain sizes are increased. Accordingly, in the Cu seed layer that has been exposed to the high temperature state and increased in grain size, the stress of the film (Cu seed layer) is increased three times to ten times as compared with the Cu seed layer formed (without being subjected to annealing) at the room temperature. Thus, when the average grain size in the Cu seed layer is kept small at 300 nm or less, the film stress can be reduced to about one-third to one-tenth. In this way, it is effective to set the average grain size in the Cu seed layer to be 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less as countermeasures against the stress increase in the Cu seed layer resulting from the substrate reduced in thickness.
Cu seed layer 2 in the present embodiment is smaller in average grain size and smaller in area density (film density) than Cu plating produced by electrolytic plating.
The average grain size in Cu seed layer 2 formed as Cu seed layer 2 is 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less, as described above. In this way, as a method of forming Cu seed layer 2 so as to have an average grain size of 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less, there is a method of forming Cu seed layer 2 at the room temperature as the temperature inside the film forming chamber, which is set without using a temperature raising mechanism of the sputtering apparatus. When the temperature is elevated during formation of Cu seed layer 2, the same effect as that achieved by annealing describe above is caused, so that the average grain size is increased, thereby increasing the stress.
In view of the above, as a method of obtaining a Cu seed layer reduced in average grain size, it is effective to form a Cu seed layer at the room temperature without using a temperature raising mechanism. Then, by forming a Cu seed layer having such grain sizes, the film stress is reduced, so that the Cu plating yield can be improved. Thus, it becomes possible to improve the reliability of the Cu-plated substrate such as a semiconductor device having Cu plating, which is formed by the method of forming Cu plating in the present embodiment.
In the oxygen plasma treatment performed for the purpose of improving the wettability for the seed layer (see PTD 1), if the energy of the oxygen plasma to be applied is not appropriately controlled, an oxide film is excessively formed on the Cu seed layer. The excessively formed oxide film remains as a residue (void) at the interface even after formation of plating, thereby inhibiting the continuity between the Cu seed layer and the Cu plating. This causes a problem that the electric characteristics and the reliability are adversely affected, so that the plating yield is decreased. On the other hand, by forming the oxide film to have a thickness of 5 nm or more and 25 nm or less, the amount of the oxide film remaining after formation of plating is reduced, and crystals are coalesced into one at the interface between the Cu seed layer and the Cu plating, thereby forming an excellent interface. Thus, the plating yield can be improved, and the characteristics of the device (the Cu-plated substrate) can be improved.
Furthermore, when the area density of the Cu plating is defined as 100%, the area density of the Cu seed layer is preferably 60% or less. When the Cu seed layer is reduced in area density in this way, the average grain size in the Cu seed layer can be controlled to fall within the range in the present embodiment. For example, by forming a seed layer using a sputtering apparatus or the like at the room temperature, the Cu seed layer can be reduced in area density.
As shown in
As shown in
Since the area density of the Cu film (Cu seed layer) may vary also depending on the film formation conditions, an error of about 10% (±5%) needs to be taken into consideration. Specifically, an error of 10% (±5%) of the etching rate and an error of 10% (±5%) of the film quality need to be taken into consideration. It is considered that, even in consideration of such errors, when the area density of the Cu plating formed by electrolytic plating is defined as 100% based on the above-mentioned etching rate ratio, the area density of the Cu seed layer formed at the room temperature is 60% or less.
The area densities of the Cu seed layer and the Cu plating may be calculated, for example, using Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS), X-Ray Reflectivity (XRR), and the like.
In order to achieve the wettability improving effect that is an object of the oxygen plasma treatment performed for the Cu seed layer, it is desirable that an oxide film is uniformly formed on the entire Cu seed layer. For example, there are valleys formed between the crystal grains on the film surface, into which plasma is less likely to flow, so that an oxide film is less likely to be formed thereon. In order to form an oxide film also on such a portion into which plasma is less likely flow, it is preferable that the thickness of the oxide film is 5 nm or more on the entire surface of the Cu seed layer.
The Cu seed layer having a large average grain size and a high density is less likely to be oxidized. Thus, even when such a Cu seed layer undergoes the normal plasma treatment, only an oxide film having a thickness of about 2 nm to 3 nm can be formed.
Furthermore, when the treatment time period of the oxygen plasma treatment is lengthened in order to increase the thickness of the oxide film, the temperature inside the plasma treatment chamber rises due to plasma energy, to thereby raise the temperature of the Cu seed layer, so that stress may be increased. Accordingly, it is desirable that the plasma treatment time period is relatively short.
In the Cu film (Cu seed layer) in the present embodiment formed at the room temperature in order to form a Cu seed layer to have an average grain size of 50 nm or more and 300 nm or less, the film density (area density) is relatively low, so that oxidation is more likely to progress as compared with the case of normal Cu. Thus, even in a short time period during which the temperature inside the chamber does not rise, an oxide film having a thickness of 5 nm or more (for example, about 10 nm), which is thicker than the conventional oxide film, can be formed on the Cu seed layer as described above. Even in consideration of about 1 nm or about 2 nm as a measurement error of the thickness of the oxide film, when the thickness of the natural oxidation film is 7 nm as shown in
In
As shown in
Then, the evaluation test was conducted for checking the change in the effect of washing with dilute sulfuric acid, which is caused in accordance with the thickness of each oxide film formed on the Cu seed layer. Table 1 shows the result of verifying the effect of removing the oxide film using dilute sulfuric acid as a remover in the third step (S30 in
According to the result shown in Table 1, each oxide film having a thickness up to 25 nm could be removed, but each oxide film having a thickness exceeding 25 nm (for example, 50 nm) excessively formed on the surface of the Cu seed layer could not be removed, and the color of copper oxide remained on the surface of each film. When plating is performed in the state where the oxide film remains, such the oxide film remains as a void at the interface, which exerts an influence upon the reliability. Accordingly, it is preferable that the thickness of the oxide film is 25 nm or less.
Also as shown in
On the other hand,
Furthermore,
In this way, by controlling the thickness of the oxide film to fall within the range of 5 nm or more and 25 nm or less, occurrence of voids between the Cu seed layer and the Cu plating could be suppressed. In view of the above, it turns out that the oxide film having a thickness of 5 nm or more and 25 nm or less allows: formation of an excellent interface as shown in
Furthermore, oxygen plasma is applied to the seed layer, thereby exerting an influence upon the seed layer as follows: specifically, the film surface roughness may be increased by the energy of the applied oxygen plasma. When the surface roughness is increased, defects may occur during the subsequent device fabrication. Thus, it is desirable to confirm that the surface roughness is not increased.
The apparatus used in the oxygen plasma treatment for Cu seed layer 2 shown in
Furthermore, as the treatment conditions during the oxygen plasma treatment, the RF output, the oxygen flow rate, the degree of vacuum, the treatment time period, the size of the treatment chamber, the electrode area, the sample temperature during the plasma treatment, adsorption moisture of the sample, and the like can be conceivable as modifiable parameters. By adjusting these parameters, an oxide film having a thickness of 5 nm or more and 25 nm or less can be formed on the outermost surface of Cu seed layer 2. Any treatment conditions can be set as long as an oxide film having a thickness of 5 nm or more and 25 nm or less can be formed on the outermost surface of Cu seed layer 2.
As shown in
Furthermore, a resist frame is formed on the device in the actual process. Thus, it was verified whether the resist frame exerted an influence upon formation of the oxide film or not. As a result, it turned out that an oxide film is normally formed though the resist is simultaneously etched by the oxygen plasma treatment. It also turned out that the formation speed of the oxide film and the temperature dependency in oxide film formation were changed due to the existence of the resist, but such changes were not obstructive to formation of an intended oxide film of 5 nm or more and 25 nm or less. Thus, formation of an oxide film was not influenced.
Furthermore, since an RIE apparatus can conduct anisotropic etching, there is also an additional effect that the resist shape can be improved by the etching effect.
As described above, according to the method of forming Cu plating in the present embodiment for controlling the average grain size in the Cu seed layer and the thickness of the oxide film on the Cu seed layer for reducing the stress, it becomes possible to: suppress occurrence of voids at the interface between the Cu seed layer and the Cu plating; and improve the wettability, without adversely affecting the film characteristics of the Cu seed layer. Consequently, the reliability of the device can be improved.
It should be understood that the embodiments disclosed herein are illustrative and non-restrictive in every respect. The scope of the present invention is defined by the terms of the claims, rather than the description above, and is intended to include any modifications within the meaning and scope equivalent to the terms of the claims.
1 substrate, 2 Cu seed layer, 3 resist, 4 oxide film, 5 Cu plating.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2015/081883 | 11/12/2015 | WO | 00 |