This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-074496, filed Mar. 16, 2004, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device, and more particularly to a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device, which comprises etching an oxide of a metal having a strong bonding strength with oxygen.
2. Description of the Related Art
With the scale down of semiconductor elements, so-called high-k materials exhibiting a high dielectric constant have been required as a gate material of transistors. Metal oxides represented by alumina have a relatively high dielectric constant, and thus attract attention as high-k materials.
Although alumina can be etched by sputter etching utilizing physical sputtering effect exerted by accelerated ions, nonvolatile sputtered materials generated upon etching deposit on the surface of alumina, lowering etching rate of alumina.
Under the circumstances, for etching alumina, reactive ion etching (RIE) using a chlorine-based reactive gas (for example, Cl2 or a mixed gas of Cl2 with BCl3), which avoids substantial influence on the etching rate of alumina due to the etching reaction products formed, has become employed. The mixed gas of Cl2 with BCl3 is disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Disclosure (KOKAI) No. 2001-15479. RIE is one of dry etching techniques like sputter etching and performs anisotropic etching.
Generally, to conduct RIE, a semiconductor substrate having a target film is placed on a cathode in a vacuum chamber. A high-frequency voltage is applied to the cathode to generate electric discharge in the vacuum chamber. When a reactive gas is introduced into the vacuum chamber, the reactive gas turns into a plasma, and is dissociated into active reactive ion species and electrons. These active reactive ion species are directed toward the substrate on the cathode perpendicularly thereto and impinge on the target film, thereby etching the target film.
As described above, RIE performs the etching through a chemical reaction caused by the energy derived from the impingement, upon the target film, of the active reactive ion species from the reactive gas. In this case, since the active reactive ion species impinge perpendicularly on the target film, anisotropic etching can be performed.
When an alumina film is etched by RIE using the chlorine-based reactive gas noted above, the reaction products can be removed from the vacuum chamber by evacuation, since the reaction products are volatile. Accordingly, the reaction products do not deposit on the alumina film and hence the etching rate of the alumina film is not lowered.
However, since alumina, which is aluminum oxide, is strong in bonding strength between aluminum and oxygen, even if the aforementioned chlorine-based reactive gas is employed, the etching rate itself by RIE is not sufficiently high. As a result, during etching an alumina film using the chlorine-based reactive gas, exposed portions of a film or films other than the alumina film are caused to expose to the plasma of the chlorine-based reactive gas for a long period of time, thus possibly deteriorating the other film or films.
Meanwhile, when BCl3 is employed singly in RIE, active boron ion species and active chlorine ion species are generated in the plasma. The active boron ion species, being reductive in nature, reduce the surface of alumina to aluminum, and the active chlorine ion species etch the aluminum. However, in reducing alumina by the active boron ion species, boron oxide which is non-volatile, is also formed and deposits as particles on the surface of the substrate being etched.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device, which comprises etching a film of a metal oxide comprising a metal bonded with oxygen, formed above a semiconductor substrate, by using an etching gas, the etching gas comprising a reducing gas which is capable of reducing the metal oxide and is non-reactive with the metal, and a reactive gas which is capable of etching the metal.
A method of manufacturing a semiconductor device according to one embodiment of the present invention comprises etching a film of a metal oxide comprising a metal bonded with oxygen, formed above a semiconductor substrate, by using an etching gas. The etching gas comprises both a reducing gas which is capable of reducing the metal oxide and is non-reactive with the metal, and a reactive gas which is capable of etching the metal.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the etching of the metal oxide film is performed by RIE. For example, the RIE can be performed using an ordinary etching apparatus comprising a vacuum chamber (etching chamber) equipped with an etching gas inlet conduit and an exhaust gas outlet conduit. A cathode is installed in the chamber. The etching apparatus has also a high-frequency power source. A semiconductor substrate having a metal oxide film is mounted on the cathode and then a high-frequency voltage is applied to the cathode to generate electric discharge in the vacuum chamber. When an etching gas is introduced into the vacuum chamber, the etching gas turns into a plasma, and is dissociated into active ion species and electrons. The active ion species are directed toward the substrate perpendicularly thereto, etching the metal oxide film as explained in detail below.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the metal oxide is an oxide of a metal exhibiting a high bonding strength with oxygen, and may be a metal oxide whose metal can be etched at a higher rate than the metal oxide itself by the reactive gas. Examples of such a metal oxide include alumina (Al2O3), hafnium oxide (HfO3), aluminum-hafnium oxide (AlHfOx), and hafnium-silicon oxide (HfSiOx). These metal oxides are expected to be useful as a high-k material. These metal oxides can be deposited on a substrate by CVD (chemical vapor deposition) as is well known in the art. For example, alumina can be deposited on a substrate by using aluminum trichloride (AlCl3), carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H2), or by using aluminum tribromide (AlBr3) and nitrogen monoxide (NO), as raw materials for CVD.
The etching gas used for etching the metal oxide comprises both a reducing gas and a reactive gas.
The reducing gas is capable of reducing a metal oxide to a corresponding metal, and is non-reactive with the metal formed by the reduction of the metal oxide. The reducing gas can be selected from methane (CH4) gas, carbon monoxide (CO) gas, hydrogen (H2) gas, and any combination of these gases. Since the reducing gas is non-reactive with the metal formed by the reduction, the metal is not subjected to any changes by the reducing gas. Methane reduces the metal oxide to form the metal, CO (or CO2) and H2O. Carbon monoxide reduces the metal oxide to form the metal and CO2. Hydrogen reduces the metal oxide to form the metal and H2O. Thus, all of the reaction products produced by the reduction with the reducing gas, except for the metal, are volatile. In other words, the reducing gas may be the one which is capable of reducing the metal oxide to form reaction products which are volatile under the reduced pressure at which the etching is conducted in the vacuum chamber, except for the metal formed by the reduction.
The reactive gas is capable of etching the metal formed by the reduction of the metal oxide with the reducing gas. In one embodiment of the present invention, the reactive gas comprises molecules containing chlorine atom as a constituent atom thereof. The reactive gas can be selected from chlorine (Cl2) gas, hydrogen chloride (HCl) gas, boron trichloride (BCl3) gas, and any combination of these gases. The chlorine gas reacts with the metal to produce a metal chloride. Hydrogen chloride gas reacts with the metal to produce a metal chloride and hydrogen gas. The boron trichloride behaves somewhat differently. The active chlorine ion species generated in the plasma from boron trichloride reacts with the metal to produce a metal chloride. On the other hand, the active boron ion species simultaneously generated in the plasma, being reductive in nature, reduce, together with the reducing gas, the metal oxide to a metal, and at the same time produce non-volatile boron oxide. However, the boron oxide thus formed is reduced to volatile boron by the reducing gas co-existing in the etching atmosphere. In this way, when BCl3 is uses as a reactive gas, the reduction of metal oxide can be effected by both boron ion species and the reducing gas, shortening the time required for the reduction and hence the overall etching time.
To explain again, firstly the active reducing species derived from a reducing gas reduce a surface portion of the metal oxide film to the metal, and the reactive species derived from the reactive gas act on this metal to etch away the metal. A fresh surface of the residual metal oxide film exposed as a result of the etching is reduced by the active reducing species to the metal similarly, which in turn is etched away by the reactive species. In this way, the metal oxide film is etched.
As apparent from the above explanation, according to one embodiment of the present invention, overall reaction products generated upon etching the metal oxide film are volatile at least under a reduced pressure inside the vacuum chamber. Accordingly, all of these reaction products can be removed from the vacuum chamber by evacuation, and hence do not deposit on a substrate to lower the etching rate, and do not generate particles. Moreover, the etching rate, by the reactive gas species, of the metal reduced from the metal oxide is significantly higher than the etching rate of the metal oxide.
With respect to the ratio of flow rate ratio (volume ratio) of the reducing gas to the reactive gas, if the proportion of the reducing gas is excessively large relative to the reactive gas, the ratio of the reactive gas may become insufficient, making it difficult to perform the etching to a sufficient extent. Further, since the bonding force between the metal and oxygen in the metal oxide differs depending on the kinds of metal and since the reducing power of the reducing gas also differs depending on the kinds of reducing gas, it is difficult to indiscriminately determine an optimum flow rate ratio of the reducing gas to the reactive gas. Generally however, as long as the flow rate (volume) of the reducing gas is within the range of about 5 to about 30% of the total flow rate (volume) of the reducing gas and the reactive gas, it is possible to achieve a satisfactory etching rate of the metal oxide.
Although there is not any particular limitation with regard to the pressure inside the vacuum chamber at the etching, the inside pressure may range from about 5 to about 50 mTorr in general. The discharge voltage differs considerably depending on the configuration of etching apparatus employed. Needless to say, the discharge voltage should be sufficient to generate electric discharge.
Next, with reference to
First, as shown in
Further, a film 4 of high-k material providing a second gate insulating film is formed on the film 3 by CVD. As described above, the high-k material may be alumina (Al2O3), hafnium oxide (HfO3), aluminum hafnium oxide (AlHfOx), or hafnium silicon oxide (HfSiOx).
Then, a film 5 of control gate material, for example a polysilicon film, is deposited on the film 4 by CVD. Thereafter, a film 6 for lowering the electric resistance of the control gate, for example a film of high-melting point metal silicide such as tungsten silicide, is deposited on the film 5 by CVD. Subsequently, a resist is applied on the film 6 and processed into a resist pattern 7 by photolithography technique. Incidentally, instead of the resist pattern, a hard mask formed from, e.g., silicon oxide or silicon nitride, can be used.
Thereafter, as shown in
Then, as shown in
Subsequently, as shown in
Following the etching of the film 4, as shown in
Subsequently, as shown in
A high-k material constituting the film 4 etched in the step of
Experiments were conducted to investigate the etching rates of alumina as an example, when chlorine gas was employed alone as an etching gas according to the conventional method, and when a mixed gas of chlorine gas with methane gas was employed.
As shown in
Since the polyimide film 12 acts as a mask, the portion of the alumina film which is located at a region “A” where the alumina film 11 is covered by the polyimide film 12 is not etched, while the rest of the alumina film which is located at a region “B” where the alumina film 11 is exposed is etched, as shown in
After the etching, the polyimide film 12 formed at the region “A” was removed, as shown in
This step on the surface of the alumina film 11 was measured by a tracer method using a profilometer (Alpha-Step 200 (trade name), TENCOR Co., Ltd.) operated to move in the direction indicated by an arrow AR shown in
On the other hand,
It will be clear from the comparison in height of the steps “C” between the region “A” and the region “B” that while the height of the step “C” in
This is the phenomenon presented due to the fact that the bonding strength between aluminum and oxygen atom is very strong in alumina. Alumina, if remaining as such, reacts with chlorine ion species only slowly, and hence the etching rate of alumina is slow.
However, when a mixed gas of chlorine gas with methane gas is employed as an etching gas, firstly the surface of alumina film is reduced to aluminum by the methane gas. The reaction formula is:
Al2O3+CH4→Al+CO (or CO2)+H2O
Since chlorine ions are significantly high in the rate of reaction with aluminum (the reaction takes place readily) compared with the rate of reaction with alumina, aluminum can be etched within a shorter period of time. The reaction formula is:
Al+Cl2→AlCl3
When aluminum on the surface portion of the alumina film is etched in this manner to expose a new surface portion of alumina film, the exposed new alumina portion is reduced by the methane gas again to expose aluminum thus reduced. Under the circumstances, the chlorine ions can always etch aluminum, enhancing the etching rate of alumina.
In this manner, by using a mixed gas containing the reactive gas and the reducing gas, as an etching gas, the alumina film 11 can be etched to a desired depth within a shorter period of time as compared with the case where chlorine gas is employed alone according to the conventional method.
Therefore, other films such as tungsten silicide film 6 and control gate film 5 are not exposed to the etching gas plasma for a long period of time during the etching of the alumina film 4 in the formation of the gate electrode structures of the NAND type non-volatile memory described with reference to
Moreover, the volatile reaction products produced in the reduction of the alumina film 4 as well as in the etching of aluminum can be exhausted in the form of gas and thus do not deposit on the surface of a semiconductor substrate, giving no damages to the substrate.
When a mixed gas of carbon monoxide with boron trichloride was employed as an etching gas in the above experiments, results similar to those shown in
In the foregoing, the formation of the gate electrode structures of the NAND type non-volatile memory is explained as one example, but the present invention should not be limited thereto and can be applied to the manufacture of other semiconductor devices involving etching of metal oxide film. It is needless to say, two or more of the various embodiments described above may be combined.
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details and representative embodiments shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-074496 | Mar 2004 | JP | national |