The invention relates to a method of producing a mixed substrate intended for manufacturing specific stacked structures. Such a stacked structure is obtained by bonding the mixed substrate with another substrate or a layer on a bonding interface.
It is often necessary, in the semiconductor field, to manufacture structures by stacking and bonding. For example, two substrates may be assembled by molecular bonding (or “wafer bonding”) of a main face of one of the substrates with a main face of the other substrate. For this purpose, the faces to be put in contact must be carefully prepared to allow this molecular bonding. This preparation may involve chemical-mechanical polishing of the faces to be put in contact, cleaning of these faces and activation thereof in order to obtain close contact (faces of mirror quality).
This molecular bonding technique procures very good results for the bonding of semiconductor substrates having faces that are homogeneous with regard to their composition. However, the application of this technique to substrates having a non-homogeneous face may pose a problem. Such substrates are called “mixed substrates”. Thus the main face of a mixed substrate (the face to be bonded) may have at least one area of a different nature to the rest of the substrate. An example of a mixed substrate consists of a silicon substrate having blocks of silicon oxide lying flush on the face to be bonded of the substrate, the blocks of oxide alternating with silicon areas. Another example of a mixed substrate consists of a silicon substrate whose face to be bonded has an alternation of thin blocks of oxide and thick blocks of oxide. Yet another example of a mixed substrate consists of a semiconductor substrate whose face to be bonded has an alternation of electrically conductive areas and electrically insulating areas obtained by localised doping and/or inclusion of material that is conductive to a greater or lesser extent.
The surface preparation of a mixed substrate with a view to its molecular bonding may pose a problem. By way of example, the case of a silicon substrate will be examined, one face of which has at least one flush block of silicon oxide. The production of such a substrate will be described in relation to
The mixed substrate illustrated by
One problem often encountered is that of a different efficacy of this planarization on the surfaces treated: this difference in efficacy depends for example on the distribution of the topologies on the surface or for example also to the nature of the different materials of the surface (selectivity of attack during mechanochemical planing).
It will then be noted that some areas are polished in excess compared with other areas (the so-called dishing phenomena). This results in slight depressions on the surface. It will be understood that these depressions are detrimental to close contact with a flat face of another substrate and that they give rise to bonding defects. In addition, after assembly of the two substrates, if these depressions appear on electrically insulating areas of one of the substrates, the result may be a degradation of the dielectric integrity of the insulating areas.
The applications sought with such bonded structures assume the production of insulating areas of several mm2, or even several cm2. These insulating areas are generated in blocks of suitable dimensions. Concerning the quality of the insulators, the dielectric stiffness must be good along an axis perpendicular to the surface of the substrate used. In the case of silicon dioxide insulating areas, in order to ensure good dielectric stiffness, it is preferable to produce this insulator by thermal oxidation. The thickness of silicon dioxide generated in a cavity is around twice the initial depth of the cavity produced in the silicon substrate.
Where it is wished for insulating areas of large size (several mm2, or even several cm2), attempts at topology planing are a failure since a surface hollowing is caused between the protrusions because of the large dimensions of the blocks to be obtained. The result is flatness defects caused that prevent subsequent bonding, even if the surface roughness over dimensions of around a micrometre is satisfactory.
The U.S. Pat. No. 5,747,377 discloses a method of forming shallow insulating trenches on a face of a silicon substrate. To form field oxide regions, it is proposed to produce series of trenches in the substrate. The trenches corresponding to one and the same future region are separated by a wall, the width of which is of the same order of magnitude as the trenches. Next the oxidation of the walls (lateral oxidation) is proceeded with a view to filling in the trenches. In this case, the oxidation time is much lower than if the starting point was a simple cavity without walls. However, the electrical insulation may be defective vertically. In addition, the method disclosed by the U.S. Pat. No. 5,747,377 is intended particularly for producing field oxide regions for CMOS transistors. It involves a wall density that is too great to allow planarization with a small removal of material. The roughness of the insulating areas created from the trenches can be treated over micrometric dimensions but not on millimetric scales.
The present invention was designed with a view to remedying the drawbacks of the prior art cited above.
The present invention proposes a method of producing a mixed substrate in which the cavities are formed with regularly spaced projections, greatly reducing the surface roughness. The density and lateral dimensions of the projection are limited so as to be able to effectively plane all the projections by removing a minimum of surface material on the structured substrate. The distance separating the projections may be around a hundred micrometres and the width of the projections may be around 0.1 to 6 μm.
The subject matter of the invention is a method of producing a mixed substrate, that is to say a substrate comprising at least one block of material different from the material of the substrate, the method comprising the following successive steps:
According to a first variant, the part of the first material projecting consists of a wall or pillar projecting from the bottom of the cavity.
According to a second variant, the step of forming the cavity is carried out so as to leave several parts of the first material projecting and delimiting several alveoli in the cavity.
The planarizing step can be carried out by chemical-mechanical or mechanical polishing.
According to a particular application, the substrate being made from silicon, a thermal oxidation of the silicon is implemented in order to form a silicon dioxide block.
According to another particular application, the substrate being made from SiGe, a thermal oxidation of the SiGe is implemented in order to form an oxidised SiGe block.
According to yet another particular application, the substrate being made from silicon, a nitriding of the silicon is implemented in order to form an SiN block.
The method can also comprise, between the step of forming the cavity and the step of forming the block, a step of masking the parts of the substrate that are not to undergo said reaction.
After the planarizing step, a step of bonding a thin film on the planarized face of the substrate can be provided.
The invention will be better understood and other advantages and particularities will emerge from a reading of the following description given by way of non-limitative example, accompanied by the attached drawings, among which:
By way of example, in the following the initial substrate will be made from silicon and the block will be made from silicon oxide. The reaction used to obtain the block will be a thermal oxidation of the silicon forming the initial substrate, this oxidation being initiated at the cavity formed in the initial substrate.
It will advantageously be sought for the silicon pillars, after thermal oxidation, to be completely oxidised at the cavity 11. The width of these pillars will in particular be correlated with the thickness of oxide that it is wished to generate. The greater this thickness, the wider the pillars can be.
The film 13 of silicon nitride does not cover the cavity 11 and the parts 12 that belong to the cavity. However, it is present on the tops of the parts 12.
The thermal oxidation of the silicon of the cavity is then carried out, that is to say the oxidation of the bottom, the walls of the cavity and the walls of the parts 12 of the cavity. The oxidation is advantageously carried out until the structure shown in
In
The following step consists of planarization the main face of the substrate, for example by chemical-mechanical polishing. The polishing eliminates the protrusion 15 and planarizes the main face of the substrate 10. The block 14 has a plane face with minimised dishing, compatible in terms of flatness with the bonding of a thin film for example made from silicon.
On the surface of a silicon substrate, a cavity is etched. This cavity, referenced 11 in
3 μm of silicon dioxide is produced at the etched area, by thermal oxidation at 1100° C. under steam. The area of the substrate situated outside the future insulating block is protected by a film of silicon nitride in order to prevent its oxidation. It will then be observed that the separation walls of the alveoli are oxidised over a height depending on the initial width of these walls and the thickness of oxide generated. Advantageously, the dimensions of these walls (and in particular the thickness) will be chosen so that the walls are oxidised over their entire initial height. Protrusions 0.8 μm high will also be observed vertically in line with these walls. At the edge of the cavity, the protrusions have a height of between 1 μm and 1.2 μm.
The chemical-mechanical planarization is carried out and characterised in particular vertically in line with the future insulating areas. If the mean value of the dishing obtained on “conventional” areas, that is to say not protected by the protrusions, and on areas “protected” by protrusions, are compact, it can be seen that the dishing is effectively much reduced by virtue of the presence of the protrusions.
For example, during a method of planarizing edge protrusions 1.1 μm high and for adjoining surface insulating areas of 3 mm×3 mm, dishing greater than 50 nm is obtained if the areas do not have any protective protrusions whereas with protrusions the dishing is reduced to less than 50 nm, or even to less than 10 nm. The substrate obtained can then be bonded at this face, after possibly a suitable surface preparation, to a thin film of silicon in order to form a mixed substrate having SOI areas and solid areas.
On the surface of a silicon substrate, a cavity is etched. This cavity (referenced 11 in
3 μm of silicon dioxide is produced in the etched area, by thermal oxidation at 1100° C. under steam. The area of the substrate situated outside the future insulating block is protected by a film of silicon nitride in order to prevent its oxidation. It will then be observed that the alveoli separation walls are completely oxidised over a height of 0.5 μm. Protrusions 0.7 μm high will also be observed vertically in line with these walls. At the edge of the cavity, the protrusions have a height of between 1 μm and 1.2 μm.
After polishing and surface preparation, this substrate can be assembled with a thin film of silicon oxide oxidised on the surface in order to form an SOI substrate with areas of oxide with different thicknesses.
On the surface of a silicon substrate, a cavity is etched. This cavity consists of a set of alveoli separated by walls or spacers rising from the bottom of the cavity. The cavity has a depth of 1.5 μm. The alveoli have a width of 100 μm. The alveoli separation walls are 2 μm thick.
The area situated outside the future insulating block is therefore covered with a film of silicon oxide obtained for example thermally, chemically or by dry method of the plasma or UV/O3 type, referred to as a pedestal film. The thickness of this film is less than 0.5 μm, preferably less than 50 nm and preferably again less than 20 nm. This film of oxide is protected by a film of silicon nitride intended to form a barrier to subsequent oxidation.
3 μm of silicon oxide is produced in the etched area, by thermal oxidation at 1100° C. under steam. It is then observed that the alveoli separation walls are completely oxidised over a height of 2 μm. Protrusions 0.8 μm high are also observed vertically in line with these walls. At the edge of the cavity, the protrusions have a height of between 1 μm and 1.2 μm.
The chemical-mechanical planarization is carried out and characterised in particular vertically in line with the future insulating areas. If the mean amount of the dishing obtained on “conventional” areas, that is to say not protected by the protrusions, and on areas “protected” by protrusions are compared, it is found that the dishing is actually much reduced by virtue of the presence of the protrusions. It is greater than 50 nm at the “conventional” areas and around 5 nm at “protected” areas.
For example, during a process of edge planarization of protrusions 1.1 μm high and for adjoining surface insulating areas of 3 mm×3 mm, a dishing greater than 50 nm is obtained if the areas do not have protective protrusions while with protrusions the dishing is reduced to less than 5 nm.
This example can be varied with several thickness of oxide, with various forms of projecting parts (spacers, walls, partitions, pillars), with various thickness of spacer, with spacers the width of which varies according to the height (trapezoidal shape), the tops of the projecting parts being able to be wider than their bases (as shown in
The width of the spacers will be smaller, the shorter the oxidation time and therefore the thickness of oxide of the future insulating block.
The width of the spacers will be smaller, the greater the oxidised height of the spacers. The outline diagram of
The invention also applies to the thermal oxidation of SixGey or to the nitriding of silicon, but for shallower cavities since nitriding consumes much less silicon than oxidation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06 55193 | Nov 2006 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/062959 | 11/28/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/15/2009 |