1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a method of producing a semiconductor substrate through a lamination process, and more particularly to a method of producing a semiconductor substrate through a lamination process at a state that a thickness of a buried oxide film is thin.
2. Description of Related Art
Recently, semiconductor substrates having a SOI structure that silicon layer or so-called SOI layer is formed on an oxide film are applied as a wafer for a high-performance LSI in electron devices because they are adaptable for speeding up the device and are low in the power consumption and excellent in the pressure resistance, resistance to environment and the like.
As the production method of the semiconductor substrate, there are known a so-called SIMOX method wherein a silicon wafer is implanted with oxygen ions at a high concentration and then subjected to a heat treatment at a high temperature to form an oxide film therein, and a method called as a so-called lamination process. In the lamination process, an oxide film is formed on at least one of a wafer for an active layer forming SOI layer and a wafer for a support substrate and both the wafers are laminated to each other through the oxide film and thereafter the wafer for the active layer is thinned to produce a semiconductor substrate in which SOI layer is formed on the buried oxide film as an insulating film.
Further, the lamination process can be classified into a grind polishing method, a PACE (Plasma Assisted Chemical Etching) method, an ion implantation exfoliation method (which is called as Smart Cut® method), an ELTRAN method and so on. Among them, the ion implantation exfoliation method is frequently used because the crystallinity of the active layer and the thickness uniformity of the active layer are good and the good surface flatness is obtained.
The production procedure of the semiconductor substrate through the lamination process is shown in
Lately, it is required to produce SOI wafers having a higher quality in association with the high integration of the semiconductor devices. For this end, it is increasingly demanded to make the thickness of the buried oxide film thinner, for example, up to a thickness of about 20 nm, or to directly laminate the silicon wafers to each other without utilizing the oxide film as to the laminated wafer.
When the laminated wafer is produced by thinning the buried oxide film or without forming the oxide film through the ion implantation exfoliation process, the wafer for the active layer and the wafer for the support substrate are laminated to each other by thinning the oxide film to be formed on either of the wafers or without forming the oxide film.
In the production of the laminated wafer having a thin oxide film inclusive of the case that the buried oxide film is not formed, however, when the exfoliation heat treatment is carried out after the lamination, blisters are generated between the wafer for the support substrate and the oxide film, or there are generated voids extending from the oxide film to the active layer.
That is, in the conventional production of the semiconductor substrate through the lamination process, defects such as blisters or voids may be caused at the laminated interface. Particularly, such blister or void defects tend to frequently occur as the thickness of the buried oxide film existing between two semiconductor wafers becomes thinner, which comes into a serious problem in the production of the laminated semiconductor substrate having a thin oxide film or having no oxide film.
As a countermeasure on the frequent occurrence of blisters or voids when the thickness of the buried oxide film existing between the two semiconductor wafers is made thinner, JP-A-2004-259970 proposes that the thickness of the wafer for the active layer is increased to increase the thickness of the active layer to thereby raise the hardness of the active layer.
However, even when the thickness of the active layer is made thick, if the thickness of the buried oxide film is thin, the blisters or voids occur naturally. Also, when the thinning of the active layer is promoted, the thickness of the active layer is thickened at the midway step for the purpose of raising the hardness, which takes a great labor in the subsequent thinning treatment and causes the deterioration of the quality. That is, when the thickness of the active layer at the midway step is thick, it is required to conduct the thinning of the active layer by a treatment of thermal oxidation+removal of oxide film, or by grinding or polishing treatment for obtaining a final desired thickness of the active layer. In the latter case, as the treating quantity (oxidation quantity, etching quantity, grinding or polishing quantity) increases, the thickness uniformity of the active layer is deteriorated.
It is, therefore, an object of the invention to provide a method for suppressing the occurrence of defects such as voids or blisters even in the production of the laminated wafer having a thickness of an oxide film thinner than that of the conventional oxide film.
The inventors have made various studies on the frequent occurrence of the defect such as voids or blisters when the thickness of the oxide film is thin in the production of the laminated wafer and found the following knowledge.
That is, the voids or blisters are generated due to the fact that hydrogen ions implanted into the active layer are diffused into the laminated interface in the exfoliation heat treatment to form hydrogen gas, which weakens the bonding strength between the wafer for the active layer and the wafer for the support substrate. If the oxide film formed in the wafer for the active layer is thick, the implantation energy in the hydrogen ion implantation becomes large, so that there is caused a phenomenon that hydrogen ions sputter oxygen from the oxide film and hence oxygen is implanted into the active layer.
When the wafer for the active layer is laminated to the wafer for the support substrate and then subjected to the exfoliation heat treatment, it has newly been revealed that oxygen implanted in the active layer traps hydrogen ions to suppress the diffusion of hydrogen into the laminated interface and hence the generation of defects such as voids or blisters. Further, it has been revealed that when a proper amount of oxygen is implanted into the active layer, the wafer for the active layer becomes hard, which contributes to suppress the generation of the voids or blisters.
On the contrary, when the oxide film formed on the wafer for the active layer is made thin for thinning the thickness of the buried oxide film, or when the thickness of the oxide film to be formed is made thin at the step (b) of
Based on the above knowledge, the inventors have made various investigations on a method capable of implanting a proper dose of oxygen into the active layer even when the thickness of the oxide film is made small.
At first, the inventors introduced the following equation (I) in the examination on the above effect of suppressing the hydrogen diffusion by oxygen every factor:
ND=NHO+NIO+NID (I)
where
ND: total factor number producing the effect of suppressing hydrogen diffusion,
NHO: oxygen introduced into active layer through hydrogen ion implantation,
NIO: oxygen introduced into active layer through ion implantation other than hydrogen,
NID: defects introduced into active layer through ion implantation other than hydrogen.
Based on the above equation (I), the inventors have made various cases and sought optimum conditions for avoiding the defects in case that the thickness of the oxide film is thinned.
Firstly, when hydrogen ions are implanted at an implantation energy: 50 keV and a dose: 6×1016 atoms/cm2 into a wafer for an active layer having an oxide film of usual thickness: 150 nm as the conventional method, a good product having no defect is NHO=4.2×1014 atoms/cm2 from data of a secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). Also, since ions other than hydrogen are not implanted, NIO=0 and NID=0, so that it is sufficient to be ND>4.2×1014 atoms/cm2.
Then, it is considered that the condition for obtaining the good product through only the hydrogen ion implantation is satisfied in case of changing the thickness of the oxide film.
When the condition is NHO=DH (hydrogen dose)×tbox (thickness of oxide film)×kHO (coefficient) . . . (II), from NHO=4.2×1014 atoms/cm2, DH=6×1016 atoms/cm2 and tbox=150 nm is kHO=4.2×1014/{(6×1016)×(150×10−7)}=4.67×102 (/cm).
From the above equation (II), a relation between DH (hydrogen dose) and tbox (thickness of oxide film) is DH=A·1/tboxA=NHO/kHO.
The results of the relation arranged by DH and tbox are shown in
In the light of the above relation, if it is intended to thin the oxide film to not more than 50 nm, it is difficult to satisfy ND only by the hydrogen ion implantation as shown in
In order to satisfy ND, therefore, it has been found that it is necessary to supplement a portion not satisfied by the hydrogen ion implantation through an implantation of ions other than hydrogen, and as a result, the invention has been accomplished.
That is, the summary of the invention is as follows.
(1) A method of producing a semiconductor substrate, which comprises the steps of forming an oxide film having a thickness of not more than 50 nm on a wafer for an active layer forming a silicon layer, implanting hydrogen ions into the wafer for the active layer to form a hydrogen ion implanted layer, implanting ions other than hydrogen to a position such that a depth from the surface side of the other than hydrogen ion implantation is shallower than the hydrogen ion implanted layer, laminating the wafer for the active layer through the oxide film to a wafer for a support substrate, and then exfoliating the wafer for the active layer at the hydrogen ion implanted layer (first invention).
(2) A method of producing a semiconductor substrate, which comprises forming an oxide film having a thickness of not more than 50 nm on a wafer for an active layer forming a silicon layer, implanting ions other than hydrogen into the wafer for the active layer to a position shallower than an exfoliation region of the wafer for the active layer, implanting hydrogen ions into the exfoliation region to form a hydrogen ion implanted layer, laminating the wafer for the active layer through oxide film to a wafer for a support substrate, and then exfoliating the wafer for the active layer at the hydrogen ion implanted layer (second invention).
(3) A method of producing a semiconductor substrate according to item (1) or (2), wherein a plasma treatment is carried out prior to the lamination of the wafer for the active layer and the wafer for the support substrate.
According to the invention, the semiconductor substrate formed by directly silicon wafers to each other through the oxide film having a thickness thinner than the conventional one or without forming the oxide film can be produced under a stable quality without causing defects such as voids or blisters.
The invention lies in that when a semiconductor substrate is produced by directly silicon wafers to each other through the oxide film having a thickness thinner than the conventional one or without forming the oxide film, in addition to hydrogen ions for exfoliating the wafer for the active layer, ions other than hydrogen ions are implanted to sputter a necessary quantity of oxygen from the oxide film and implant oxygen into the active layer, and concrete methods therefor are explained individually.
In the method according to the first invention shown in
Thereafter, ions other than hydrogen such as oxygen ions or argon ions are implanted to a position that a depth from the surface side the hydrogen ion implantation is shallower than the hydrogen ion implanted layer 4 (step (d)). When the implantation of oxygen ions or argon ions is carried out together with the implantation of hydrogen ions, these ions sputter oxygen from the oxide film to implant oxygen required for suppressing void or blister defects into the active layer.
Then, the wafer 1 for the active layer is laminated through the oxide film 3 at the ion implanted side to the wafer 2 for the support substrate (step (e)), and the exfoliation heat treatment is conducted to partly exfoliate the wafer 1 for the active layer at the ion implanted layer 4 as a cleavage plane (exfoliation face) (step (f)), and thereafter re-oxidation treatment (step (g)), removal of oxide film (step (h)) and planarization treatment (step (i)) are carried out to produce a semiconductor substrate 7 in which a silicon layer 6 is formed on a buried oxide film 5.
As the planarization treatment is suitable a treatment in Ar or H2 atmosphere at a high temperature above 1100° C.
In the above method, the ions other than hydrogen are particularly implanted at the step (d) in addition to the implantation of hydrogen ions at the precedent step, so that the diffusion of hydrogen into the laminated interface at the exfoliation heat treatment of the step (f) is suppressed by oxygen sufficiently sputtered at these steps to suppress the occurrence of voids or blisters, whereby there is obtained the semiconductor substrate having a thin thickness of the oxide film.
The condition for implanting oxygen required for the suppression of void or blister defects in the active layer by conducting the implantation of oxygen ions or argon ions in addition to the implantation of hydrogen ions to sputter oxygen from the oxide film with these ions is explained in detail below.
In order that ND defined in the above equation (I) satisfies ND>4.2×1014 atoms/cm2 through the implantation of ions other than hydrogen, it is necessary that a shortage of NHO (oxygen introduced into the active layer by hydrogen ion implantation) is made up by NIO (oxygen introduced into the active layer by element(s) other than hydrogen) and NID (defects introduced into the active layer by implanting ions other than hydrogen).
There are B, P and As as an element generally implanted into the wafer. In Table 1 is shown a dose of oxygen introduced by a recoil phenomenon in the implantation of such an element ion. In
From the results of
RZ=0.0007×qZ1.325 (III)
where qZ is an atomic mass.
Each recoil ratio of hydrogen, oxygen and argon is determined according to the equation (III) as follows:
Hydrogen: RH=0.0007 (qH=1)
Oxygen: RO=0.0277 (qO=16)
Argon: RAr=0.0934 (qAr=40)
When argon ions are implanted after the hydrogen ion implantation at hydrogen dose: 6×1016 atoms/cm2 and implantation energy: 50 keV, a relation between implantation dose of argon ions and thickness of oxide film is determined in order that ND defined in the equation (I) satisfies ND>4.2×1014 atoms/cm2.
At first, the equation (I) in the implantation of argon ions is represented as follows:
ND=NHO+NArO+NArD (I)
When NHO, NArO and NArD are
NHO=DH(hydrogen dose)×tbox(thickness of oxide film)×kHO(coefficient) (II)
(where DH=6×1016 atoms/cm2 and kHO=4.76×102 8/cm)),
NArO=DAr(argon dose)×tbox(thickness of oxide film)×kHO(coefficient) (where kArO=RAr/RH×kHO=0.0934/0.0007×4.67×102=6.23×104) and
NArD=DAr, the above equation (I) is
ND=NHO+NArO+NArD=DH×tbox×kHO+DAr×tbox×kArO+DAr=4.2×1014 atoms/cm2, from which the implantation dose of argon ions is DAr=(4.2×1014-6.0×1016×tbox×4.67×102)/(tbox×6.23×104+1).
Similarly, when oxygen ions are implanted after the hydrogen ion implantation at hydrogen dose: 6×1016 atoms/cm2 and implantation energy: 50 keV, a relation between implantation dose of oxygen ions and thickness of oxide film is determined in order that ND defined in the equation (I) satisfies ND>4.2×1014 atoms/cm2.
At first, the equation (I) in the implantation of oxygen ions is represented as follows:
ND=NHO+NOO+NOD (I)
When NHO, NOO and NOD are
NHO=DH(hydrogen dose)×tbox(thickness of oxide film)×kHO(coefficient) (II)
(where DH=6×1016 atoms/cm2 and kHO=4.76×102 (/cm)),
NOO=DO (oxygen dose)×tbox (thickness of oxide film)×kOO (coefficient) (where kOO=RO/RH×kHO=0.0277/0.0007×4.67×102=1.85×104) and
NOD=DO, the above equation (I) is
ND=NHO+NOO+NOD=DH×tbox×kHO+DO×tbox×kOO+DO=4.2×1014 atoms/cm2, from which the implantation dose of oxygen ions is DO=(4.2×1014-6.0×1016×tbox×4.67×102)/(tbox×1.85×104+1).
In
In the method according to the second invention shown in
Since the implantation of oxygen ions or argon ions is carried out in addition to the implantation of hydrogen ions, oxygen is sputtered from the oxide film by these ions to implant oxygen required for the suppression of void or blister defects into the active layer.
Then, the wafer 1 for the active layer is laminated through the oxide film 3 at the ion implanted side to the wafer 2 for the support substrate (step (e)), and an exfoliation heat treatment is applied to partly exfoliate the wafer 1 for the active layer at the ion implanted layer 4 as a cleavage plane (exfoliation face) (step (f)), and thereafter re-oxidation treatment (step (g)), removal of oxide film (step (h)) and planarization treatment (step (i)) are carried out to produce a semiconductor substrate 7 in which a silicon layer 6 is formed on a buried oxide film 5.
In the above method, the ions other than hydrogen are particularly implanted at the step (c) in addition to the hydrogen ion implantation at the subsequent step, so that the diffusion of hydrogen into the laminated interface at the exfoliation heat treatment of the step (f) is suppressed by oxygen sufficiently sputtered at these steps to suppress the occurrence of voids or blisters, whereby there is obtained the semiconductor substrate having a thin thickness of the oxide film.
Even in the method of
In any methods shown in
According to the method shown in
According to the method shown in
According to the method shown in
According to the method shown in
According to the method shown in
According to the method shown in
According to the method shown in
In these examples, the same procedures as in Invention Examples 1-4 are repeated, respectively, except that the surfaces of the wafer for the active layer and the wafer for the support substrate are subjected to an oxygen plasma treatment prior to the lamination between the wafer for the active layer and the wafer for the support substrate. Moreover, the plasma treatment is carried out under condition that the wafers are kept for 20 seconds after the interior of the reaction chamber replaced with oxygen gas is rendered into a vacuum state.
With respect to the thus obtained semiconductor substrates, the defect number is visually measured under a high-intensity light-gathering lamp or a fluorescent lamp. The results are shown in Table 2. As seen from Table 2, the occurrence of defects is suppressed in the semiconductor substrates according to the invention even when the buried oxide film is thin or the oxide film is not existent. Moreover, it is preferable to previously implant ions other than hydrogen because when hydrogen ions are previously implanted, the organic substance existing on the surface of the wafer is liable to be fixed on the wafer to fear the occurrence of the blisters. More preferably, the wafer after the implantation of ions other than hydrogen is cleaned to conduct the hydrogen ion implantation.
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