The present invention relates in general to melting and recrystallization of thin silicon (Si) layers by pulsed laser irradiation. The method relates in particular to methods of evaluating the recrystallized layers.
Silicon crystallization is a step that is often used in the manufacture of thin-film transistor (TFT) active-matrix LCDs, and organic LED (AMOLED) displays. The crystalline silicon forms a semiconductor base, in which electronic circuits of the display are formed by conventional lithographic processes. Commonly, crystallization is performed using a pulsed laser beam shaped in a long line having a uniform intensity profile along the length direction (long-axis), and also having a uniform or “top-hat” intensity profile in the width direction (short-axis). In this process, a thin layer of amorphous silicon on a glass substrate is repeatedly melted by pulses of laser radiation while the substrate (and the silicon layer thereon) is translated relative to a delivery source of the laser-radiation pulses. Melting and re-solidification (re-crystallization) through the repeated pulses, at a certain optimum energy density (OED), take place until a desired crystalline microstructure is obtained in the film.
Optical elements are used to form the laser pulses into a line of radiation, and crystallization occurs in a strip having the width of the line of radiation. Every attempt is made to keep the intensity of the radiation pulses highly uniform along the line. This is necessary to keep crystalline microstructure uniform along the strip. A favored source of the optical pulses is an excimer laser, which delivers pulses having a wavelength in the ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum. The above described crystallization process, using excimer-laser pulses, is usually referred to as excimer-laser annealing (ELA). The process is a delicate one, and the error margin for OED can be a few percent or even as small as ±0.5%
There are two modes of ELA. In one mode, the translation speed of a panel relative to the laser beam is sufficiently slow that the “top-hat portion” of the beam-width overlaps by as much as 95% from one pulse to the next so any infinitesimal area receives a total of about 20 pulses. In another mode referred to as advanced ELA or AELA the translation speed is much faster and in a single pass over a panel the irradiated “lines” have minimal overlap and may even leave un-crystallized space therebetween. Multiple passes are made such that the entire panel is irradiated with a total number of pulses that may be less than in an ELA process to produce equivalent material.
Whichever ELA mode is employed, evaluation of crystallized films on panels in a production line is presently done off line, by visual inspection. This inspection is entirely subjective and relies on highly trained experienced inspectors, who through their experience are able to correlate observed features of the panels with very small changes, for example less than 1%, in energy density in the crystallizing beam. In a manufacturing environment, the process of visual analysis and establishing if a change of process energy density is necessary typically takes between about one and one and one-half hours from when the crystallization was performed, with a corresponding adverse effect on production line throughput of acceptable panels.
There is a need for an objective method of evaluation of the ELA process. Preferably, the method should be capable at least of being implemented on a production line. More preferably, the method should be capable of being used for quasi real-time evaluation in a feedback loop for automatically adjusting process energy density responsive to data provided by the evaluation.
The present invention is directed to evaluating the progress of crystallization of semiconductor layer at least partially crystallized by exposure to a plurality of laser-radiation pulses having an energy density on the layer. The crystallization produces first and second groups of periodic surface features on the layer in respectively first and second directions perpendicular to each other, the form of the first and second groups of periodic features depending on the energy density of the laser-radiation pulses to which the semiconductor laser has been exposed.
In one aspect of the present invention an evaluation method comprises delivering light to an area of the crystallized semiconductor layer such that first and second portions of the light are diffracted by respectively the first and second groups of periodic features. The amplitudes of the first and second diffracted light portions are separately measured. The energy density on the layer of the laser-radiation pulses is determined from the measured amplitudes of the first and second diffracted light portions.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, schematically illustrate a preferred embodiment of the present invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the preferred embodiment given below, serve to explain principles of the present invention.
ELA processing of thin Si films leads to formation of surface roughness: protrusions are formed as a result of the expansion of Si upon solidification; they are formed especially between three or more solidification fronts colliding during lateral growth. The protrusions are often not randomly located. Rather, they are aligned due to processes of ripple formation collectively referred to in the literature as laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS). The ripples thus consist of series of well aligned protrusions. The ripple formation is only observed within an energy density window (range) in which partial melting of the film is achieved. Typically the ripple periodicity is on the order of the wavelength of the incident light, for example, around 290-340 nm for XeCl excimer lasers. Because of these small dimensions, ripples cannot or can at best hardly be resolved using conventional optical microscopy techniques.
What is typically observed in optical bright field microscopy is that the surface of ELA processed films consists of elongated darker colored regions interspersed with brighter regions. Close inspection of the darker regions shows that they consist of more strongly rippled (ordered) regions having higher protrusions, while in between are regions having less order and/or lower protrusions. The more ordered regions are herein referred to as ridges, while the regions in between are referred to as valleys. It is an inventive finding that the formation of ridges appears to be correlated to that of ripples with the typical orientation of ridges being in a direction perpendicular to the ripple direction. The inventive method and apparatus rely on measuring light-diffraction from ridges in a thin Si film (layer) that are formed as a result of the ELA process. The method offers an indirect measure of the degree of rippling that can be used for monitoring or controlling the ELA process in quasi real-time. In addition, a method is described looking more directly at the ripples themselves, albeit using microscopy techniques that are relatively slow compared to more conventional optical microscopy techniques used for measuring diffraction from ridges.
Ripples are commonly not formed in one direction only. The ripples are predominantly formed in a direction parallel to the scan direction, and also in a direction perpendicular to the scan direction (the line direction). The ripples are periodic and are described herein by the direction of their periodicity, using terminology common in metallurgy, wherein the rolling direction (RD) corresponds with the scanning direction and the transverse direction (TD) corresponds with the line-direction. Accordingly, since ripples oriented in the scan direction are periodic in the transverse direction, they are termed TD ripples. Similarly ripples oriented in the line direction are periodic in the rolling direction and are termed RD ripples.
In accordance with LIPSS theory, TD ripples have a spacing roughly equal to the wavelength of the light, while RD ripples are spaced approximately λ/(1±sin θ), with the λ/(1−sin θ) spacing typically dominant, wherein θ is the angle of incidence of laser-radiation on the layer, which in ELA typically is about 5 or more degrees. Ripple formation is instrumental in obtaining uniform poly-Si films, because the grain structure tends to follow the surface periodicity. When ripples are present, ideally, a very ordered film consisting predominantly of rectangular grains sized roughly λ by λ/(1−sin θ) is formed. At lower energy density (ED), grains are smaller and at higher ED, grains are larger. When grains larger than the ripple domain size are grown, herein referred to as super-lateral growth (SLG), surface reflow will result in reduction of the protrusion height and a gradual loss of the order in the film.
In a first experiment to determine a numerical relationship between surface periodicity caused by the ripples and ED of laser pulses, laser scanning microscope (LSM) images of crystallized films were analyzed by fast Fourier transform (FFT), with transforms made in the RD and TD directions. A peak in the FFT indicates the existence of a certain surface periodicity and the location of the peak corresponds to the direction of the surface periodicity. The TD-transform provided sharp peaks at about 1/λ indicating strong TD periodicity. RD transforms showed peaks less sharp at about (1−sin θ)/λ and with lower amplitude than those of the TD transforms, i.e., less pronounced RD ripples with about (1−sin θ)/λ spacing.
Unlike ripples, the ridges are not strictly periodic. However, the ridges have a characteristic spacing that can typically range between about 1.5 μm and about 3.0 μm, or about an order of magnitude larger than the spacing between the ripples. In accordance with the terminology of ripples the ridges are referred to in the direction of periodicity, i.e., RD ridges are oriented in the transverse direction and TD ridges are oriented in the rolling direction.
The FFT analysis, in itself, clearly provides one means of evaluating a crystallized layer. However, the steps required to generate the above discussed information are generally slow and would not encourage use of such analysis for near real-time on-line monitoring or evaluation of a layer crystallized by ELA or A-ELA. Accordingly, it was decided to investigate the possibility of analyzing diffraction phenomena associated with the perpendicularly oriented groups of ridges associated with RD and TD ripples, rather than attempting to directly measure the ripples themselves.
The center of the conoscopic image corresponds to the optical axis of the microscope system and the distance from the optical axis (center spot) corresponds to the angle over which the light travels. Accordingly, the conoscopic image provides information on the direction of light in the microscope.
A condenser diaphragm was set close to a minimum aperture to limit the angular distribution of incident light on the sample and consequently to restrict the image of the aperture to the center of the conscopic image. The remainder of the image is formed by light diffracted from the TD and RD ridge groups formed by the crystallization. The polarizer and analyzer, together, act to minimize the brightness of the central spot relative to the rest of the image. At 90-degrees relative rotation the two polarizers form a pair of crossing bands of extinction, known as isogyres, in the conoscopic image. By rotating polarizer and analyzer together with respect to the sample, the isogyres can be rotated away from the diffraction bands to minimize extinction of the bands.
The actual image represented in gray-scale in
The microscope objective was a 20× objective. A fragmented edge of the central spot where the intensity gradient is high gives an indication of the image pixel size. The larger squares in the dark quadrants are an artifact of JPEG image-compression.
In a horizontal direction of the figure there is a strong band of light resulting from diffraction by RD ridges (as related to TD ripples). In the vertical direction of the figure, there is weaker band of light resulting from diffraction by TD ridges (as related to RD ripples). Transmitted light forms a bright spot in the center of the image.
As would be expected from the graphs of
A commercially available raster graphics editor was used to determine the mean brightness of the blue and green channels of polarized light images as a measure of the diffraction of RD ridges and TD ridges, respectively. A disadvantage of this approach is that the image color channels do not provide optimized filtering to see the band brightness so that there is quite a significant cross-talk between the two signals. Also the signal of the non-diffracted central spot is superimposed on these color channels so that they have a higher noise level. Even so, the difference clearly shows a trend, with the OED found when the ratio of the green channel brightness to the blue channel brightness reaches a maximum, as depicted in
Alternatively a conoscopic image recorded by a CMOS array or CCD array, similar to the image of
A partially reflective and partially transmissive optical element 32 (a beamsplitter) directs beam 29 onto layer 22 at normal incidence to the layer as depicted in
The reflected and diffracted light is transmitted through element 32. The reflected light is blocked by a stop 38. The diffracted light by-passes stop 38 and is incident on an optical detector element 52 in a detector unit 50. An electronic processor 54 is provided in detector unit 50 and is arranged to determine the amplitude of the diffracted light received by the detector.
Detector element 52 can be a pixelated detector such as a CCD array or a CMOS array as discussed above, recording a conoscopic image of the diffracted light (see
In either case, another spectral filter (not shown) can be provided for limiting the bandwidth of light from source 28 to those colors which are diffracted. This will reduce noise due to scattered light (not shown) from layer 22, that is able to by-pass stop 38 and mix with the diffracted light.
In
Alternative to a reflected light microscope, a transmitted light microscope may be used. Such a microscope setting does not have a beamsplitter but does require a separate condenser lens ahead of the sample. For best results the beam stop 38 may be placed in the back focal plane of the objective or in any conjugate plane thereof after the sample. For reflected light microscopy, the beam stop is best placed in a conjugate plane to the back focal plane of the objective that is located after the beamsplitter so as to not also block the incoming light.
It should be noted that the diffraction from ridges was observed also in the absence of polarizers and/or a beam stop. Diffraction bands could also still be observed after removal of the objective and/or the condenser lenses. Such lenses should thus be seen as a tool to optimize the measurement in terms of brightness and selectivity of the region within the film that is being probed. They are not critical elements of the apparatus described herein.
Above-described apparatus 20 is positioned above layer 22. Processing unit 54 determines from the amplitude of the TD-ridge diffracted and RD ridge diffracted light components observed by detector element 52 and an electronic look-up table created from experimental curves such as the curves of
Typically the energy density in the projected laser beam (pulse energy or process ED) is initially controlled at the nominal OED. The delivered energy density, however, may drift with time, which is usually recorded as an apparent drift of the OED. If the OED appears to have drifted to a lower value than nominal, the ED will be below the OED; there will be a lower density of ridges in both directions as discussed above; and, accordingly, both the diffraction signals will be reduced in magnitude. A signal is then sent from processing unit 54 to attenuator 66 to reduce the pulse energy delivered to the layer. If the OED appears to have drifted to a higher value than nominal, the ED will be below the instant OED; there will be a lower density of RD ridges relative to TD ridges discussed above; and, accordingly, both the RD ridge diffraction magnitude will decrease while the TD diffraction magnitude remains the same. A signal is then sent from processing unit 54 to attenuator 66 to appropriately increase the pulse energy delivered to the layer.
The above-described correction process does not, of course, have to be done automatically using the feedback arrangement of
The inventive method and apparatus may thus be used to find OED from a panel containing multiple scans each at a different ED for example with ED 10, 5, or even just 2 mJ/cm2 apart. A microscope according to the present invention may be mounted inside an annealing chamber of laser annealing apparatus. The microscope may include a zoom-lens assembly to change the magnification. The panel can be scanned underneath the microscope to allow the panel to be measured at one or multiple locations per condition. The microscope may additionally be provided with a stage to make movements in the transverse direction. An automatic focusing arrangement may be added but this will not be necessary for a conoscopic image as this has a larger depth of focus than the ELA process. Fully crystallized panels can also be measured (either online or offline) in one or more locations to detect the quality of the process so that the crystallization of further panels may be interrupted if necessary. If sufficient measurements are carried out, a map of defects (mura) may be obtained.
It should be noted here that while the present invention is described with reference to evaluating ELA and A-ELA crystallized silicon layers, the invention is applicable to evaluating crystallized layers of other semiconductor materials. By way of example, layers of germanium (Ge) or Ge and Silicon alloy make be evaluated.
In summary, while the invention is described above in terms of a preferred and other embodiments, the invention is not limited to the embodiments described and depicted. Rather, the invention is limited only by the claims appended hereto
This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/663,435, filed Jun. 22, 2012, the complete disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61663435 | Jun 2012 | US |