The field of the invention is that of forming passive components in the back end of the line wiring of an integrated circuit.
Conventionally, the formation of passive components, e.g. resistors and capacitors, in the back end employs one or more photolithographic masks to define the deposition of a high-resistance material in the case of resistors and the deposition of a pair of planar electrodes with a dielectric between in the case of a capacitor.
In the case of resistors, the material has a high resistivity compared with the Al or Cu of the interconnect material and therefore requires a separate deposition step and a special mask different from the mask of the nth wiring level. In the case of capacitors, there will be separate deposition steps for horizontal planar electrodes and for the dielectric between the electrodes.
Structures like these perform well enough, but the requirement of one or more additional masks means that the use of such structures incurs additional costs to have the masks made, plus yield detractors associated with the additional handling and processing steps.
The art could benefit from a method of forming passive components that does not require additional masks and/or processing steps.
The invention relates to a method of forming passive components in the back end that does not require the use of an additional mask.
A feature of the invention is that the structure is formed by combining wires and vias defined by the same masks used for interconnections in the back end.
Another feature of the invention is that structures on different levels of interconnection are combined so as to reduce variability in the value of the resistance or capacitance of the device being formed.
a and 9B show top views of an alternative embodiment
Passive Resistors:
Box 3 on the right represents schematically other interconnections on the (n+1)th level in other parts of the circuit being constructed. Box 2 also represents schematically other interconnections on the nth level in other parts of the circuit being constructed.
Each resistive element in
The example in
The designer of the product containing the structure (e.g. an integrated circuit) will decide what will be the cross section of the resistive element. In a preferred embodiment, a cross section for the wire in the resistive element is greater than 1× (e.g. 1.4) and in a range of greater than 1× to 2× the corresponding minimum cross section width of the regular interconnect. This counterintuitive result, since the resistance will thereby be lowered, results from a desire to reduce variability of the total resistance of the final structure. The wire resistance variability is determined by the variation in width, height, and conductor resistivity. For minimum width wires, the variability is typically dominated by the wire width variation. Thus, for example, a 200 nm wide wire will have 40% less resistance variability than a 100 nm wide wire. In addition, more than one via is preferably used in a parallel connection as shown in
Table I shows measured wire reistance variability (the range from 5th to 95th percentile, measured on both 200 mm and 300 mm wafers with approximately 20 sites per wafer measured) for various wire serpentine structures. For the 130 nm generation fluorinated SiO2 (FSG) dielectric, the measured wire resistance variability decreased substantially as the wire width increased from 200 nm to 3 um. For all structures, wiring generations, and dielectrics, the measured wire variability decreased as the number of wiring levels used increased from 1 to 2 to 3.
Passive Capacitors:
On chip capacitors can be formed using the self or natural capacitance of the BEOL wires (J. Kim et al., IEEE 2003 Symp. on VLSI Circuits, p 29). By employing methods similar to those discussed supra for resistors, the vertical natural capacitor (VNC) capacitance can be increased, the capacitance variability can be decreased, and the reliability, as measured by ramping the voltage until the capacitor fails, performing time dependent dielectric breakdown stressing (TDDB), or calculating the yield to a specific leakage current criteria, can be improved.
One method of increasing the capacitance density of VNC capacitors is to include vias between the interpenetrating comb structures.
Table II shows the effect of decreasing the transverse dimension of vias in a structure such as that shown in
In general, the wiring pitch (pitch=minimum wire width+minimum wire space) is not constant for multilevel wiring. For the 65 nm generation, illustrative wiring pitches are given below, and the wire width and space are approximately ½ the pitch:
M1—160 nm
M2-M6—200 nm
M7-M8—400 nm
M9-M10—800 nm
When the wires are used to form resistors or capacitors, it is desirable to have a repeating unit cell. One method of achieving this is to use the M2-M6 wiring as a template, with the M1 wires having same width/space as M2; M7-M8 having double the pitch, and M9-M10 having quadruple the pitch: An example is shown in the following Table III
Although, in this example, a simple wire pitch doubling algorithm is used, any algorithm which results in a repeating unit cell could be used.
As with any wiring structures, it is desirable to minimize wire to wire or via to wire/via shorting both during processing and while the chip is in the field. For large minimum space structures, such as the capacitors or resistors discussed in this disclosure, a reaction between the dielectric and non-inert atmosphere (e.g. humid air) can occur, resulting in either the growth of Cu containing particles between wires or the degradation of the electrical insulative properties of the intermetal dielectric due to water absorption. To prevent this ambient atmosphere-induced degradation, particularly for FSG and carbon-based oxide (SiCOH) intermetal dielectrics (IMD), the time between Cu CMP and the post CMP dielectric cap deposition should be minimized and kept below a time window threshold amount. In particular, for FSG-IMD, the time window should be less than 16 hours, e.g. 6 hours; and, for SiCOH-IMD, the time window should be less than 120 hours, e.g. 24 hours. This allows for flexibility in manufacturing without degradation of the VNC yield or reliability, as determined by voltage ramp to fail or TDDB stressing. For films sensitive to water absorption, a bake-out, e.g. 400C in a vacuum or inert ambient for 1 hour, rework step could be employed for wafers which exceed the time window.
The following claims refer to the first and second wiring levels. It will be evident to those skilled in the art that the first wiring level of a structure may be on the second, third, etc metal wiring level of the back end.
The disclosure has used a dual damascene technique for illustration, as this technique is economical. The invention can also be practiced with separate steps for the interconnections and for the vias
While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced in various versions within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100297825 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11164634 | Nov 2005 | US |
Child | 12849086 | US |