1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a process of fabricating a magnetic device, which includes a dry etching method. More specifically, the present invention relates to the dry etching method which is useful for micro processing for a film or a stack of films of magnetic material(s) (hereinafter the term ‘magnetic material’ is used for ferromagnetic, ferromagnetic, and antiferromagnetic material) such as FeNi, CoFe, FeMn, CoPt, CoFeB, PtMn, and IrMn.
2. Related Background Art
The random access memories such as MRAM (magnetic random access memory) and STRAM (spin transfer random access memory), that use magnetic materials have received attention as a memory which has the same level of high integration density as a DRAM and the same level of a high speed performance as an SRAM, and is nonvolatile and unlimitedly rewritable. Similarly, a thin-film magnetic head which constitutes a magnetic resistance device such as a GMR (giant magneto-resistance) and a TMR (tunneling magneto-resistance), a magnetic sensor and the like have been rapidly developed.
Up to now, an ion milling method has been often employed as an etching process for a magnetic material. However, since the ion milling method is a physical sputter etching process, it is difficult to selectively etch different materials. The ion milling also has a problem that after etching, the profile has a tapered or skirt-like shape. Therefore, the ion milling method has not been suitable particularly for a manufacture of an MRAM having a large capacity, for which a fine processing technology is needed. Additionally, the ion milling has difficulty in processing a substrate having a large area of 300 mm with a high uniformity and is therefore difficulty in enhancing yield, under present circumstances.
In place of such an ion milling method, technologies are starting to be introduced which have been nurtured in a semiconductor industry. Among the technologies, etching processes are positively developed, which use an NH3+CO-based gas that is effective for processing a ferromagnetic material without forming after-corrosion (Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. H8-253881), and which use a CH3OH gas (Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2005-42143). However, the etching processes by using these reactant gases cause an oxidation reaction on the processed surface of the magnetic material, and accordingly caused a problem that the magnetic properties were deteriorated after the magnetic material was processed
A conventional MRAM device or TMR sensor device has had a comparatively large junction area, so that a damaged layer due to the oxidation of the processed surface on the magnetic material has not given a large influence to the magnetic properties. However, as the junction area becomes smaller, the influence due to the oxidation layer (damaged layer) formed on the processed surface cannot be neglected. As the micro processing will further progress in the future, this problem will increasingly give an important influence to the magnetic properties, so that normal device characteristics may not be obtained
An object of the present invention is to provide a process of fabricating a magnetic device, which uses a dry etching method that can reduce an etching damage that can deteriorate the magnetic characteristics by using a gas which does not oxidize the processed surface of a magnetic material, when etching the magnetic material while using a non-organic material as a mask material, and to provide an apparatus therefore.
In order to achieve the above described object, this invention proposes a dry etching method for etching a magnetic material(s) by using a mixture gas of a carbon hydride gas and an inert gas, and by using a mask made from a non-organic material.
An example of the above described etching gas is a mixture gas of ethylene (C2H4) gas and nitrogen (N2) gas.
A mask made from the non-organic material can employ a mask material made of a single film or a stacked film of any of Ta, Ti, Al and Si, or a mask material made from a single film or a stacked film of an oxide or a nitride of any of Ta, Ti, Al and Si.
A mask material can employ, for instance, a single film or a stacked film made from any of Ta, Ti, Al and Si which are single elements The mask material also can employ a single film or a stacked film made from Ta oxide, Ti oxide, Al oxide such as Al2O3, Si oxide such as SiO2, TaN, TiN, AlN, SiN and the like, which are an oxide or a nitride of any of Ta, Ti, Al and Si.
In the above described dry etching method which is adopted in the present invention, the magnetic material is etched while the temperature of the magnetic material is kept desirably in a range of 250° C. or lower. This is because of preventing the magnetic thin film which is extremely thin from receiving an unnecessary thermal damage. The more preferable temperature is in a range from 20 to 100° C. In the above described dry etching method which is adopted in the present invention, the magnetic material is etched desirably in a vacuum in a range from 0.005 Pa to 10 Pa. This pressure range can process the magnetic material with excellent anisotropy. In the above described dry etching method according to the present invention an inert gas is added to an etching gas as an additive gas Any of these gases may be added singly or in an optional combination with gases in the group. It is desirable to add the inert gas in a range of 10% by volume or more but 95% by volume or less into the etching gas. The inert gas to be defined here includes nitrogen gas in addition to a rare gas such as He, Ar, Ne, Xe and Kr.
When a magnetic material is etched by using a dry etching method which is adopted in the present invention and a mask made from a non-organic material, the necessity for after-corrosion treatment is eliminated, and the corrosion resistance of an etching apparatus is not necessary to be particularly considered.
In addition, the dry etching method according to the present invention can reduce an etching damage which occurs when the magnetic material is etched by using the mask made from the non-organic material, and results in deteriorating magnetic characteristics by inhibiting the processed surface from being oxidized during the etching process.
Thus, the present invention can provide a dry etching method which is useful for micro processing for a ferromagnetic thin film made of a single film or a stacked film of an Fe—Ni-based alloy, a Co—Fe-based alloy, an Fe—Mn-based alloy, a Co—Pt-based alloy, an Ni—Fe—Cr-based alloy, a Co—Cr-based alloy, a Co—Pt-based alloy, a Co—Cr—Pt-based alloy, a Co—Pd-based alloy and a C—Fe—B-based alloy.
The exemplary embodiment according to the present invention uses an etching apparatus which is provided with an ICP (Inductive Coupled Plasma) source as illustrated in
The MTJ device having a structure illustrated in
The inside of a vacuum container 2 illustrated in
The above etching process for forming the Ta layer 63 was conducted with the use of CF4 and the PR layer 61 under the following conditions, for instance
Subsequently, layers 64 to 69 including a TMR film were etched by using a mixture gas of a carbon hydride gas and an inert gas as an etching gas and by using the Ta layer 63 which had been formed in the above described process as a mask, and were processed so as to have a predetermined pattern as illustrated in
This process was conducted also with the use of an etching apparatus which was equipped with an ICP plasma source as illustrated in
Usable carbon hydride gases include: a gas of a carbon hydride having an alkylene group such as ethylene (C2H2) and propylene (C3H6), and a gas of a carbon hydride having an ethylene group such as ethane, propane and butane.
Usable inert gases (occasionally, hereinafter referred to as “additive gas”) include N2 gas and a gas of He, Ar, Ne, Xe, Kr and the like, for instance. The gases can be used alone or in a form of a mixture.
A process for fabricating a magnetic device according to the present invention mainly employs a technique of extracting the inert gas ion onto an article to be processed, and a reaction of depositing a carbon compound originating from a carbon hydride gas on the surface to be processed to selectively etch the layers. In other words, when a carbon compound deposits on a mask layer that is hard to be physical-sputtered, the mask layer is changed into a plane that is more hardly etched, which produces a difference of an etching rate between a mask layer and a magnetic layer. Thereby, the layers are selectively etched, and the process according to the present invention can process the layers into a predetermined shape without causing the deterioration of the device due to the oxidation and the like.
Accordingly, the optimum additive amount varies depending on the type of each additive gas, but when the additive gas generally in a range of 10% by volume or more but 95% by volume or less is added with respect to the whole amount of the etching gas, the mixture is usable When the amount of the additive gas is less than 10% by volume, carbon originating from the carbon hydride gas deposits on the surface of the magnetic material during the etching process, so that the magnetic material cannot be etched On the other hand, when the amount of the additive gas exceeds 95% by volume, the difference of the etching rate between the mask layer and the magnetic layer becomes small, which degrades the selectivity of etching.
In the above, a preferred embodiment according to the present invention was described However, the present invention is not limited to the above described embodiment but can be modified into various forms in a technological range grasped from the scope of the claims.
For instance, an etching apparatus is not limited to an ICP-type plasma apparatus having an antenna of one turn as illustrated in
The above described etching gas of ethylene (C2H4) and nitrogen (N2) gas according to the present invention was subjected to a plasma emission spectral analysis. The etching gas of methanol (CH3OH) which is used in a conventional art, was also subjected to the plasma emission spectral analysis similarly, and the results were compared.
(Plasma Emission Spectral Analysis of Etching Gas According to the Present Invention)
(Plasma Emission Spectral Analysis of CH3OH of Etching Gas)
The comparison results are illustrated in
Etching characteristics were compared and examined between the case in which the device has been etched with a dry etching method according to the present invention, and the case in which the device has been etched with the use of a CH3OH-based gas.
An MTJ device illustrated in
Conditions in the process of the comparison test are as follows respectively
(Method of the Present Invention)
The result of this comparative test was summarized in the following Table.
As for an etching rate for NiFe, the uniformity within plane of the etching rate and a selectivity ratio of NiFe to a Ta mask, etching characteristics of ethylene (C2H4) and nitrogen (N2) according to the present invention showed approximately equal values to etching characteristics of methanol (CH3OH). As for the etched shape of the MTJ device, an etching process using ethylene (C2H4) and nitrogen (N2) according to the present invention provided a further perpendicular MTJ taper angle compared to that of the etching process using methanol (CH3OH). This shows that the etching process according to the present invention is effective in the case where the size of the MTJ device becomes smaller along with the tendency of the miniaturization of a device in the future.
A test was carried out in order to examine the lower limit of the additive amount while using various additive inert gases. An additive amount when the etching rate became lower than a predetermined value due to the deposition of an organic material onto a magnetic material was determined by using an ethylene gas as a carbon hydride gas, and the additive amount was assumed to be the lower limit.
As a result, when the additive amount was lower than 15% by volume in the case of nitrogen gas, was lower than 25% by volume in the case of Ar gas, and was lower than 45% by volume in the case of He gas, the organic material deposited on the magnetic material. From the result, it was proved that a process of using nitrogen gas can reduce the used amount of the gas for obtaining a necessary etching rate and provide a preferable result.
It has been found that the above mentioned numbers for the lower limit of the additive gases also depend on the other process conditions used such as ethylene gas flow, chamber pressure, source power, bias power and others. Therefore, it is possible to have different limits for the different process conditions For examples use of another carbon hydride gas will have different lower limits for the additive gas.
The magnetization loss of a NiFe film due to etching process was also examined for the etching process using ethylene (C2H4) and nitrogen (N2) according to the present invention and compared with the CH3OH process It was found that the magnetization change in comparison to the starting (not etched) films after ethylene (C2H4) and nitrogen (N2) process according to the present invention was much smaller than the change after CH3OH process.
Additionally, it has been observed that the ethylene (C2H4) and nitrogen (N2) process according to the present invention can also etch materials that are not magnetic Examples include—Oxides such as SiO2, Al2O3, MgO, Nb2O5, ZrO2, NiO, PrCaMnO, Cr doped SrZrO3, V doped SrZrO3, PbZrTiO3, CuO, LaNiO, HfOx, BiOx, and the like; Single element materials such as Si, Ru, Cu, Fe, Cr, Ni, Pt, Au, Ir, Os, Re and the like; Alloy materials such as Cu—N alloys, Pt—Mn alloys, Ir—Mn alloys, Ni—Fe—Cr alloys, Ni—Cr alloys, and the like. Therefore, the present invention is also related to etching of single layer films or the stack of films comprised of nonmagnetic and/or magnetic materials. For example, the process described in the present invention is applicable to technology of patterned magnetic recording media (ex. BPM (Bit Patterned Media), DTM (Discrete Track Media)) and the like.