a through 1f illustrate an approach for masking with a wet process.
a through 4f illustrate using wet etch and plasma etch in a process for masking complex shapes according to one embodiment of the invention.
a through 5f illustrate using dry etch in a process for masking complex shapes according to one embodiment of the invention.
a through 6e illustrate using a dry etch process for masking a complex shape according to one embodiment of the invention.
b illustrates substrate 101, optional interlayer 102, and shape 103. A developable bottom anti-reflective coating (DBARC) 110 may be applied over substrate 101. DBARC 110 may comprise soluble organic material. DBARC 110 may be applied over substrate 110 by spin coating. Spin coating may also result in DBARC 110 coating the sides of shape 103. DBARC 110 may be used to facilitate the photolithographic process and prevent unwanted reflections under exposure to light for patterning. DBARC 110 may be developable or etchable by the same solvents used to develop or etch photoresist, thereby providing a simplified process.
c illustrates the application and masking of photoresist 120 onto DBARC 110 and shape 103. Photoresist 120 may be of any suitable material; and materials and application are well known in the art. Pattern masks 130 and 131 are provided over photoresist 120 and shape 103 using any suitable process, and many such processes are known in the art. Exposure of photoresist 120 may be from irradiation above the pattern mask 130 and 131.
d illustrates exposed photoresist 129 and unexposed photoresist pattern 127; and unexposed sheltered photoresist 128. Due to the highly directional exposure of the photoresist, sheltered photoresist 128 will not be exposed from the irradiation from above.
e illustrates removal of exposed photoresist 129 by immersion in wet solvent 140, shown by bubbles. Exposed photoresist 129 may be easily removed by wet solvent 140, leaving photoresist pattern 127, photoresist pattern side wall 130, sheltered photoresist 128 and DBARC 110; although a portion of DBARC 110 may also be removed in this step.
Exposed photoresist 129 may dissolve readily in an appropriate solvent. Unexposed photoresist is also soluble in developer, however, at a much slower rate.
f illustrates a continuation of immersion in wet solvent 140. As noted above, wet solvent 140 may dissolve unexposed photoresist, however at a slow rate. In this approach, immersion in wet solvent 140 may continue until sheltered photoresist 128 is fully dissolved. In this approach, DBARC 110 is also soluble in wet solvent 140, and is also removed. A portion of DBARC 110 or sheltered photoresist 128 is shown as residue 160 at the bottom of shape 103. Residue 160 may be removed completely by continued immersion in wet solvent 140. Photoresist pattern 127 was also partly dissolved by the continued immersion; however, may retain a controlled side wall 131. This loss of photoresist from side wall 131 from original position shown in side wall 127 in
DBARC 110 may not dissolve at the same rate as the photoresist pattern 127. If DBARC 110 dissolves at a faster rate than photoresist pattern 127, an undercut 132 may result. In some applications, undercut 132 may be detrimental and render process 100 less effective. Undercut 132 may result in voids when a subsequent material is deposited into the pattern between shape 103 and photoresist pattern 127. Undercut 132 may also result in an undesirable shape above substrate 101 if any deposited material fills into the undercut 132.
Conventional inductively coupled plasma etching or ion beam etching is anisotropic. Etching is performed by ion bombardment in a process that has been compared to sand blasting. In some conventional plasma etching systems, ions are exited between inductively coupled parallel plates and bombard a target from a single direction. For many applications, this is very desirable, and may provide excellent mask etching with well controlled vertical side walls; thereby providing sharp masks without undercutting. This attribute of inductively coupled plasma etching has a disadvantage when material to be removed is not accessible from a direction perpendicular between the parallel plates. In some instances, the target being etched may be tilted to provide line-of-sight access to the ion bombardment for etching. This may be very cumbersome and time consuming if complex shapes are involved; and many angles of incidence may be required. Some shapes, for example cantilevers or beams, may not be accessible to ion bombardment from any accessible direction.
Microwave plasma, however, operates on a different principle and excites the plasma ions in an isotropic manner. Material is removed from surfaces uniformly and line-of-sight access is not required.
Microwave plasma etching that is hydrogen based is particularly useful for removing organic photoresist and DBARC. The wet etching process can remove large areas of photoresist very efficiently, but may have detrimental effects when removing photoresist in sheltered areas. Wet etching is isotropic, that is, it etches in all directions equally. By performing a wet etch and stopping prior to removing all the photoresist from the sheltered areas, problems such as undercutting and undesired residue can be avoided. Due to the nature of microwave plasma etching, an isotropic etching occurs. Etching occurs in all directions uniformly. Photoresist and DBARC compositions may be chosen to have properties that etch uniformly by microwave plasma etching, and hydrogen based plasma is effective in etching organic photoresist and DBARC. Mask patterns therefore may preserve the sharp vertical walls provided by developing photoresist. In one embodiment of process 200, the hydrogen based plasma comprises CH3OH. In a further embodiment, the CH3OH ion density may be greater than 0.5×1012 per cm3, and gas pressure between 75 mTorr and 750 mTorr. In another embodiment, the gas flow rate may be between 80 ml/minute and 200 ml/minute. In another embodiment, the plasma temperature may be between 80° C. and 150° C., and in a further embodiment, the microwave power may be between 100 and 1000 watts.
In one embodiment of process 200, the hydrogen based plasma comprises a mixture of hydrogen and nitrogen. In a further embodiment, the N2/H2 ion density may be greater than 0.5×1012 per cm3, and gas pressure between 75 mTorr and 750 mTorr.
In another embodiment, the gas flow rate may be between 80 ml/minute and 200 ml/minute. In another embodiment, the plasma temperature may be between 80° C. and 150° C., and in a further embodiment, the microwave power may be between 100 and 1000 watts.
For some applications, wet etching may be undesirable. Wet etching may not be compatible with the chemistry of the materials used, possibly leading to corrosion or chemical reactions. Wet etching may also be undesirable due to process limitations.
In
In one embodiment of process 300, the hydrogen based plasma comprises CH3OH. In a further embodiment, the CH3OH ion density may be greater than 0.5×1012 per cm3, and gas pressure between 75 mTorr and 750 mTorr. In another embodiment, the gas flow rate may be between 80 ml/minute and 200 ml/minute. In another embodiment, the plasma temperature may be between 80° C. and 150° C., and in a further embodiment, the microwave power may be between 100 and 1000 watts.
In one embodiment of process 300, the hydrogen based plasma comprises a mixture of hydrogen and nitrogen. In a further embodiment, the N2/H2 ion density may be greater than 0.5×1012 per cm3, and gas pressure between 75 mTorr and 750 mTorr. In another embodiment, the gas flow rate may be between 80 ml/minute and 200 ml/minute. In another embodiment, the plasma temperature may be between 80° C. and 150° C., and in a further embodiment, the microwave power may be between 100 and 1000 watts.
a through 4f illustrate process 400 using wet etching and microwave plasma etching for masking complex shapes according to one embodiment of the invention.
In
a also illustrates DBARC 410 applied over substrate 401. DBARC 410 may comprise soluble organic material. DBARC 410 may be applied over substrate 410 by spin coating. Spin coating may also result in DBARC 410 coating the sides of shape 403. DBARC 410 may be used to facilitate the photolithographic process and prevent unwanted reflections when exposed when exposed to light for patterning. DBARC 410 may be developable or etchable by the same solvents used to develop or etch photoresist, thereby providing a simplified process.
b illustrates the application and masking of photoresist 420 onto DBARC 410 and shape 403. Organic photoresist 420 may be of any suitable material; and materials and application is well known in the art. Pattern mask 430 and 431 are provided over photoresist 420 and shape 403 using any suitable process, and many such processes are known in the art. Exposure of the photoresist 420 may be from irradiation direction 405 above the pattern masks 430 and 431.
c illustrates substrate 401, DBARC 410, exposed photoresist 429 and unexposed photoresist pattern 427. Unexposed photoresist may also occur on the sides of shape 403 as described in process 100, shown in
d illustrates removal of the exposed photoresist 429 of
e illustrates a dry process after wet etching as described in
f illustrates shape 403 with residue 433 in
a through 5f illustrate process 500 using dry etch in a process for masking complex shapes according to one embodiment of the invention.
In
a also illustrates DBARC 510 applied over substrate 501. DBARC 510 may comprise soluble organic material. DBARC 510 may be applied over substrate 510 by spin coating. Spin coating may also result in DBARC 510 coating the sides of shape 503. DBARC 510 may be used to facilitate the photolithographic process and prevent unwanted reflections when exposed when exposed to light for patterning. DBARC 510 may be developable or etchable by the same solvents used to develop or etch photoresist, thereby providing a simplified process.
b illustrates the application and masking of photoresist 520 onto DBARC 510 and shape 503. Organic photoresist 520 may be of any suitable material; and materials and application is well known in the art. Pattern mask 530 and 531 are provided over photoresist 520 and shape 503 using any suitable process, and many such processes are known in the art. Lithographic exposure of photoresist 520 may be from direction 505 above the pattern masks 530 and 531.
c illustrates substrate 501, DBARC 510, exposed photoresist 529 and unexposed photoresist pattern 527. Unexposed photoresist may also occur on the sides of shape 503 as described in process 100; and shown in
d illustrates removal of the exposed photoresist 529 of
In
f illustrates shape 503 with residue 533 removed from sheltered side 537. Any remaining photoresist residue or DBARC residue is also removed from substrate 501. Photoresist pattern 527; and underlying DBARC 510 have been partially removed by the hydrogen based plasma etching. Photoresist pattern 527 and DBARC 510 have been etched from their original location illustrated by photoresist pattern side wall 535 in
a through 6e illustrate process 600 using a dry etch process for masking a complex shape according to one embodiment of the invention.
a illustrates structure 601 with top surface 602, trench 603, bottom 604, support 605, side wall 606, cantilever 607, and overhang 608.
b illustrates photoresist mask 610 applied on structure 601. Photoresist mask may be applied to facilitate other operations in the process, for example to form structures for deposition, etching, plating, or sputtering operations; and some or all of the mask may be removed at a later operation. Photoresist 610 may be applied in a fluid state and may fill in trenches or voids. One method of applying photoresist may be by spin coating.
b shows removal of unwanted photoresist by anisotropic plasma etching from direction 620. Anisotropic etching, for example by using an inductively coupled plasma source, is highly directional and will not etch around obstructions. Area 611 under cantilever 607 is sheltered from anisotropic plasma direction 620 and will not be etched away. Anisotropic etching is capable of etching large areas efficiently and may provide a highly productive first etching process on complex shapes.
d illustrates first angle incident anisotropic plasma etching 630 and second angle incident anisotropic plasma etching 640. Angle incident etching is known in the art and can remove material from surfaces not accessible from any single direction; however, structure 601 has surfaces that cannot be etched from any combination of angles. Residue 612 cannot be etched by anisotropic etching from any combination of angles that are accessible from an anisotropic ion source.
e illustrates removal of residue 612 from structure 601 using hydrogen based microwave plasma etching 650, illustrated by random arrows.
Although the foregoing has been described in terms of certain embodiments, other embodiments will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from the disclosure herein. Figures are illustrative and not drawn to scale. For example; proximity between structures such as trenches, side walls, top and bottom surfaces are illustrated compactly for clarity, but may be separated by much larger distances. Structures shown as solids may employ gradients, layers; or may have seed layers, interlayers, or laminations. Common operations that are known to those of ordinary skill in the art have been omitted or simplified in figures for clarity. The described embodiments have been presented by way of example only and are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure. Indeed, the novel methods and systems described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms without departing from the spirit thereof. Thus, the invention is not limited by any preferred embodiments, but is defined by reference to the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4529860 | Robb | Jul 1985 | A |
5010378 | Douglas | Apr 1991 | A |
5173442 | Carey | Dec 1992 | A |
5328810 | Lowrey et al. | Jul 1994 | A |
5562801 | Nulty | Oct 1996 | A |
5661083 | Chen et al. | Aug 1997 | A |
5798303 | Clampitt | Aug 1998 | A |
5994226 | Kadomura | Nov 1999 | A |
6309976 | Lin et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6649531 | Cote et al. | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6787475 | Wang et al. | Sep 2004 | B2 |
6951823 | Waldfried et al. | Oct 2005 | B2 |
6984585 | Ying et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
7253115 | Tanaka et al. | Aug 2007 | B2 |
7265060 | Tsai et al. | Sep 2007 | B2 |
7297638 | An et al. | Nov 2007 | B2 |
7371507 | Myung | May 2008 | B2 |
7390753 | Lin et al. | Jun 2008 | B2 |
7547669 | Lee | Jun 2009 | B2 |
7674755 | Egbe et al. | Mar 2010 | B2 |
7700533 | Egbe et al. | Apr 2010 | B2 |
7718543 | Huang et al. | May 2010 | B2 |
20030100190 | Cote et al. | May 2003 | A1 |
20040214448 | Chan et al. | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20090029557 | Kikuchi et al. | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20090173977 | Xiao et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
20090192065 | Korzenski et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |