The present invention relates to a production method of an SiC monitor wafer which is introduced into a semiconductor process device and has an ultra-flat and highly pure surface.
A semiconductor device having a silicon single crystal as a substrate goes through an oxidization process for forming an oxide film on the surface of a silicon substrate (silicon wafer), a diffusion process for diffusing impurities, a low pressure CVD (LPCVD) process for forming a silicon nitride film, a polycrystal silicon film (polysilicon film) under reduced pressure and the like, and has a very small circuit formed on the silicon wafer. Semiconductor production facility called diffusion equipment, an LPCVD equipment and the like are used for these processes. Each of these equipment is composed of a furnace part into which a plurality of silicon wafers are inserted and which heats the silicon wafer main body to high temperature, a gas introduction part for supplying a reactive gas into the furnace, an exhaust part and the like, and a number of silicon wafers can be simultaneously processed (batch processing) therein.
In
A boat pedestal 18 is provided at a center portion of a base 16 covered with the process tube 14, and a wafer boat 20 in a vertical rack shape formed of SiC, quartz, or the like is placed on this boat pedestal 18. A number of silicon wafers 22 to form semiconductor devices such as a large scale integrated circuit (LSI) and the like are held with appropriate spaces between them in a vertical direction of the wafer boat 20. A gas introduction pipe 24 for introducing a reaction gas into the furnace and a thermocouple protecting tube 26 containing a thermocouple for measuring the temperature inside the furnace are placed at the sides of the wafer boat 20.
In the CVD equipment 10 constituted as above, a number of silicon wafers 22 are placed inside the furnace via the wafer boat 20. The pressure of the inside of the furnace is reduced to 100 Torr or less, the inside of the furnace is heated to a high temperature of, for example, 800° C. to 1200° C., and a carrier gas such as H2 and a reaction gas (raw material gas) such as SiCl4 are introduced into the furnace via the gas introduction pipe 24, whereby a polycrystal silicon film (polysilicon film) and a silicon oxide film (SiO2) are formed on the surface of the silicon wafer 22.
In the CVD device 10 as described above, a plurality of monitor wafers 30 are placed to mingle with the silicon wafers 22 at appropriate positions in the vertical direction of the wafer boat 20 to check the state of particles attached to the silicon wafer 22 and to check whether a film of predetermined thickness is formed on the silicon wafer 22 and the like. An Si single crystal wafer with surface roughness of about Ra=0.25 nm is generally used for a monitor wafer which is used to perform management of the film thickness of the formed thin film, particles and the like as described above. Though very flat surface as described above is obtained with the silicon single crystal, the conventional monitor wafer cannot be reused by washing the film with acid or the like when a polysilicon film or a silicon oxide film is formed, and it is thrown away after one use, which makes it very uneconomical. Consequently, SiC wafers, which are excellent in anticorrosion against nitric acid and the like, facilitate removal of deposits caused by etching, and can be repeatedly used for a long period of time, receive attention.
On the other hand, SiC has high hardness, then it is difficult to produce an ultra-flat surface. Polishing with use of a diamond abrasive grain is generally performed, but it easily gives a scratch damage onto the wafer surface by the abrasive grain or the SiC itself which is fallen away. Concerning the surface cleanness, there exists the problem of impurities mixing in this grinding process.
With the prior SiC polishing technique, it is not possible to produce an SiC monitor wafer having an ultra-flat and clean surface at low cost. For example, with the design rule of 0.13 μm in mind, it is necessary to detect a particle (dust) of at least 0.1 μm. However, with the SiC polishing technique corresponding to volume production of the present situation, the average roughness is about Ra=20 nm, and therefore it is confirmed that the particle detection cannot be performed with this surface roughness.
The present invention is made in view of the above-described problem of the prior art, and has its object to provide the SiC monitor wafer production method which can make a surface flat until the particle detection becomes possible.
In order to attain the above-described object, in a production method of an SiC monitor wafer according to the present invention, 3C-SiC is grown in a [111] direction by CVD. A C surface of SiC is polished and is irradiated with the GCIB by an Ar gas. Further, CF4, SF6, NF3, CHF3 Or O2 alone or a mixture gas of them is used as a gas seed of the GCIB.
More specifically, a production method of an SiC monitor wafer according to the present invention comprises the steps of depositing SiC of crystal system 3C on a substrate by a CVD (Chemical Vapor Deposition) method; detaching the SiC from the substrate; flattening the SiC surface by using mechanical polishing alone or in combination with CMP (Chemo Mechanical Polishing); thereafter, irradiating the surface with GCIB (Gas Cluster Ion Beam) until the surface roughness becomes Ra=0.5 nm or less, and impurity density of the wafer surface becomes 1×1011 atoms/cm2 or less to thereby produce the SiC monitor wafer.
Further, in the CVD process, 3C-SiC crystal may be oriented and grown in a direction of [100] or [110] or [111], and crystal orientation may be made uniform, whereby etching rate anisotropy is avoided at the time of the CMP and GCIB irradiation, thereby producing the SiC monitor wafer.
In the machining step in which mechanical polishing alone or in combination of CNLP is used before the GCIB is irradiated, the surface roughness (PV value) in an area of 100 μm of the wafer surface may be flattened to 5 nm to 50 nm, and thereafter an ultra-flat surface may be produced by the GCIB.
When mechanically polishing the SiC surface, a C surface of the 3C-SiC crystal is formed and made a surface to be polished, and a larger etching rate is obtained as compared with Si surface polishing. Further, when irradiating the SiC surface with the GCIB, a C surface of the 3C-SiC crystal is made a surface to be irradiated, and a larger etching rate is obtained as compared with the Si surface irradiation. In addition, by using CF4, SF6, NF3, CHF3 or O2 alone or a mixture gas of them as a gas seed which is irradiated to the wafer surface, F radical generated on the surface may be utilized to promote chemical reaction on the SiC surface so that a large etching rate is obtained. Furthermore, after etching is carried out by using CF4, SF6, NF3, CHF3 or O2 alone or a mixture gas of them as a gas seed of GCIB, which is irradiated to the wafer surface, Ar gas cluster may be irradiated to ultra-flatten the surface.
The present invention is to obtain an ultra-flat and clean SiC surface at low cost by using a crystal orientation control, selection of the Si surface/C surface of SiC, and reactivity of SiC and a gas seed.
When ion etching is conducted, an ideal incident angle of ion exists to increase a spattering rate. When the crystal orientation of SiC is not uniform, even if the ion beam is irradiated uniformly, the etching depth differs for each crystal grain composing the wafer. This problem is solved by orientation growth. The (111) surface and the (1-1-1-) surface of SiC are not equivalent. The former is called the Si surface and the latter is called the C surface. As for permeability for oxygen ions in the SiO2 film formed on the SiC surface, for example, SiO2 on the Si surface has less permeability, that is, larger oxidation resistance. As for etching, difference between the C surface and the Si surface is expected. Further, by using CF4, SF6, NF3, CHF3, or O2 alone, or a mixture gas of them as the gas seed of the GCIB, the reaction of the SiC surface and F radical proceeds, and a larger etching rate as compared with the case of an Ar gas is obtained. In the case of these gas seeds, the etching rate is large, but flattening performance lags behind, and therefore final finishing is performed by an Ar gas.
Hereinafter, a preferred embodiment of a production method of an SiC monitor wafer according to the present invention will be explained in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
As shown in
This is the same when polishing is performed, when (111) is polished, the layer of silicon atoms Si appears on its surface and when the opposite surface is polished, the layer of carbon atoms C appears. Accordingly, in the (111) SiC wafer, one side surface is always a so-called Si surface in which the layer of silicon atoms Si appears, and the other side surface is a so-called C surface in which the layer of carbon atoms C appears.
The SiC monitor wafer production method according to this embodiment is carried out as follows. A flowchart of the production process will be shown in
On producing the SiC monitor wafer, the SiC wafer is firstly produced. As for this, a disc-shaped graphite base material 40 in a predetermined size composed of high purity graphite corresponding to the size of the SiC wafer to be produced is made as shown in
Plishing processing is carried out so that the SiC wafer 50 thus obtained can be used as a monitor wafer. After the wafer 50 is firstly polished to Ra=0.02 μm using a diamond abrasive grain, the CMP polishing is carried out. With use of colloidal silica (grain diameter of 70 nm) as an abrasive material, pH of slurry is adjusted to 10 to 11 by addition of alkali. The polishing time is twelve hours. The surface for which CMP is carried out is the C surface. An etching rate at temperature of 55° C. is 0.1 μm/h with pH 10, and 0.2 μm/with pH 11. The etching rate becomes further smaller at around the room temperature. On the Si surface, the etching rate is half or less as compared with that on the C surface.
Next, the GCIB is irradiated to the wafer for which only mechanical polishing is carried out and also to the wafer for which mechanical polishing and CMP are used in combination, and thereby the wafers are flattened. A GCIB equipment is shown in
As a source gas to be introduced, CF4, SF6, NF3, CHF3, or O2 alone, or a mixture gas of them with large etching rate is used. With these kinds of gases, etching speed is large, but flattening performance lags behind, and therefore one, or two or more kinds of gas or gases, such as, for example, a compound carbon dioxide gas, as well as argon, a nitrogen gas, an oxygen gas and the like can be solely used or mixed and used.
By the GCIB irradiation as described above, the surface roughness is improved to an atom level size. In the gas cluster ion beam, the energy which the ions have is lower unlike ordinary ion etching, therefore making desired ultra precise polishing possible without giving a damage to the surface of the wafer. As for irradiation of the gas cluster ion beam to the surface of the substrate, it is preferable to irradiate the beam in the substantially vertical direction relative to the surface.
Table 1 provides the typical irradiation conditions by the above-described GCIB.
The depth of etching is obtained from difference of elevation between the irradiated portion and the non-irradiated portion with masking being applied. Table 2 provides a summary of the effect of flattening with CF4 irradiation.
The etching rate when CF4 is irradiated to the C surface is 1 μm/h. For the Si surface, it is 0.4 μm/h. With Ar gas cluster irradiation, the etching rates of the C surface and the Si surface become 1/10 as compared with CF4. Throughput becomes extremely low with use of only an Ar gas. After irradiation of CF4, Ar gas cluster is irradiated as final finishing. As a result of observing the surface with AFM, the wafer having the flattest surface is the C surface (using CMP in combination), and the Ra value of the average roughness is 0.2 nm.
As described above, according to the present embodiment, the direction of the SiC crystal is aligned with [111] by CVD, and by applying CMP and GCIB onto the C surface, and by using a reactive substance such as CF4 as the GCIB gas, the surface of SiC that is difficult to machine can be ultra-flattened. In the above-described embodiment, the case in which the direction of the SiC crystal is aligned with [111] is explained, but the same effects can be obtained when the crystal direction is [100] and [110].
As explained thus far, the present invention is constituted so that SiC of crystal system 3C is deposited on a substrate by the CVD (chemical Vapor Deposition) method and after this SiC is detached from the substrate and the SiC surface is flattened by using mechanical polishing alone or in combination with CMP (Chemo Mechanical Polishing), the GCIB (Gas Cluster Ion Beam) is irradiated to the surface until the surface roughness becomes Ra=0.5 nm or less and the impurity density on the wafer surface becomes 1×1011 atoms/cm2 or less, therefore obtaining the excellent effect that the surface of the SiC wafer can be ultra-flattened to the extent that particle detection is possible.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2002-045725 | Feb 2002 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP03/00175 | 1/10/2003 | WO | 00 | 10/7/2004 |
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WO03/071588 | 8/28/2003 | WO | A |
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