1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to methods for removing surface deposits by using an activated gas created by remotely activating a gas mixture comprising of oxygen and fluorocarbon. More specifically, the present invention relates to methods for removing surface deposits from the interior of a chemical vapor deposition chamber using an activated gas created by remotely activating a gas mixture comprising of oxygen and perfluorocarbon.
2. Description of Related Art
Remote plasma sources for the production of atomic fluorine are widely used for chamber cleaning in the semiconductor processing industry, particularly in the cleaning of chambers used for Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) and Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD). The use of remote plasma sources avoids some of the erosion of the interior chamber materials that occurs with in situ chamber cleans in which the cleaning is performed by creating a plasma discharge within the PECVD chamber. While capacitively and inductively coupled RF as well as microwave remote sources have been developed for these sorts of applications, the industry is rapidly moving toward transformer coupled inductively coupled sources in which the plasma has a torroidal configuration and acts as the secondary of the transformer. The use of lower frequency RF power allows the use of magnetic cores which enhance the inductive coupling with respect to capacitive coupling; thereby allowing the more efficient transfer of energy to the plasma without excessive ion bombardment which limits the lifetime of the remote plasma source chamber interior.
The semiconductor industry has shifted away from mixtures of fluorocarbons with oxygen for chamber cleaning, which initially were the dominant gases used for in situ chamber cleaning for a number of reasons. First, the emissions of global warming gases from such processes was commonly much higher than that of nitrogen trifluoride (NF3) processes. NF3 dissociates more easily in a discharge and is not significantly formed by recombination of the product species. Therefore, low levels of global warming emissions can be achieved more easily. In contrast, fluorocarbons are more difficult to breakdown in a discharge and recombine to form species such as tetrafluoromethane (CF4) which are even more difficult to break down than other fluorocarbons.
Secondly, it was commonly found that fluorocarbon discharges produced “polymer” depositions that require more frequent wet cleans to remove these deposits that build up after repetitive dry cleans. The propensity of fluorocarbon cleans to deposit “polymers” occurs to a greater extent in remote cleans in which no ion bombardment occurs during the cleaning. These observations dissuaded the industry from developing industrial processes based on fluorocarbon feed gases. In fact, the PECVD equipment manufacturers tested remote cleans based on fluorocarbon discharges, but to date have been unsuccessful because of polymer deposition in the process chambers.
However, if the two drawbacks as described above can be resolved, fluorocarbon gases are desirable for their low cost and low-toxicity.
The present invention relates to a method for removing surface deposits, said method comprising: (a) activating in a remote chamber a gas mixture comprising oxygen and fluorocarbon, wherein the molar ratio of oxygen and fluorocarbon is at least 1:4, using sufficient power for a sufficient time such that said gas mixture reaches a neutral temperature of at least about 3,000 K to form an activated gas mixture; and thereafter (b) contacting said activated gas mixture with the surface deposits and thereby removing at least some of said surface deposits.
Surface deposits removed in this invention comprise those materials commonly deposited by chemical vapor deposition or plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition or similar processes. Such materials include silicon, doped silicon, silicon nitride, tungsten, silicon dioxide, silicon oxynitride, silicon carbide and various silicon oxygen compounds referred to as low K materials, such as FSG (fluorosilicate glass) and SiCOH or PECVD OSG including Black Diamond (Applied Materials), Coral (Novellus Systems) and Aurora (ASM International).
One embodiment of this invention is removing surface deposits from the interior of a process chamber that is used in fabricating electronic devices. Such process chamber could be a Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) chamber or a Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) chamber.
The process of the present invention involves an activating step using sufficient power to form an activated gas mixture having neutral temperature of at least about 3,000 K. Activation may be accomplished by any means allowing for the achievement of dissociation of a large fraction of the feed gas, such as: RF energy, DC energy, laser illumination and microwave energy. The neutral temperature of the resulting plasma depends on the power and the residence time of the gas mixture in the remote chamber. Under certain power input and conditions, neutral temperature will be higher with longer residence time. Here, preferred neutral temperature is over about 3,000 K. Under appropriate conditions (considering power, gas composition, gas pressure and gas residence time), neutral temperatures of at least about 6000 K may be achieved, for example, with octafluorocyclobutane.
The activated gas is formed in a remote chamber that is outside of the process chamber, but in close proximity to the process chamber. The remote chamber is connected to the process chamber by any means allowing for transfer of the activated gas from the remote chamber to the process chamber. The remote chamber and means for connecting the remote chamber with the process chamber are constructed of materials known in this field to be capable of containing activated gas mixtures. For instance, aluminum and stainless steel are commonly used for the chamber components. Sometimes Al2O3 is coated on the interior surface to reduce the surface recombination.
The gas mixture that is activated to form the activated gas comprises oxygen and fluorocarbon. A fluorocarbon of the invention is herein referred to as a compound comprising of C and F. Preferred fluorocarbon in this invention is perfluorocarbon compound. A perfluorocarbon compound in this invention is herein referred to as a compound consisting of C, F and optionally oxygen. Such perfluorocarbon compounds include, but are not limited to tetrafluoromethane, hexafluoroethane, octafluoropropane, hexafluorocyclopropane decafluorobutane, octafluorocyclobutane, carbonyl fluoride and octafluorotetrahydrofuran. Preferred of the perfluorocarbons is octafluorocyclobutane.
The gas mixture that is activated to form the activated gas may further comprise a carrier gas such as nitrogen, argon and helium.
The total pressure in the remote chamber during the activating step may be between about 0.5 Torr and about 20 Torr.
The gas mixture comprises oxygen and fluorocarbon in a molar ratio of at least about 1:4. Under the high neutral temperature condition used in this invention, oxygen in excess of 10 molar percent of the stoichiometric requirement (i.e., the amount of oxygen necessary to convert all carbon in the fluorocarbon to CO2) results in surprisingly good deposition chamber cleaning rates, eliminates fluorocarbon emissions except COF2 and prevents fluorocarbon polymer depositions on the deposition surfaces.
The gas mixture is activated using sufficient power for a sufficient time such that said gas mixture reaches a neutral temperature of at least about 3,000 K to form an activated gas mixture. For example, a power range of from about 3,000-15,000 watts in a 0.25 liter remote chamber corresponds to a power density of from about 12,000-60,000 watts/liter. These values scale both up and down for remote chambers of different sizes. The residence time of the gas mixture in the remote chamber under such power input must be sufficient such that the gas mixture achieves a neutral temperature of at least about 3,000K. For appropriate conditions (considering power, gas composition, gas pressure and gas residence time), neutral temperatures of at least about 6000K may be achieved, for example, with octafluorocyclobutane. A preferred embodiment of the present invention is a method for removing surface deposits from the interior of a process chamber that is used in fabricating electronic devices, said method comprising: (a) activating in a remote chamber a gas mixture comprising oxygen and perfluorocyclobutane in a mole ratio of at least from about 2:1 to about 20:1 using power of at least from about 3,000 watts for a sufficient time such that said gas mixture reaches a neutral temperature of at least about 3,000 K to form an activated gas mixture; and thereafter (b) contacting said activated gas mixture with the interior of said deposition chamber and thereby removing at least some of said surface deposits.
It was also found that at the similar conditions of this invention, the drawbacks of the perfluorocarbon compound, i.e. global warming gases emission and polymer deposition, can be overcome. In the experiments of this invention, no significant polymer depositions on the interior surface of chamber was found. See also
Alternatively, the system can be used to alter surfaces placed in the remote chamber by contact with the fluorine atoms and other constituents coming from the source.
The following Examples are meant to illustrate the invention and are not meant to be limiting.
The feeding gas composed of O2, perfluorocarbon and Ar, wherein the perfluorocarbon is Zyron® 8020 (C4F8), C3F8, C2F6, or CF4. The flow rates of perfluorocarbons in this Example were adjusted so that the molar flow rate of elemental fluorine into the remote chamber was the same for all mixtures. In this Example, the flow rates for C4F8, C3F8, C2F6, and CF4 were 250, 250, 333 and 500 sccm respectively, which are all equivalent to 2000 sccm of elemental fluorine. The percentage flow rate of O2 to the total of O2 and perfluorocarbon was changed to detect the etching rate dependence on the O2 percentage. See
As a reference, the etching rate of NF3+Ar plasma is shown in
The O2 percentages corresponding to the maximum etching rates for CF4, C2F6, C3F8 and C4F8 were 55%, 77%, 80% and 87% respectively. The optimum O2 percentages are different from that of in situ chamber cleaning with perfluorocarbon gases or with remote microwave sources. These are also beyond the expected stoichiometric amount of oxygen required to convert all carbons in the fluorocarbon to CO2.
The common experimental conditions for
Chamber pressure was 2 torr. The feeding gas was activated by 400 KHz RF power to a neutral temperature of more than 3000 K for NF3 gas mixture and more than 5000K for perfluorocarbon gas mixtures. The activated gas then entered the process chamber and etched the SiO2 surface deposits on the mounting with the temperature controlled at 100° C. FTIR was used to measure the concentration of emission species in the pump exhaust.
As for
As for
As for
As for
a,
3
b,
3
c, and 3d show the concentration of emission species in the pump exhaust as measured by FTIR.
Result from C2F6 was similar and not shown here. Obviously under current inventive conditions, there is no perfluorocarbon emission except COF2 for perfluorocarbon containing mixture discharges. This is quite different from results of in situ chamber cleaning with perfluorocarbon gases where the perfluorocarbon emissions are significant.
a and 4b demonstrate the effects of perfluorocarbon flow rate and O2 percentage (O2/(CxFy+O2)) on the concentration of emission gases. For both Figures, from left to right the bars in each group indicate emission concentrations of C4F8, C2F6, C3F8, CF4 and COF2. For the experiments of
For the experiments of
In
b demonstrates that when O2 percentages were close to or higher than the optimum value, no measurable perfluorocarbon emission was detected under the current inventive conditions. However, when O2 percentages were much lower than the optimum value, perfluorocarbon emissions began to appear. These results suggest that the amount of O2 added in perfluorocarbon plasma is critical to complete dissociation of perfluorocarbon gases and the reduction of perfluorocarbon emissions.
In this experiment, the surface composition of a sapphire sample was measured before and after exposed to the activated gases in the process chamber.
For experiments of
For experiments of
a was the measurement of the sapphire surface after a 10 minute exposure to the activated gas. Signal of oxygen, aluminum and fluorine were present on the surface, however no carbon was observed. Similar results were observed for C4F8 and CF4 discharges. This suggests that with optimized O2 percentage, perfluorocarbon gases can be used for chamber cleaning without any perfluorocarbon deposition. The AFM measurements confirmed this conclusion.
b was the measurement of the sapphire surface after a 10 minute exposure to the oxygen-free activated gas. With no O2 in the feeding gas, only signals of carbon and fluorine were observed in
Number | Date | Country | |
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60556227 | Mar 2004 | US |