Enabling technology for the manufacture of multiple layer integrated circuit devices has been chemical mechanical planarization (CMP). In this process, each layer of wiring devices or of insulating material is polished flat (planarized) prior to deposition of the next layer. CMP facilitates the construction of multi-layer integrated circuit devices by reducing irregularities in surface topography to an acceptable level, to thus prevent defects such as short circuits or open circuits as the layers are built up.
The machinery to perform CMP has become highly sophisticated and efficient, with equipment costing millions of dollars. Nevertheless, there are some components of this equipment that require frequent replacement during the polishing operation, and are classed as consumables. These parts contribute significantly to the high costs of CMP equipment operation. One of these short-lived, consumable components is the retaining ring, which is part of the polishing head assembly (alternatively called the wafer carrier). The retaining ring serves to hold the semiconductor wafer and keep it in place during the polishing operation where it is forced against the polishing pad. The retaining ring conventionally consists of a stainless steel body to which a non-metallic wear member is attached. The non-metallic wear member surrounds the wafer, while the bottom surface of the wear member contacts the polishing pad directly. A flexible diaphragm within the polishing head above the wafer applies downward pressure on the wafer. Thus, the wafer is entrapped in a cavity created by the retaining ring assembly, the polishing pad below, and the flexible diaphragm above. Downward pressure on the retaining ring is applied independently of the flexible diaphragm, and can be varied in order to prevent the wafer from forcing its way out and being destroyed. The non-metallic part of the retaining ring is the only part that is in contact with the polishing pad in addition to the wafer. As such, it is subject to the polishing action of the polishing pad and the abrasive slurry.
Current retaining ring construction materials, although having other desirable properties, do not have good wear resistance. The average life of presently available retaining rings is approximately 500 wafers under normal circumstances. At increased temperature and pressure, this will be significantly lower. Replacement of the retaining ring on a regular basis adds substantially to the cost of ownership of the CMP process machinery. Under current practice, the entire retaining ring assembly is generally discarded and replaced with a new one. It would, therefore, be highly desirable to develop a retaining ring with increased useful life, with the capability of operating at increased temperatures and pressures, and which has the capacity of replacing only its wear-surfaces. One prior-art retaining ring currently available is manufactured of polyphenylene sulfide (PPS). This material seems satisfactory in most regards, but requires frequent replacement as the material wears. The typical lifetime of current designs is about 500 wafers.
In commonly-owned, copending application Ser. No. 10/087,223, filed on Mar. 1, 2002, which application is incorporated by reference herein, there is disclosed a polishing pad made of fibrous construction, which may include various natural or synthetic fillers, abrasives or friction modifiers, the whole matrix being bound together by a thermosetting resin, densified, and heat cured under pressure to produce a rigid, yet, porous, structure. One or both surfaces of the polishing pad of the invention are ground, sanded, or the equivalent, to lift and expose fibers in a random, three-dimensional pattern that becomes the active polishing surface or surfaces. The basic fiber matrix may be any natural or synthetic fiber or blend thereof that is felted, dry laid, wet laid, woven, carded, spun, blown, or any other process that produces a porous fiber matrix that can be resin-impregnated and processed as above.
It is, therefore, the primary objective of the present invention to provide a retaining ring for use in retaining a wafer during polishing by a CMP apparatus, which has a wear pad associated therewith of such construction, design and material such that it provides improved resistance to wear and/or degradation as compared to currently available products for use in the chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) of semiconductor wafers and similar materials.
It is yet another objective of the present invention to provide such a retaining ring with a wear pad, which wear pad is made of comprised of fibrous material impregnated with a thermosetting resin.
It is yet another objective of the present invention to provide such a retaining ring with a wear pad, with an insulating layer being interposed between the wear pad and the bottom surface of the retaining ring, whereby heat generated during wafer-polishing is better retained in order to elevate the temperature at which wafer-polishing is performed.
It is yet another objective of the present invention to provide such a retaining ring with a wear pad, which wear pad has a bottom surface that may be either ground and/or provided with hard abrasive additive.
It is yet another objective of the present invention to provide a means of re-using retainer rings of the prior art by retrofitting them with the wear pad of the present invention.
The retaining ring with wear pad of the invention is able to withstand increased operating temperatures and pressures at the polishing surface of the wafer with less wear than would normally be encountered with currently used materials and designs. The ability to operate at increased temperature and pressure can improve the polishing removal rate in some processes such as tungsten, copper and oxide. The flexibility of a manufacturer to use an expanded range of temperature and pressure in CMP processes, combined with a significant reduction in the cost of consumables, provides a significant advantage in the final cost of ownership in the production of multilayer, integrated circuit devices and other products where CMP is utilized in manufacture. Moreover, the retaining-ring wear pad of the present invention may also retrofitted to previously used and worn retaining rings of the prior-art design, thus salvaging the major structural component of the CMP processing apparatus, thereby reducing costs. It is also an integral part of this invention to make the wear pad of the invention replaceable, so as to obviate the necessity of replacement of an entire retaining ring, resulting in considerable cost-savings.
The invention will be more readily understood with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to the drawings in greater detail, there is shown in
While presently available retaining rings last on average about 500 wafers polished before being replaced, the retaining ring of the present invention lasts approximately 2,500 wafers polished, about 5 times as long. Additional savings result from the reduction in down time required to change out worn retaining rings. This is under normal conditions. Furthermore, it has been found that in some CMP processes, notably tungsten CMP, increased operating temperature and pressure increase the rate of removal of tungsten. Under these conditions, prior-art, retaining-ring life is reduced even further. Excessive wear of prior-art, retaining rings at elevated pressure and/or temperature also increases defects by adding to particulate contamination on the wafer. With the present invention, the savings in cost of ownership for longer life and reduced downtime is significant. Making the wear-pad section replaceable reduces this cost even further. With consideration to the potential performance increase, the savings may be dramatic.
The wear pad of the invention is constructed of a fibrous matrix that has been impregnated with a thermosetting resin and dried, densified and cured under heat and pressure to create a rigid semi-porous structure. The surface of the retaining-ring wear pad that contacts the polishing pad is ground or sanded, if desired, or may be left “as molded”, depending on the frictional performance required for the intended use. In some cases, the densification process results in a non-porous structure.
The basic fiber matrix is preferably any natural or synthetic fiber or blend that is felted, wet-laid, dry-laid, carded, spun, blown, woven, or other process that produces a porous fibrous matrix that can be resin-impregnated and processed as described above. Various natural or synthetic fillers of a suitable nature may also be incorporated into the base structure as needed in order to obtain specific physical characteristics. The preferred resin impregnation is with a thermosetting resin, such as phenolic, epoxy, silicone, or the like, although certain high-temperature thermoplastic resins may also be used. In one example, the wear-pad material is a wet-laid cotton fiber matrix that has been densified to a desired density. This fiber matrix is then impregnated with a phenolic resin to desired resin content, dried, and cured under heat and pressure to a semi-porous state, with the wear pad having a ground surface. Hard, abrasive particles may be incorporated into the material of the wear pad of the invention in order to condition the polishing pad during the polishing process. This conditioning generally improves the performance of the polishing pad. Pad conditioning is conventionally accomplished by means of a separate conditioning pad of the CPM apparatus that periodically conditions the polishing pad. The abrasive-particle additive that may be used may be diamond, diamond dust, aluminum oxide, colloidal alumina, aluminum silicate, clay aluminum silicate, colloidal silica, amorphous silica, silicon carbide, zirconia-alumina, cubic boron nitride, boron carbide, celite, ceramics, garnet, emery, pumice, iron oxide, feldspar, cerium oxide, fused alumina or tripoli, or other conventional materials.
The wear pad of the present invention has the distinct advantage of allowing the use of wear-resistant and impact-resistant fillers in the pad material in order to increase life. This has not been preferable in prior-art, conventional retaining rings, since such fillers would be released onto the surface of the polishing pad, thereby, causing defects on the wafers being polished. In the present invention, fillers, abrasives and the like are less likely to be released onto the polishing pad.
Reference is had to copending application Ser. No. 10/087,223, filed on Mar. 1, 2002, which application is incorporated by reference herein, in which is disclosed a polishing pad made of fibrous construction, which may include various natural or synthetic fillers, abrasives or friction modifiers, the whole matrix being bound together by a thermosetting resin, densified, and heat cured under pressure to produce a rigid, yet porous, structure. One or both surfaces of the polishing pad of the invention are ground, sanded, or the equivalent, to lift and expose fibers in a random, three-dimensional pattern that becomes the active polishing surface or surfaces. The basic fiber matrix may be any natural or synthetic fiber or blend thereof that is felted, dry laid, wet laid, woven, carded, spun, blown, or any other process that produces a porous fiber matrix that can be resin-impregnated and processed as above the wear-pad material of the present invention is preferably made similarly to the polishing pad material of this copending application. In some uses, however, the density of the wear pad is greater than that of the polishing pad disclosed in said application Ser. No. 10/087,223.
The wear-pad material is a matrix of absorbent fibers, such as cellulose fiber, which may include cotton linters and wood pulp, such as hardwood and softwood, and which are impregnated with a thermoset resin, preferably phenolic, is densified, grooved, if desired, and cured to provide a rigid, yet porous structure. Other thermoset resins may be used, such as silicones, epoxies, blends thereof, and the like. The fibers that may be used are: natural or synthetic including cellulose, wood pulp, “ARAMID”, rayon, linen, carbon, graphite, polyamide fiber, polymer fiber, lyocell fiber, engineered fibers, etc, and combinations thereof. The cross-sectional diameters of the fibers may be between 10 and 50 microns, with a preferred range of between 15–35 microns. The length is preferably in the range of between 0.4 and 1.3 mm., although it is to be understood that fiber-lengths somewhat shorter or longer may be used effectively. The fibrous matrix constitutes approximately 30–80% by weight of the wear-pad material. In one form, the wearing pad surface is ground to achieve a surface finish of 1–25 mm Ra. If well-known, hard, abrasive particles are added as fillers to the wear pad material, such may be in the range of between approximately 10–500 microns in diameter, depending upon the specific use and desired properties. The density of the wear-pad is preferably in the range of approximately in the range of 0.3 to 2.0 g/cm3. The manufacture of the wear-pad material may be accomplished by any of those methods disclosed in above-mentioned co pending application Ser. No. 10/087,223. Application of the wear-pad surface to the bottom surface of a retaining ring may be accomplished by well-known methods, such as molding, etching, photolithography, and the like.
With respect to the capability of modifying or retrofitting existing prior-art retainer rings, any of the above-mentioned embodiments may be used. For the embodiment shown in
Priority of provisional application Ser. No. 60/295,472, filed on Jun. 1, 2001, is hereby claimed. This application is a Continuation of Ser. No. 10/156,665 filed May 28, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,899,610.
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5645474 | Kubo et al. | Jul 1997 | A |
6179694 | Quek | Jan 2001 | B1 |
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6899610 | Cooper et al. | May 2005 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050026554 A1 | Feb 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60295472 | Jun 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10156655 | May 2002 | US |
Child | 10924715 | US |