1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method of fabricating semiconductor devices, and more particularly, to a method of performing salicide processes.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Field effect transistors are important electronic devices in the fabrication of integrated circuits, and as the size of the semiconductor device becomes smaller and smaller, the fabrication of the transistors also improves and is constantly enhanced for fabricating transistors with smaller sizes and higher quality.
In the conventional method of fabricating transistors, a gate structure is first formed on a substrate, and a lightly doped drain (LDD) is formed on the two corresponding sides of the gate structure. Next, a spacer is formed on the sidewall of the gate structure and an ion implantation process is performed to form a source/drain region within the substrate by utilizing the gate structure and spacer as a mask. In order to incorporate the gate, source, and drain into the circuit, contact plugs are often utilized for interconnection purposes, in which the contact plugs are composed of conducting metals such as tungsten and copper. Nevertheless, the interconnection between the contact plugs and the silicon material of the gate structure and the source/drain region is usually poor, hence a silicide material is often formed over the surface of the gate structure and the source/drain region to improve the ohmic contact between the contact plugs and the gate structure and the source/drain region. Today, the process known as self-aligned silicide (salicide) process has been widely utilized to fabricate silicide materials, in which a source/drain region is first formed, a metal layer comprised of cobalt, titanium, or nickel is disposed on the source/drain region and the gate structure, and a rapid thermal process (RTP) is performed to react the metal layer with the silicon contained within the gate structure and the source/drain region to form a metal silicide for reducing the sheet resistance of the source/drain region.
However, when the silicides are being formed, the atoms within the metal layer will diffuse into the substrate and deplete the silicon within the source/drain region, thereby damaging the original lattice structure of the source/drain region and causing the PN junction between the source/drain region and the silicon substrate to react with the silicon contained within the source/drain region as a result of an overly short distance between the PN junction and the silicide layer. Ultimately, the problems become much worse in the design of ultra shallow junctions (USJ) as the silicides often come in contact directly with the substrate and result in failure of the device.
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In order to prevent the short channel effect of the transistors and improve the interconnect resistance of the integrated circuit, the junction depth of the source and drain needs to be effectively reduced for fabricating transistors containing silicides. However, if the thickness of the silicides on the source and drain is decreased while reducing the junction depth of the source and drain, the interconnect resistance and contact resistance may increase simultaneously. On the other hand, if the depth of the silicides is kept constant, the distance between the PN junction of the source/drain region 112 and the silicon substrate and the silicide layer 116 may become overly short and result in junction leakage. Additionally, the mixture utilized during the wet cleaning process will corrode the liner disposed between the gate electrode and the spacer and cause the silicide to approach the channel area during silicide formation and result in a nickel silicide piping phenomenon.
Moreover, due to high temperature of the PVD chamber or the degas process, the as-deposition formed before the rapid thermal annealing process will result in silicides with polycrystalline structure and degrade the overall thermal stability. In other words, when the treatment temperature is too high or process time of the treatment is too long, the silicides will become pieces of unconnected mass and result in an agglomeration phenomenon and increase the sheet resistance. Additionally, a high temperature will induce a conversion and consume silicon excessively, and cause a spiking phenomenon in the ultra shallow junction or forming a high resistivity structure, such as converting the low resistivity state nickel silicide (NiSi) having less than 20 μ, Ω-cm to a high resistivity state nickel disilicide (NiSi2) having approximately 50 μ, Ω-cm.
It is therefore an objective of the present invention to provide a salicide process to improve the above-mentioned problems.
According to the present invention, a salicide process includes: providing a substrate, wherein the surface of the substrate comprises at least a silicon layer; performing a degas process on the substrate; performing a cooling process on the substrate; depositing a metal layer over the surface of the substrate, wherein the surface of the metal layer and the surface of the silicon layer are in contact with each other; and removing the unreacted metal layer.
Another aspect of the present invention discloses a salicide process, in which the salicide process includes: providing a substrate, wherein the surface of the substrate comprises at least a silicon layer; performing a first low temperature deposition process to form a metal layer over the surface of the substrate, wherein the surface of the metal layer and the surface of the silicon layer are in contact with each other; performing a second low temperature deposition process to form a cap layer over the surface of the metal layer; performing a rapid thermal annealing (RTA) process to form the surface of the silicon layer contacting the metal layer into a silicide layer; and removing the unreacted metal layer and cap layer.
In contrast to the conventional salicide process, the present invention aims to reduce the thermal budget of salicide processes when salicides are formed on the substrate. Consequently, the present invention is able to reduce the effects of the agglomeration phenomenon and increase in sheet resistance caused by an overly high temperature or prolonged treatment time, and at the same improve the spiking phenomenon in the ultra shallow junction and the problem of converting low resistivity nickel silicide (NiSi) to high resistivity nickel disilicide (NiSi2).
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
Please refer to
Next, a lightly doped ion implantation process is performed to implant a light dopant (not shown) into two sides of the substrate 100 corresponding to the gate 104 to form a source/drain extension region 110 by utilizing the gate 104 as a mask. Next, a liner 107, such as a silicon oxide layer, is deposited around the gate structure 106 and a spacer 108 is formed over the surface of the liner 107, in which the spacer 108 is composed of silicon and oxide composites. Next, a heavily doped ion implantation is performed to implant a heavy dopant (not shown) into the substrate 100 to form a source/drain region 112 with heavier dopant concentration by utilizing the gate 104 and the spacer 108 as a mask. Next, a thermal annealing process utilizing a temperature ranging from 1000° C. to 1020° C. is performed to activate the dopants within the substrate 100 and repair the damage of the crystal lattice structure of the substrate 100 during the ion implantation process.
Subsequently, a wet cleaning step is performed to remove the native oxide and other impurities from the surface of the gate 104 and the source/drain region 112. After the substrate 100 is disposed into a physical vapor deposition (PVD) chamber, a degas process is performed to remove the remaining water vapor from the surface of the substrate 100 by utilizing a temperature between 100° C. and 400° C. Next, a cooling process is performed to cool the substrate 100 to a predetermined temperature, such as below 50° C. by utilizing an inert gas or a wafer cooling chiller to contact the substrate 100, in which the preferred predetermined temperature includes room temperature.
Next, an in-situ deposition is performed by sputtering a metal layer 114 on the substrate 100 and covering the surface of the gate structure 106, the spacer 108, and the source/drain region 112 while controlling the temperature of the PVD chamber under 150° C., as shown in
As shown in
By first performing a cooling process to cool the substrate 100 to room temperature after the 100° C. to 400° C. degas process and then forming a metal layer 114 composed of nickel or other atoms and a cap layer 116 composed titanium or titanium nitride while maintaining the temperature of the PVD chamber under 150° C., the present invention is able to reduce the effects of the agglomeration phenomenon of the as-deposition and the rise of the sheet resistance, thereby improving the spiking phenomenon on the ultra shallow junction. Additionally, the cooling process and the low temperature deposition process performed after the degas process are also able to effectively improve the conventional junction leakage problem caused by an overly high temperature during the metal deposition process, and at the same time decrease the spiking and piping phenomena.
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In contrast to the conventional salicide process, the present invention aims to reduce the thermal budget of salicide processes when salicides are formed on the substrate. Consequently, the present invention is able to reduce the effects of the agglomeration phenomenon and increase in sheet resistance caused by an overly high temperature or prolonged treatment time, and at the same improve the spiking phenomenon in the ultra shallow junction and the problem of converting low resistivity state nickel silicide (NiSi) to high resistivity state nickel disilicide (NiSi2).
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.