This application is directed to a showerhead assembly within the preferred embodiment of Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) apparatus and more specifically to an improved showerhead design allowing cooling and uniform distribution of the reactant gases in a deposition reactor.
Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) systems are widely used to deposit elemental, alloy and compound films in the manufacture of electronic devices, such as integrated circuits formed by the sequential or simultaneous deposition of compounds upon a heated substrate, which is usually in the form of a wafer that is typically mounted on a “susceptor” which may or may not rotate. A showerhead provides distribution and passage for one or more reactant gases with the deposition chamber. The reactants are transported to the surface of the substrate, in the gas phase, by typically one or more carrier gases. The elements deposit on the wafer surface, forming the desired compound and any undesirable by-products are pumped away in a gaseous form. A heating element (filament) is mounted below the susceptor and heats the wafers.
In many CVD applications, wherein films are formed at a hot surface by the thermal driven reaction of precursor vapors, the mechanism that heats the surface to drive the surface thermal driven reactions may also radiate sufficient heat to generate gas phase reactions and or heat the vapor inlet mechanism sufficiently to drive thermal reactions at the vapor inlet mechanism. Reactions at the precursor inlet mechanism, commonly called a showerhead, are generally detrimental to the process because such coatings formed by the reactions can disturb or otherwise block desired flow patterns and or such coatings may flake off generating particles and the coatings may also act as a source of an element that may not be desired in a subsequent layer of a multilayer deposition.
The present invention is directed to a reactant vapor distribution assembly for Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) apparatus includes an upper flange which includes a plenum disposed on its lower face and vapor injectors for injecting reactant vapors into the plenum. The distribution assembly also includes a lower flange having a peripheral rim surrounding a lower wall and a plenum on its upper face, certain of the vapor injectors are used inject reactant vapors into this plenum. The lower flange includes fluid channels bored in the lower wall beneath the plenum and a number of gas flow openings drilled through the lower wall of the lower flange to permit the precursor gases to flow from the plenum. The fluid channels may be used to heat or cool the flange. The lower flange has no welds or joints facing the hostile environment of the deposition chamber and all critical parts of the lower flange may be formed from a single billet of material.
This work builds upon and improves upon our prior work, wherein we disclosed aspects of integrating showerhead cooling mechanisms. Many prior showerhead designs were constructed of a multiplicity of tubes, plates and flanges which had to carefully welded together into a gastight assembly. However every weld is a potential failure point. The present approach is directed to a showerhead design wherein no process side surface is exposed to welds (eliminating the potential of thermal cycling or other stress induced leaks), further it includes a showerhead design wherein the precursor gases may be introduced separately from one another (minimizing prereactions).
The showerhead also includes a mechanism wherein the precursor concentrations can be varied radially, thus improving uniformity of the deposit; as well as canceling depletion effects of consumed precursors forming in the deposit. The showerhead further provides a uniform carrier gas flow into the deposition chamber which promotes uniform laminar flow without recirculation. By the ordering and assemblage of components in the assembly the showerhead face closest to the heat source is temperature controlled by thermal regulating fluid flow. A large window for optical access to the deposition plane through the showerhead is also provided (thus allowing a multitude of deposition optical monitors and or imagers—such as temperature, deposition rate, bandgap, stress, and so on).
By adding a top flange fluid channel in this arrangement, we also have the option to heat or cool the entire assembly and thereby set a temperature that eliminates any condensation and mitigates the pre-reaction issue. An additional feature is that an electrode can be inserted in the upper or lower plenums such that at either level, but separate from the process reactor, can generate reactive ionic, excited or non molecular species for subsequent flow into the deposition reactor.
It should also be noted that this structure can also effectively be modified to allow some gases to heat on the way into the reactor; wherein a diffuser forms the lowest face of the showerhead so that a more contiguous gas flow is achieved across the whole surface. In this case the more thermally sensitive reactants are still distributed through the narrow holes 80 as shown in
a is an exploded view, looking downwardly, of the showerhead assembly in accordance with the present invention;
b is an exploded view, looking upwardly, of the showerhead assembly in accordance with the present invention;
a is a perspective view, looking downwardly, of the lower showerhead flange in accordance with the present invention;
b is a perspective view, looking upwardly, of the lower showerhead flange in accordance with the present invention;
c is a sectional view cut along a horizontal plane of lower wall of the lower flange of the showerhead assembly;
d is a sectional view cut along a vertical plane of the lower flange of the showerhead assembly;
a is an exploded view, looking downwardly, of the lower flange of the showerhead assembly in accordance with a third embodiment of the present invention; and
b is a sectional view cut along a vertical plane of the lower flange of the showerhead assembly of
a is an exploded view of showerhead assembly 12 looking downwardly, which includes an upper showerhead flange 30, a lower showerhead flange 32 and a uniform gas flow diffuser 34 located therebetween. As best seen in
Uniform gas flow diffuser 34 is located between and separates upper plenum 36 of upper showerhead flange 30 and lower plenum zones 40 of lower showerhead flange 32. Gas flow diffuser 34 is constructed of a gas permeable material, such as porous stainless steel, molybdenum, other metals, or ceramics to permit gases from upper plenum 36 of upper showerhead flange 30 to diffuse into lower plenum zones 40 of lower showerhead flange 32. The porosity of gas flow diffuser 34 is generally sized with the flow to assure that the pressure in the upper plenum is greater than that in the lower plenum. Gas flow diffuser 34 thus mitigates back flow from the lower plenum 42 to upper plenum 36. Uniform gas flow diffuser 34 also includes openings 48 which are aligned with precursor injectors 40 to permit direct injection of precursor gases into lower plenum zones 40. Elongated openings 50 in uniform gas flow diffuser 34 align with view ports 44 in upper showerhead flange 30 to permit unobstructed viewing of the deposition process.
The design of the lowermost portion of a showerhead assembly is of critical importance to the integrity of the CVD system since it is exposed to the environment of deposition chamber 13. In the present invention all critical components of lower showerhead flange 32 can be preferably machined from a single billet of material, such as stainless steel, without any welds being exposed to the process atmosphere, eliminating the potential of thermal cycling or other stress induced leaks.
a and 3b are perspective views, looking downwardly and upwardly respectively, of lower showerhead flange 32 which includes a relatively thick lower wall 60 and precursor injections zones 62 formed by concentrically configured walls 64 within plenum 42 for precursor injection.
As noted above lower wall 60 of lower showerhead flange 32 is relatively thick to permit a series of fluid channels 70 to be “gun drilled” therethrough, as illustrated in
A multiplicity of gas flow openings 80 are drilled vertically through lower wall 60 of lower showerhead flange 32 to permit the precursor gases to flow form plenum 42 to the interior of CVD system 10 and thereafter to substrate wafers 16. It is to be noted that gas flow openings 80 are positioned so that they do not intercept water channels 70 so as to maintain the water tightness of channels 70. This can be best seen in
Lower showerhead flange 32 includes a circular rim 82 which includes a series of bores 84 through which rim 82 will be bolted to the upper rim of the deposition chamber of CVD reactor 10 by bolts which also serve to secure upper showerhead flange 30 to lower showerhead flange 32. As such, fluid inlet fittings 76 and fluid outlet fittings 78 are located outside of deposition chamber 13 of CVD reactor 10. Thus only the bottom surface of lower wall 60 of lower showerhead flange 32 faces the heated substrates and the flowing coolant assures that the precursors do not decompose in showerhead assembly 12. The design described herein can maintain the face of the showerhead at less than 100° C. when facing a heat source ranging from room temperature to greater than 1650° C. All of the critical components of lower showerhead flange 32 are preferably machined from the same billet of material as a unitary component by standard CNC equipment which assures a gastight assembly as every weld is a potential failure point.
a is an exploded view, looking downwardly, of lower flange 32 of the showerhead assembly in accordance with a third embodiment of the present invention; and
Also included in this embodiment is a cover plate 98 disposed on the underside of lower flange 32. Cover plate 98 is used to form a third and lowest level plenum. Cover plate 98 is porous so that it can also pass a flow of gas into the reactor uniformly. Further, the gas flowing through cover plate 98 can be heated as it passes through porous cover plate 98 with heat from radiation from the heated wafers. Preheating some gases over others can help enhance the reaction rate at the surface, but not so much as to create to high a rate of gas phase pre-reactions. Further, the other gases coming through gas flow openings 80 lower flange 32 remain essentially cool. The two gas flows combine to make a uniform flow down to the heated surface.
The invention has been described with respect to preferred embodiments of apparatus for film deposition on a wafer surface. However, as those skilled in the art will recognize, modifications and variations in the specific details which have been described and illustrated may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/920,125 filed Mar. 27, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60920125 | Mar 2007 | US |