Embodiments of the present principles generally relate to semiconductor processing of semiconductor substrates.
Copper is often used in semiconductor connectivity as a low resistance material for metallization processes. However, as the critical dimensions become smaller, electrical pathways such as vias have been failing due to copper voids occurring at the interfaces. The copper voids cause high resistance and even complete failure of the vias, decreasing the wafer yields. Some processes attempting to resolve the issues have reduced the number of voids but at the expense of a higher resistance in the interconnects.
Accordingly, the inventors have provided improved processes that improve the performances of vias while maintaining lower resistivity in dual damascene interconnects.
Structures and integrated tools that improve copper interface quality while minimizing resistivity are provided herein.
In some embodiments, a structure for interconnecting semiconductor circuits on a substrate may comprise at least one opening with a sidewall from an upper surface to an underlying metallic layer, a barrier layer formed on the sidewall of the at least one opening, a liner layer formed on the barrier layer and on the underlying metallic layer, a first copper layer with a dopant with a first dopant content formed on the liner layer and filling a lower portion of the at least one opening to form a via, and a second copper layer with the dopant with a second dopant content formed on the first copper layer and filling the at least one opening, where the second dopant content is less than the first dopant content.
In some embodiments, the structure may further include where the first dopant content is approximately 0.5 percent to approximately 10 percent, where the second dopant content is zero percent to approximately 0.5 percent of the dopant, where the dopant is manganese, aluminum, graphene, cobalt, or magnesium, where the barrier layer is tantalum nitride, where the liner layer is cobalt or ruthenium, where the underlying metallic layer is copper, where the second copper layer has a narrower cross-section at a bottom of the second copper layer than a cross-section at a top of the second copper layer, where the first copper layer has a higher dopant content than the second copper layer and the barrier layer has a higher dopant content than the first copper layer, and/or where the second copper layer has lower resistivity than the first copper layer.
In some embodiments, a structure for interconnecting semiconductor circuits on a substrate may comprise at least one opening with a sidewall from an upper surface to an underlying metallic layer, a barrier layer formed on the sidewall of the at least one opening, a liner layer formed on the barrier layer and on the underlying metallic layer, a first copper layer with a dopant with a first dopant content formed on the liner layer and filling a lower portion of the at least one opening to form a via, and a second copper layer with the dopant with a second dopant content formed on the first copper layer and filling the at least one opening, where the second dopant content is less than the first dopant content.
In some embodiments, the structure may further include where the first dopant content is approximately 0.5 percent to approximately 10 percent, where the second dopant content is zero percent to approximately 0.5 percent of the dopant, where the dopant is manganese, aluminum, graphene, cobalt, or magnesium, where the barrier layer is tantalum nitride, where the liner layer is cobalt or ruthenium, where the underlying metallic layer is copper, where the second copper layer has a narrower cross-section at a bottom of the second copper layer than a cross-section at a top of the second copper layer, where the barrier layer has a higher dopant content than the first copper layer, and or where the second copper layer has lower resistivity than the first copper layer.
In some embodiments, a structure for interconnecting semiconductor circuits on a substrate may comprise at least one opening with a sidewall from an upper surface to an underlying metallic layer of copper, a barrier layer of tantalum nitride formed on the sidewall of the at least one opening, a liner layer of cobalt or ruthenium formed on the barrier layer and on the underlying metallic layer, a first copper layer with a dopant with a first dopant content formed on the liner layer and filling a lower portion of the at least one opening to form a via, where the first dopant content is approximately 0.5 percent to approximately 10 percent, and a second copper layer with the dopant with a second dopant content formed on the first copper layer and filling the at least one opening, where the second dopant content is zero percent to approximately 0.5 percent of the dopant and is less than the first dopant content.
In some embodiments, the structure may further include where the dopant is manganese, aluminum, graphene, cobalt, or magnesium, and/or where the barrier layer has a higher dopant content than the first copper layer or where the second copper layer has lower resistivity than the first copper layer.
In some embodiments, an integrated tool for producing a substrate with metallization may comprise a first etch chamber configured to dry etch and remove etch stop layers in vias, a preclean chamber configured to clean the substrate, a first deposition chamber configured to deposit a barrier layer on the substrate, a second deposition chamber configured to deposit a liner layer on the substrate, a third deposition chamber configured to deposit a first copper layer with a dopant with a first dopant content at first temperature and to reflow the first copper layer at a second temperature, and a fourth deposition chamber configured to deposit a second copper layer with the dopant with a second dopant content at the first temperature and to reflow the second copper layer at a third temperature, where the second dopant content is less than the first dopant content, where the integrated tool is configured to process the substrate without a vacuum break between chambers.
In some embodiments, the integrated tool may further comprise a second etch chamber configured to etch a portion of the first copper layer after an annealing process, where the first dopant content is approximately 0.5 percent to approximately 10 percent, where the second dopant content is zero percent to approximately 0.5 percent, where the first temperature is zero degrees Celsius to approximately 200 degrees Celsius, where the second temperature is approximately 200 degrees Celsius to approximately 400 degrees Celsius, and/or where the third temperature is approximately 200 degrees Celsius to approximately 400 degrees Celsius.
Other and further embodiments are disclosed below.
Embodiments of the present principles, briefly summarized above and discussed in greater detail below, can be understood by reference to the illustrative embodiments of the principles depicted in the appended drawings. However, the appended drawings illustrate only typical embodiments of the principles and are thus not to be considered limiting of scope, for the principles may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
To facilitate understanding, identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical elements that are common to the figures. The figures are not drawn to scale and may be simplified for clarity. Elements and features of one embodiment may be beneficially incorporated in other embodiments without further recitation.
The structures and integrated tools provide a high-quality copper interface with low resistivity in vias and line interconnects. The methods use an integrated tool to first deposit a copper doped with high dopant such as, but not limited to, manganese (Mn), aluminum (Al), graphene, or magnesium (Mg), which keeps the highly doped copper at the via and trench interfaces (barrier interfaces). A slight anneal and reflow process moves the dopant towards the interface of the dielectric and barrier layer, improving the barrier layer and electro migration (EM) properties. A second process of reflow fills the vias and trenches with pure or low doped copper for the bulk or center of trenches, resulting in low resistivity. The structures and methods of the present principles have the advantages of improved line EM and TDDB (time dependent dielectric breakdown) with increased dopant at the interfaces, improved via EM which allows scaling of dual damascene to sub 30 nm pitch, high dopant in via and trench sidewalls which allows, for example Ta—Mn O—N formation, to enhance barrier properties, scaling of barrier layer thickness (dead area) with dopant protection, and reduced line resistivity as the dopant in trench bulk areas is kept low.
Scaling the liner and barrier layers for advanced interconnects is difficult as the scaling causes issues with gapfill, electro migration, and TDDB. Current densities within vias are also significantly higher which leads to copper voids and open circuits. The bottom of the via is the weakest link (due to uneven grains and lower activation energy (Ea)) for copper diffusion and potential micro voids during gapfill processes. The traditional processes use pure copper fill or copper alloy with same amount of dopant throughout. Thus, higher dopant content is required to get the same EM and barrier performance, resulting in higher resistivity. The inventors have discovered that by creating a two-part copper process having a dopant such as Mn in the first 30 A to 70 A, the process can allow for improved dopant at the interface and via bottom, improving EM and barrier properties. Subsequently deposited pure copper (or lower dopant copper) allows for low resistivity in the rest of the interconnect (e.g., trenches).
As used herein, a feature on a substrate may include an interconnect structure, a trench structure, a damascene structure, a via structure (e.g., a dual damascene via, etc.) and the like. Different types of features may be used as examples in some embodiments but are not meant to be limiting to only that feature type.
If the received substrate has an etch stop layer 206 that is intact in the bottom of the via 210, the optional process in block 104 is performed to remove the etch stop layer in the bottom of the via to expose the underlying metallic layer 204 as depicted in a view 200C of
In block 110, a liner layer 224 is deposited on the substrate in the via 210, the first trench 212, and the second trench 214 as depicted in a view 200E of
In block 114, the substrate is annealed at a second temperature to cause reflow of the first copper layer 226 and migration of the dopant towards the barrier layer 220 and interface, increasing the TDDB performance of the barrier for the trenches and vias. The migration strengthens the barrier allowing a reduced barrier thickness to be used without sacrificing barrier performance. The annealing also reflows the first copper layer 226 into the via 210 and fills the via 210 (see view 200G of
After completion of the deposition and anneal processes of the first copper layer 226, optional block 116 may be performed to etch back a portion of the first copper layer 226 as depicted in a view 200H of
In block 120, the substrate is annealed at a third temperature to cause reflow of the second copper layer 230 and filling the first trench 212 and the second trench 214 as depicted in a view 200I of
If the received substrate has an etch stop layer 206 that is intact in the bottom of the via 210, the optional process in block 304 is performed to remove the etch stop layer in the bottom of the via to expose the underlying metallic layer 204 as depicted in a view 200C of
In block 310, a liner layer 224 is deposited on the substrate in the via 210, the first trench 212, and the second trench 214 as depicted in a view 200E of
In block 314, the substrate is annealed at a second temperature to cause reflow of the metal layer. The annealing reflows the metal layer on the sidewalls of the trenches to improve electro migration in the sidewalls and into the via 210, filling the via 210 (see view 200G of
After completion of the deposition and anneal processes of the metal layer, block 316 is performed to etch back a portion of the metal layer (see, e.g., view 200H of
In block 320, the substrate is annealed at a third temperature to cause reflow of the copper layer and filling the first trench 212 and the second trench 214 as depicted in a view 200I of
The methods for creating dual metal interconnects described herein may be performed in individual process chambers that may be provided in a standalone configuration or as part of a cluster tool, for example, an integrated tool 400 (i.e., cluster tool) described below with respect to
In some embodiments, the factory interface 404 comprises at least one docking station 407, at least one factory interface robot 438 to facilitate the transfer of the semiconductor substrates. The docking station 407 is configured to accept one or more front opening unified pod (FOUP). Four FOUPS, such as 405A, 405B, 405C, and 405D are shown in the embodiment of
In some embodiments, the processing chambers 414A, 414B, 414C, 414D, 414E, and 414F are coupled to the transfer chambers 403A, 403B. The processing chambers 414A, 414B, 414C, 414D, 414E, and 414F comprise at least a first etch chamber configured to dry etch and remove etch stop layers in vias, a first deposition chamber configured to deposit a barrier layer on a substrate, a second deposition chamber configured to deposit a liner layer on the substrate, a third deposition chamber configured to deposit a first copper layer with a dopant of approximately 0.5 percent to approximately 10 percent at first temperature and to reflow the first copper layer at a second temperature, a fourth deposition chamber configured to deposit a second copper layer with a dopant of zero percent to approximately 0.5 percent at a third temperature and to reflow the second copper layer at a fourth temperature, and a second etch chamber configured to etch a portion of the first copper layer after an annealing process. Additional chambers may also be provided such as chemical vapor deposition (CVD) chambers, annealing chambers, atomic layer deposition (ALD) chambers, plasma vapor deposition (PVD) chambers, or the like. ALD and PVD chambers may include any chambers suitable to perform all or portions of the methods described herein, as discussed above. In some embodiments, one or more optional service chambers (shown as 416A and 416B) may be coupled to the transfer chamber 403A. The service chambers 416A and 416B may be configured to perform other substrate processes, such as degassing, orientation, substrate metrology, cool down and the like.
The system controller 402 controls the operation of the integrated tool 400 using a direct control of the process chambers 414A, 414B, 414C, 414D, 414E, and 414F or alternatively, by controlling the computers (or controllers) associated with the process chambers 414A, 414B, 414C, 414D, 414E, and 414F and the integrated tool 400. In operation, the system controller 402 enables data collection and feedback from the respective chambers and systems to optimize performance of the integrated tool 400. The system controller 402 generally includes a Central Processing Unit (CPU) 430, a memory 434, and a support circuit 432. The CPU 430 may be any form of a general-purpose computer processor that can be used in an industrial setting. The support circuit 432 is conventionally coupled to the CPU 430 and may comprise a cache, clock circuits, input/output subsystems, power supplies, and the like. Software routines, such as a method as described above may be stored in the memory 434 and, when executed by the CPU 430, transform the CPU 430 into a specific purpose computer (system controller 402). The software routines may also be stored and/or executed by a second controller (not shown) that is located remotely from the integrated tool 400.
The memory 434 is in the form of computer-readable storage media that contains instructions, when executed by the CPU 430, to facilitate the operation of the semiconductor processes and equipment. The instructions in the memory 434 are in the form of a program product such as a program that implements the method of the present principles. The program code may conform to any one of a number of different programming languages. In one example, the disclosure may be implemented as a program product stored on a computer-readable storage media for use with a computer system. The program(s) of the program product define functions of the aspects (including the methods described herein). Illustrative computer-readable storage media include, but are not limited to: non-writable storage media (e.g., read-only memory devices within a computer such as CD-ROM disks readable by a CD-ROM drive, flash memory, ROM chips, or any type of solid-state non-volatile semiconductor memory) on which information is permanently stored; and writable storage media (e.g., floppy disks within a diskette drive or hard-disk drive or any type of solid-state random access semiconductor memory) on which alterable information is stored. Such computer-readable storage media, when carrying computer-readable instructions that direct the functions of the methods described herein, are aspects of the present principles.
Embodiments in accordance with the present principles may be implemented in hardware, firmware, software, or any combination thereof. Embodiments may also be implemented as instructions stored using one or more computer readable media, which may be read and executed by one or more processors. A computer readable medium may include any mechanism for storing or transmitting information in a form readable by a machine (e.g., a computing platform or a “virtual machine” running on one or more computing platforms). For example, a computer readable medium may include any suitable form of volatile or non-volatile memory. In some embodiments, the computer readable media may include a non-transitory computer readable medium.
While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the present principles, other and further embodiments of the principles may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof.
This application claims benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 63/218,015, filed Jul. 2, 2021, which is herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63218015 | Jul 2021 | US |