The present invention relates to semiconductor process technology, and more particularly, to fabricating through-silicon vias.
A through-silicon via is a vertical electrical connection passing completely through a silicon die or wafer. A through-silicon via in a die connects a metal layer or component on the active side of the die to a pad or component on the other side of the die. In one application, two or more dies having integrated circuits may be stacked vertically, where through-silicon vias electrically connect the integrated circuits. This application is referred to as 3D packaging, or chip stacking.
In the plan view designated by the letter B, an opening 114 has been etched into the contact dielectric layer 110 and the substrate 102 to begin the process of forming a through-silicon via. In practice, the etching will not necessarily produce a vertical sidewall, as illustrated in simplified fashion in the plan view of B in
In the plan view designated by the letter C, a liner dielectric 116 has been formed over the contact dielectric layer 110 and into the opening 114. The liner dielectric 116 electrically isolates the through-silicon via from the substrate 102. Depending upon the material used, the liner dielectric 116 may also improve adherence of conductive material to be deposited into the opening 114. In many applications, the liner dielectric 116 may comprise silicon nitride or silicon dioxide. Note that the plan view designated by the letter C shows that the thickness of the dielectric liner 116 at the bottom of the opening 114 is larger than along the sidewall of the opening 114. Again, for ease of illustration, the sidewall of the dielectric liner 116 are shown to be vertical, although in practice this may not be the case.
In the plan view designated by the letter D, a conductive material 118 has been deposited into the opening 114 and on top of the dielectric liner 116. The conductive material may be copper or tungsten, for example. In the plan view designated by the letter E, the portions of the dielectric liner 116 and the conductive material 118 directly above the contact dielectric layer 110 have been removed by polishing, resulting in the through-silicon via 120 comprising the remaining portions of the conductive material 118 and the dielectric liner 116 inside the opening 114.
The thickness of the contact dielectric layer 110 at the beginning of the process (for example the plan view designated by the letter A) is about 0.15 μm, whereas the thickness of the dielectric liner 116 above the contact dielectric layer 110 is usually larger than 0.3 μm, and the thickness of the conductive material 118 directly above the contact dielectric layer 110 is about 3 to 5 μm. Because the chemical composition of the dielectric liner 116 is close to that of the contact dielectric layer 110, and because there is variation in the polishing process, polishing down the conductive material 118 and the dielectric liner 116 to form the through-silicon via 120 often results in removal of a significant portion of the contact dielectric layer 110. This removal is indicated by showing the thickness of the contact dielectric layer 110 in the plan view designated by the letter E as being less than the thickness of the contact dielectric layer 110 in the plan views designated by the letters A through D.
Removing too much of the contact dielectric layer 110 may result in various unwanted circuit performance issues. For example, there may be an unwanted increase in the capacitance between a first metal layer and transistor gates or active areas, there may be shorts between such a metal layer and various transistor gates, there may be contact integrity degradation, and there may be resistance variations among various interconnects. A process whereby through-silicon vias may be formed in a wafer without significant removal of the contact dielectric layer would be of utility.
In an embodiment, to form a through-silicon via in a substrate having a contact dielectric layer, an etch stop film is formed so that the contact dielectric layer is disposed between the substrate and the etch stop film. An opening is then etched through the etch stop film, the contact dielectric layer, and into the substrate.
In addition, a dielectric liner is then formed on the etch stop film, and on the sidewall and the bottom of the opening. The dielectric liner is removed from the etch stop film and at the bottom of the opening. In addition, the etch stop film may be removed.
In another embodiment, a substrate has an etch stop film and a contact dielectric layer disposed between the substrate and the etch stop film. A through-silicon via is through the contact dielectric layer and the etch stop film, and reaches into the substrate. The via includes a dielectric liner on its sidewall, and a conductor in contact with the dielectric liner and the substrate at the bottom of the via.
In the description that follows, the scope of the term “some embodiments” is not to be so limited as to mean more than one embodiment, but rather, the scope may include one embodiment, more than one embodiment, or perhaps all embodiments.
The plan view in
For some embodiments, the etch stop film 202 may be an insulator, and may have a dielectric constant higher than that of the contact dielectric layer 110. For some embodiments, the etch stop film 202 may comprise silicon nitride, SiNi, or silicon carbide, SiC, for example. Etch stop films are well known to practitioners in the art of semiconductor process fabrication. For example, one such low-k (low dielectric constant) etch stop film is marketed under the name BLOk™, or variants thereof, a trademark of Applied Materials, Inc., a Delaware Corporation headquartered in Santa Clara, Calif. For some embodiments, the etch stop film 202 may be a metal.
In the plan view designated by the letter C, an opening 204 has been etched through the etch stop film 202, the contact dielectric layer 110, and into the substrate 102. This may be performed by depositing another etch stop film on top of etch stop film 202, but of different composition than that of etch stop film 202, so that selective etching may be performed. A mask may then be used with this other etch stop film so that a pattern for opening 204 may be fabricated, following by etching to provide opening 204. This other etch stop film may then be selectively stripped away, leaving etch stop film 202 as shown.
In the plan view designated by the letter D, a dielectric liner 206 has been deposited over the etch stop film 202, and on the sidewall and the bottom of the opening 204. The sidewall of the opening 204 may be viewed as the approximately vertical surfaces of the substrate 102, the contact dielectric layer 110, and the etch stop film 202 formed by the opening 204. The bottom of the opening 204 may be viewed as the remaining surface of the substrate 102 formed by the opening 204. The dielectric liner 206 may comprise silicon dioxide or silicon nitride, for example, but should have a different composition than the etch stop film 202.
In the plan view designated by the letter E, reactive ion etching (RIE) has been used to remove portions of the dielectric liner 206 that covered the top of the etch stop film 202 and the bottom of the opening 204. The remaining portion of the dielectric liner 206 covers the sidewall of the opening 204.
In the plan view designated by the letter F, a conductive material 208 has been deposited into the opening 204 and on top of the etch stop film 202. The conductive material 208 may be copper or tungsten, for example. Because RIE has removed the portion of the dielectric liner that had covered the bottom of the opening 204, it is expected that applying the conductive material 208 by electroplating may be improved because the portion of the substrate 102 at the bottom of the opening 204 can make electrical contact with the deposited conductive material 208.
The arrows 210 and 212 indicate that either of the plan views designated by the letters G and G′ may follow the plan view designated by the letter F. In the plan view designated by the letter G, chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) has been used to remove the portion of the conductive material 208 above the etch stop film 202, as well as the etch stop film 202. The result is the silicon-through via 214 comprising the remaining portion of the conductive material 208 and the remaining portion of the dielectric liner 206 left on the sidewall of the opening 204. Because the thickness of the etch stop film 202 (e.g., 50±5 nm) is relatively small compared to the thickness of the contact dielectric layer 110, it is expected that there may only be approximately an over-polishing of 10 nm, so that only a relatively small amount of the thickness of the contact dielectric layer 110 may be lost during removal of the etch stop film 202.
In the plan view designated by the letter G′, for those embodiments in which the etch stop film 202 is an insulator, chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) has been used to remove the portion of the conductive material 208 above the etch stop film 202, but the etch stop film 202, or at least a portion thereof, has been left on the contact dielectric layer 110. Leaving an etch stop film on the contact dielectric layer 110 may have utility if a metal layer is to be added over the contact dielectric layer 110. For example, later in the processing flow, a low-k ILD may be added above the etch stop film 202, and portions of the low-k ILD where metal is to be deposited may be etched away. The exposed portions of the etch stop film 202 after etching of the low-k ILD may then be selectively etched away so that the metal may then be deposited.
For some embodiments, etching away the dielectric liner 206 as indicated in the plan view E in
As discussed previously with respect to
In most applications, the substrate 102 may be silicon. However, a substrate comprising other types of material may be used. Accordingly, the term through-silicon via is not meant to imply that a substrate containing the through-silicon via is necessarily silicon.
Various modifications may be made to the described embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention as claimed below. For example, referring to