Title: Low K materials
1Low K materials
Kejun Xia Auburn University,AL Nov 20, 2003
2outline
- Why Low k ?
- Questions
- Requirements for Low k
- General ways to gain Low k
- Low k materials
- Plasma process in Low k materials
- Conclusions
- Answers
3Questions
- Why k value of Carbon-doped Silicon Oxide
increases after O2 plasma treatment? - How to reduce the damage from Fluorine diffusion
in SiOxCy film during plasma etching?
4Why Low k
- Speed
- The goal of dielectric material in advancement
from one Tech Node to the flowed node is 20
interconnect capacitance improvement. - Power
- Cross talk
- The crossing effects between different connection
lines contain signals.
5Interconnect crisis
- 200nm -gt130nm -gt90nm -gt 65nm
- SiO2 FSG ? ?
- K4.5 k3.6 klt2.5 ?
- Debate A
- Spin on Deposition Japan Korea
- CVD US Europe
- Debate B
- Evolutionary Dense materials as before
- Revolutionary Porous materials
6Requirements
- Electrical
- Klt3
- Thermal
- Stability up to 400 0C
- High glass transition temperature
- Chemical
- Etching compatibility
- Mechanical
- Hardness, modulus
- Structural
- Moisture absorption
- Adhesion to caps, hard masks, lines etc.
7Fundamental physics of k
- K originates from the polarization
8Basic approaches to reduce k
- Optimization of molecular structrue
- Minimize configurational and dipole
polarizability, e.g. use of C-C and C-F bonds - Reduce density and incorporation of porosity
- Add uniform and microscopic pores with k of 1
- Limitation Both approaches degrade the
thermomechanical properties - Proper tradeoff between dielectric constant and
thermomechanical prosperities is important
9Electronic Polarizability vs. Strength of
Chemical Bonds
10Materials
11Materials
12Carbondoped Silicon Oxide (CDO)
- Klt2.9, candidate in the 130nm technology and
beyond - PECVD
- 400 0C, RF(13.56 MHz)
- C4H16O4Si4O2
- Disadvantage
- Oxygen plasma ashing (cnt )
13O2 plasma ashing
- O2 plasma is used in photoresist stripping which
degrades CDO. - Thickness 484.4nm -gt 396.4nm
- K 2.8 -gt3.6
- O2 plasma removes the entire C and part of Si
contents in the film. The longer treatment time,
the worse
Before
After
14Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIS)
analysis on O2 plasma treatment
- Increasing of Si-OH leads to moisture uptaking,
which is responsible for the increase of k value
and leakage current
15Reducing O2 plasma damage by postdeposition He
plasma treatment
- He plasma treatment which is carried out before
O2 plasma process does not effect the thickness
and K value itself - PECVD chamber, 700W, 20s, He 8Torr 1300sccm
- He plasma treatment reduces thickness loss and
remain k value as that after deposition, i.e. 2.8
- Origin of the effect of He plasma treatment is
not known yet
16Effect of He plasma treatment
He plasma treatment After deposition
After He and O2 plasma treatment
Without He plasma treatment
17Hydrocarbon material (SiLKTM)
- Cross linked Silica based materials
- Si-O network provides rigidity
- Organic groups lower k to 2.5-3.3
18SiLKTM dielectric properties
19Issues encounted
- Material
- SiLKTM semiconductor dielectric evaluated against
a stringent set of requirements - Process development
- New dielectric material required development of
new unit process (i.e. dual hardmask patterning) - New structures and ground rules were developed in
order to deal with low modulus materials
20SiLKTM Plasma Etching and problem
- ICP, O2/N2/CH4 gas
- Problem and solution
- Formation of bow in high ratio contact holes
which originates from the deflection of ions on
the sidewalls, generating some etching. The
distortion is explained by differential charging
on the feature sidewalls. - One solution is formation of a passivation layer
on the sidewalls preventing the spontaneous
attacks by oxygen reactives species in the
plasma.
21Ultra Low k (ULK) material Nanoporous SiOxCy
- klt2.2
- Formation
- Porogen approach combined with spin-on deposition
or PECVD - Postdeposition treatment with H2 plasma or
supercritical CO2 process or E-beam - Inherent issues
- Moisture uptake or chemical absorption due to
porosity - Mechanical fragility, material are soft and
brittle
22Diffusion barrier for Cu metallization
- Thickness consideration
- Barrier will increase overall k value
- Barrier should be thinner as possible without
compromising its integrity - A good step coverage
- Different materials (TaN, TiN, TiNSi) and
different deposition techniques (PVD, CVD, ALD)
are in competition
23CVD TiN on porous SiOC
- 10nm CVD TiN are required for a continuous
barrier layer
24Mechanical behavior
- Hardness, modulus
- Insures the capability to support all the process
steps including metal re-crystallization and
packaging - Adhesion strength between dielectric or metallic
layers - Insures stack stability during local or global
stress variations including thermal treatments or
process such as CMP
25Etching issue
- Fluorine species diffusion during plasma etching
- Penetrate into pores of SiOxCy film and react
with hydrogen species in the course of Cu
electroplating process and form HF molecules. HF
then make larger void in the film - Surface oxidized and k value increase
26One solution to etching issue
- It is indicated that the diffusion of the
fluorine species is more significant for the
films with fully interconnected pores - Tune the pore-connectivity by varying the content
of porogen. - A trade off between k value and integrity ability
27Conclusions
- Low k materials has been one of the bottle neck
in fulfill semiconductor roadmap for the nodes
beyond 130nm. Many materials are still under
research. - CDO is one candidate for 130nm node and beyond.
- SiLKTM need a new set of process, many works have
been done. - ULK material has its unique low k value but has
its weakness in mechanical behavior. Its
integrity ability is under debate and research.
28Answer to Q1
- Why k value of Carbon-doped Silicon Oxide
increases after O2 plasma treatment? - O2 plasma treatment increases Si-OH which is
hydrophilic in Carbon-doped Silicon film thus
leads to moisture uptaking, which is responsible
for the increase of k value and leakage current
29Answer to Q2
- How to reduce the damage from Fluorine diffusion
in SiOxCy film during plasma etching? - Control the content of porogen during film
deposition
30References
- Introducing advanced ULK dielectric materials
interconnects Performance and Intergration
F.Fusalba, C.Le cornec, P.maury etal. - Investigation of the Plasma Etching-Induced Pore
structure transformation and diffusion of
fluorine in porous Low-k thin films Kwang Hee
Lee, Ji-Hoon Rhee, Sang Kook, et al. - Etching of Low-k interconnect materials for next
generation devices T.chevolleau, OlJOubert,
N.Posseme, et al. - The stability of Carbon-Doped silicon Oxide low
dielectric constant thin films Y.H.Wang, R.Kumar
- Reduction of oxygen plasma damage by
postdeposition Helium plasma treatment for
Carbon-Doped Silicon Oxide Low Dielectric
constant films Y.H.Wang, D.Gui, R.Kumar and
P.D.Foo., Electrochemical and Solid-state
Letters, 6(1) F1-F3 (2003)