Title: Silicon Crystal Structure and Growth
1Silicon Crystal Structure and Growth(Plummer -
Chapter 3)
2Atomic Order of a Crystal Structure
Figure 4.2
3Amorphous Atomic Structure
Figure 4.3
4Unit Cell in 3-D Structure
Figure 4.4
5Miller Indices of Crystal Planes
Figure 4.9
6Silicon Crystal Structure
Crystals are characterized by a unit cell which
repeats in the x, y, z directions.
- Planes and directions are defined using x, y, z
coordinates. - 111 direction is defined by a vector of 1
unit in x, y and z. - Planes defined by Miller indices Their
normal direction (reciprocals of intercepts of
plane with the x, y and z axes).
7Silicon has the basic diamond crystal structure
two merged FCC cells offset by a/4 in x, y and
z.
8Faced-centered Cubic (FCC) Unit Cell
Figure 4.5
9Silicon Unit Cell FCC Diamond Structure
Figure 4.6
10Basic FCC Cell
Merged FCC Cells
Omitting atoms outside Cell
Bonding of Atoms
11Various types of defects can exist in a crystal
(or can be created by processing steps). In
general, these cause electrical leakage and are
result in poorer devices.
(Extra line of atoms)
12Point Defects
13Semiconductor-Grade Silicon
14Czochralski (CZ) crystal growing
Si is purified from SiO2 (sand) by refining,
distillation and CVD. It contains lt 1 ppb
impurities. Pulled crystals contain O (1018
cm-3) and C (1016 cm-3), plus dopants placed in
the melt.
15CZ Crystal Puller
Figure 4.10
16- All Si wafers come from Czochralski grown
crystals. - Polysilicon is melted, then held just below 1417
C, and a single crystal seed starts the growth. - Pull rate, melt temperature and rotation rate
control the growth
17(No Transcript)
18Silicon Ingot Grown by CZ Method
Photograph courtesy of Kayex Corp., 300 mm Si
ingot
Photo 4.1
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20An alternative process is the Float Zone
process which can be used for refining or single
crystal growth.
21 In the float zone process, dopants and other
impurities are rejected by the regrowing silicon
crystal. Impurities tend to stay in the liquid
and refining can be accomplished, especially
with multiple passes.(See the Plummer for models
of this process)
22Float Zone Crystal Growth
Figure 4.11
23Dopant Concentration Nomenclature
Table 4.2
24Segregation Fraction for FZ Refining
25Basic Process Steps for Wafer Preparation
Figure 4.19
26Ingot Diameter Grind
Figure 4.20
27Internal Diameter Saw
Figure 4.23
28After crystal pulling, the boule is shaped and
cut into wafers which are then polished on one
side.
29Wafer Notch and Laser Scribe
Figure 4.22
30Polished Wafer Edge
Figure 4.24
31Chemical Etch of Wafer Surface to Remove Sawing
Damage
Figure 4.25
32Wafer Dimensions Attributes
Table 4.3
33Increase in Number of Chips on Larger Wafer
Diameters(Assume large 1.5 x 1.5 cm
microprocessors)
Figure 4.13
34Developmental Specifications for 300-mm Wafer
Dimensions and Orientation
From H. Huff, R. Foodall, R. Nilson, and S.
Griffiths, Thermal Processing Issues for 300-mm
Silicon Wafers Challenges and Opportunities,
ULSI Science and Technology (New Jersey The
Electrochemical Society, 1997), p. 139.
Table 4.4
35Wafer Polishing
36Double-Sided Wafer Polish
Figure 4.26
37Improving Silicon Wafer Requirements
Adapted from K. M. Kim, Bigger and Better CZ
Silicon Crystals, Solid State Technology
(November 1996), p. 71.
38Quality Measures
- Physical dimensions
- Flatness
- Microroughness
- Oxygen content
- Crystal defects
- Particles
- Bulk resistivity
39Backside Gettering to Purify Silicon
Polished Surface
Backside Implant Ar (50 keV, 1015/cm2) The argon
amorphizes the back side of the silicon. The
wafer is heated to 550oC, which regrows the
silicon. However, the argon can not be absorbed
by the silicon crystal so it precipitates into
micro-bubbles and prevents some damage from
annealing. The wafer is held at 550oC for several
hours, and all mobile metal contaminants are
attracted to and then captured by the argon
stabilized damage. Once captured, they never
leave these sites.
40Chapter Review (Wafer Fabrication)
- Raw materials (SiO2) are refined to produce
electronic grade silicon with a purity unmatched
by any other available material on earth. - CZ crystal growth produces structurally perfect
Si single crystals which are cut into wafers and
polished. - Starting wafers contain only dopants, and trace
amounts of contaminants O and C in measurable
quantities. - Dopants can be incorporated during crystal growth
- Point, line, and volume (1D, 2D, and 3D) defects
can be present in crystals, particularly after
high temperature processing. - Point defects are "fundamental" and their
concentration depends on temperature
(exponentially), on doping level and on other
processes like ion implantation which can create
non-equilibrium transient concentrations of these
defects.
41Measurement of Wafer CharacteristicsDarkfield
and Brightfield Detection
Figure 7.15
42Schematic of Optical System
Figure 7.16
43Principle of Confocal Microscopy
Figure 7.17
44Particle Detection by Light Scattering
Figure 7.18
45Measurement of Wafer Characteristics
Hot Point Probe
- The hot point probe is a simple and reliable
means to determine whether a wafer is N or P type
is the Hot Point Probe. The basic operation of
this probe is illustrated in the next slide. Two
probes make ohmic contact with the wafer surface.
One is heated 25-100C hotter than the other. A
voltmeter placed across the probes will measure a
potential difference whose polarity indicates
whether the material is N or P type.
46Basic principle of the hot probe, illustrated for
an N-type sample, for determining N- or P-type
behavior in semiconductors.
47Hot Point Probe
- Consider an N-type sample. The majority carriers
are electrons. At the hot probe, the thermal
energy of the electrons is higher than at the
cold probe so the electrons will tend to diffuse
away from the hot probe, driven by the
temperature gradient. If a wire were connected
between the hot and cold probes, this would
result in a measurable current, whose direction
would correspond to the electrons moving right to
left. (The current by definition would be in the
opposite direction.) If we place a high-impedance
voltmeter between the probes, no current flows,
but a potential difference is measured, as
illustrated. As the electrons diffuse away from
the hot probe, they leave behind the positively
charged, immobile donor atoms that provided the
electrons. The negatively charged mobile
electrons tend to build up near the cold probe.
This results in the hot probe becoming positive
with respect to the cold probe. By a similar set
of arguments, if the material were P type,
positively charged holes would be the majority
carriers and the polarity of the induced voltage
would be reversed. The direction of the current
between the two probes would also be reversed in
P-type material, if they were shorted with a
wire. Thus a measurement of either the
short-circuit current or the open circuit voltage
tells us the type of the material.
48Four-point probe measurement method. The outer
two probes force a current through the sample
the inner two probes measure the voltage drop.
49Measurement of Sheet Resistance
- The most common method of measuring the wafer
resistivity is with the four-point probe. We
measure the sample resistance by measuring the
current that flows for a given applied voltage.
This could be done with just two probes. However,
in that case, contact resistances associated with
the probes and current spreading problems around
the probes are important and are not easily
accounted for in the analysis. Using four probes
allows us to force the current through the two
outer probes, where there will still be contact
resistance and current spreading problems, but we
measure the voltage drop with the two inner
probes using a high-impedance voltmeter. Problems
with probe contacts are thus eliminated in the
voltage measurement since no current flows
through these contacts.
50Four Point Probe
Figure 7.3
51Van der Pauw Sheet Resistivity(similar to
4-point probe, but uses shapes on wafer)
Figure 7.4
52Hall Effect Measurements
- The Hall effect was discovered more than 100
years ago when Hall observed a transverse voltage
across a conductor subjected to a magnetic field.
- The technique is more powerful than the sheet
resistance method described above because it can
determine the material type, carrier
concentration and carrier mobility separately.
The basic method is illustrated in the next
slide. The left part of the figure defines the
reference directions and the various currents,
fields and voltages the right part of the figure
illustrates a top view of a practical geometry
that is often used in semiconductor applications.
53Conceptual representation of Hall effect
measurement. The right sketch is a top view of a
more practical implementation.
54Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR)
55FTIR (Oxygen and Carbon Detection)
- The CZ crystal growth process introduces oxygen
and carbon into the silicon. These elements are
not inert in the crystal. It is important is to
be able to measure them and to control them. The
method is Fourier Transform Infrared
Spectroscopy. FTIR measures the absorption of
infrared energy by the molecules in a sample.
Many molecules have vibrational modes that absorb
specific wavelengths when they are excited. By
sweeping the wavelength of the incident energy
and detecting which wavelengths are absorbed, a
characteristic signature of the molecules present
is obtained. Oxygen in CZ crystals is located in
interstitial sites in the silicon lattice, bonded
to two silicon atoms. Low concentrations of
carbon are substitutional in silicon since carbon
is located in the same column of the periodic
table as silicon and easily replaces a silicon
atom. Oxygen exhibits a vibrational mode that
absorbs energy at 1106 cm-1 (wavenumber), that is
at a wavelength of about 9 microns carbon
absorbs energy at 607 cm-1.There are other
wavelengths of IR light that are absorbed by the
silicon atoms themselves. By measuring the
absorption of a particular wafer at 1106 or 607
cm-1, and comparing this absorption with an
oxygen or carbon free reference, the FTIR
technique can be made quantitative. - An IR beam is split by a partially reflecting
mirror and then follows two separate paths to the
sample and the detector. For pure silicon, if the
movable mirror is translated back and forth at
constant speed, the detected signal will be
sinusoidal as the two beams go in and out of
phase. The Fourier transform of this signal will
simply be a delta function proportional to the
incident intensity. If the frequency of the
source is swept, the Fourier transform of the
resulting signal will produce an intensity
spectrum. If we now insert the sample, the
resulting intensity spectrum will change because
of absorption of specific wavelengths by the
sample. The benefit of using the Fourier
transform method as opposed to simply directly
measuring the intensity spectrum is simply that
the signal to noise ratio is improved and as a
result, the detection limit is reduced. With
modern instruments, the detection limit for
interstitial oxygen in silicon is about
2x1015/cm3. Carbon can be detected down to about
5x1015/cm3. Oxygen precipitated into small SiO2
clusters can be detected by FTIR because in the
SiO2 form, the oxygen does not absorb at 1106
cm-1. As the precipitation occurs, the IR
absorption at this wavenumber decreases.
56Schematic of TEM Transmission Electron
Microscope
Wavelength of 1 MeV Electron 1Angstrom
57Electron Microscopy (TEM) of SiO2 on Si
58Oxygen Contamination in Silicon
- Oxygen is the most important impurity found in
silicon. It is incorporated in silicon during the
CZ growth process as a result of dissolution of
the quartz crucible in which the molten silicon
is contained. The oxygen is typically at a level
of about 1018 /cm3. It has recently become
possible to use a magnetic field during CZ growth
to control thermal convection currents in the
melt. This slows down the transport of oxygen
from the crucible walls to the growing silicon
interface and reduces the oxygen concentration in
the resulting crystal. - Oxygen in silicon is always present at
concentrations of 10-20 ppm (5x1017- 1018/cm3)
in CZ silicon. The oxygen can affect processes
used in wafer fabrication such as impurity
diffusion. - Oxygen has three principal effects in the silicon
crystal. - (1) In an as-grown crystal, the oxygen is
believed to be incorporated primarily as
dispersed single atoms designated OI occupying
interstitial positions in the silicon lattice,
but covalently bonded to two silicon atoms. The
oxygen atoms thus replace one of the normal Si-Si
covalent bonds with a Si-O-Si structure. The
oxygen atom is neutral in this configuration and
can be detected with the FTIR method. Such
interstitial oxygen atoms improve the yield
strength of silicon by as much as 25, making
silicon wafers more robust in a manufacturing
facility. - (2) The formation of oxygen donors. A small
amount of the oxygen in the crystal forms SiO4
complexes which act as donors. They can be
detected by changes in the silicon resistivity
corresponding to the free electrons donated by
the oxygen complexes. As many as 1016/cm3 donors
can be formed, which is sufficient to
significantly increase the resistivity of lightly
doped P-type wafers. During the CZ growth
process, the crystal cools slowly through 500oC
temperature and oxygen donors form. The SiO4
complexes are unstable at temperatures above
500C and so usually wafer manufacturers anneal
the grown crystal or the wafers themselves after
sawing and polishing, to remove the oxygen
complexes. These donors can reform, however,
during normal IC manufacturing, if a thermal step
around 400-500C is used. Such steps are not
uncommon, particularly at the end of a process
flow. - (3) The tendency of the oxygen to precipitate
under normal device processing conditions,
forming SiO2 regions inside the wafer. The
precipitation arises because the oxygen was
incorporated at the melt temperature and is
therefore supersaturated in the silicon at
process temperatures.
59Carbon Contamination in Silicon
- Carbon is normally present in CZ grown silicon
crystals at concentrations on the order of
1016/cm3.The carbon comes from the graphite
components in the crystal pulling machine. The
melt contains silicon and modest concentrations
of oxygen. This results in the formation of SiO
that evaporates from the melt surface. Generally,
the ambient in the crystal puller is Ar flowing
at reduced pressure, and the SiO can be
transported in the gas phase to the graphite
crucible and other support fixtures. SiO reacts
with graphite (carbon) to produce CO that again
transports through the gas phase back to the
melt. From the melt, the carbon is incorporated
into the growing crystal. - Four Effects of Carbon on Silicon
- (1) Carbon is mostly substitutional in the
silicon lattice. Since it is a column IV element,
it does not act as a donor or acceptor in
silicon. Carbon is known to affect the
precipitation kinetics of oxygen in silicon. This
is likely because there is a volume expansion
when oxygen precipitates and a volume contraction
when carbon precipitates because of the relative
sizes of O and C. There is thus a tendency for
precipitates that are complexes of C and O to
form at minimum stresses in the crystal. Since
precipitated SiO2 is crucial in intrinsic
gettering, this can have an effect on gettering
efficiency. - (2) Carbon is also known to interact with point
defects in silicon. Silicon interstitials tend to
displace carbon atoms from lattice sites,
presumably because this can help to compensate
the volume contraction present when there is
carbon in the crystal. - (3) Thermal donors (Oxygen Effects) normally form
around 450C. There is also evidence that if C is
present at 1 ppm, these donors may also form at
higher temperatures (650-1000C). - (4) Higher concentrations of C to Si (levels of a
few percent) can change the bandgap of the
silicon and may allow the fabrication of new
types of semiconductor devices in the future.
60Chapter Review (Wafer Metrology)
- Microscopic examination for particulates.
- Hot Point Probe (wafer doping)
- Four Point Probe (wafer resistivity)
- Hall Effect (carrier mobility)
- FBIR (oxygen and carbon detection)
- TEM (atomic resolution of defects / surface)
- Effects of Oxygen on IC fabrication
- Effects of Carbon on IC fabrication