Basic PECVD Plasma Processes
Basic PECVD Plasma Processes
Basic PECVD Plasma Processes
PECVD SiNx: SiHx + NHx or SiHx + N SiNx (+H2) SiNx (+H2) SiOx (+H2 + N2) SiONx (+H2 + N2) Si (+H2) SiCx (+H2)
PECVD SiOx: SiHx + N2O PECVD SiONx: SiHx + N2O + NH3 PECVD a-Si:H PECVD SiC: SiHx
SiHx + CHx
SiOx (Oxide)
Dep. rate ? ? Refr. Index Dep. Rate Uniformity ? ? Refr. Index Uniformity ? (more compr.) ? Film Stress (more tensile) BHF Etch Rate
It can be easily measured by ellipsometer or prism coupler, allowing rapid evaluation of film composition (and unifomrity of composition).
55
65
75
85
N2O/SIH4 RATIO
Oxford Instruments plc 2003
DEPOSITION RATE OF SILICON DIOXIDE: GAS FLOW (N2O/SIH4 RATIO) - (High rate process)
450
N2O/SIH4 RATIO
Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology
1.46 1.45
RI
1.472 1.47 1.468 1.466 1.464 1.462 1.46 1.458 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 NH3 flow (sccm )
30
40
50 N2O : SiH4
60
70
Warning: buffered hydrofluoric acid (BHF) is highly corrosive, please read safety datasheet and safe system of work before use.
Warning: Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is highly corrosive, please read safety datasheet and safe system of work before use.
Oxford Instruments plc 2003
Standard SiNx
Oxford Instruments plc 2003
Disadvantages
Lower deposition rate (7nm vs upto 20nm/min) Slightly worse uniformity Slightly worse repeatability
E ( t substrate ) = 2. . r t film 3 (1 )
2 where : = film stress bow, r = radius of scan and film thickness ratio = change in wafer t substrate E = Youngs
, r, and thicknesses must be measured in the same unit, e.g. cm or m Then will be in the same units as E (e.g. dynes/cm2 or GPa)
Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology
( t substrate ) = 2. r t film
x 6 .16 x 10
11
dynes
cm
Example: 10m bow on 25mm radius scan, 500m Si substrate, 0.5m film:
( 500 ) 10 = . 2 0 .5 ( 25000 )
x 6 .16 x 10
11
dynes
cm
4.93 x 10
dynes
cm
0.493GPa
493MPa
Tensile
Compressive
SiOxNy
Tensile
F ilm S tr e s s (G P a )
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
-0.6 -0.8 -1
Where:
Compressive
HF = HF pulse time, LF = LF pulse time, Total HF+LF pulse time typically 20secs. 0% = continuous LF, 100% = continuous HF
Percentage HF
Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology
0 - -50MPa
500
550
600
650
700
Stress 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 HF power (W)
Pressure (mT)
Stress (MPa)
Stress
a-Si:H
Deposited using SiH4 Either pure, He or Ar dilution Common for addition of PH3 and B2H6 as dopant Surface pre-cleans useful for surface adhesion improvements Bubbling of film may result when depositing on to bare Si wafers Usually deposited on to SiOx or SiNx underlayer Stress dependant on underlayer
-200
18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Pow er (W)
Particle descriptions
Possible causes
Small particles less than 5um which appear in concentrated clusters. These clusters appear in a pattern which mirrors that of the showerhead holes. They are concentrated mainly in one focal plane of the microscope and appear to be at the bottom of the film. Small particles less than 5um which appear in concentrated clusters. These clusters appear in a pattern which mirrors that of the showerhead holes. They are concentrated mainly in one focal plane of the microscope and appear to be at the bottom of the film. Small particles less than 5um which appear in concentrated clusters. These clusters appear in a pattern which may or may not mirror that of the showerhead holes. They appear in many different focal planes of the microscope, at regular intervals throughout the film.
Running the machine too soon after the completion of a clean process. Silane forms particles when it reacts with residual oxygen in the gas lines (remember all of the gas line up to the normally open, hardware interlock nupro valve is incorporated in the chamber vacuum and needs to de-gas at the end of a long clean run).
Wait 30 minutes before running a deposition process using silane after finishing a clean.
The first run after a long period of machine disuse (say overnight)
A small leak in the silane line, particularly around the mass flow, allowing a build-up of silane dust which is blown though on to the first wafer.
Fix the leak in the silane line. Flow silane gas after a significant period of machine disuse without a wafer in the chamber to clear the dust.
Every run
A leak in the gas in-let assembly or a severe leak in the silane line. Plasma forming behind the showerhead or in the gas inlet assembly.
Leak check chamber and gas line. If both less than 1mT per minute contact Oxford service department and give this description. If greater than 1 mT per minute take apart gas inlet assembly and clean O-rings and PTFE part.
Vacuum the chamber inside, this is necessary periodically after cleaning. It may be a good idea to cool the chamber first to prevent risk of injury with the hot table.
After a power failure or other reason which caused a significant drop in table temperature
When the lower electrode cools deposited film, particularly around the edges, cracks and is blown on to the wafer during subsequent deposition runs.
After a certain amount of deposition on the chamber, but it varies when they occur.
If you are depositing films of many different chemistries and stresses, particularly those with high stress, then the film will flake off much earlier than expected.
After a certain amount of deposition but it seems to be getting less and less after every clean.
The films are not adhering to the showerhead very well. Someone has cleaned the showerhead using solvent, leaving behind a residue that is giving poor adhesion for the deposited films. The showerhead has become dirty and the clean process is unable to clean it the showerhead is ready for its periodic maintenance. Showerhead holes may be lighting-up or the showerhead holes have become damaged due to normal wear and tear.
Metal particles which shine under normal cleanroom light and are greater than 20um in maximum dimension. Particles or marks which appear randomly on the wafer, but look as if they are underneath the film.
Every run
The wafer has been cleaned using solvents which have not been properly washed off with de-ionised water.
1. 2.
Change process conditions as detailed in trend tables. If processing involves LF then check; a) is the uniformity of the LF part of the deposition causing the problem? b) conditioning of chamber i. ii. How much deposition; LF much more affected by insulation build up in chamber? How clean?
d) or increase LF frequency
PECVD interlocks
PECVD clean gases (CF4/O2) are interlocked from all deposition gases as a safety feature to avoid reaction of O2 and SiH4. Such a reaction is a safety hazard as this is an explosive mixture, and is bad for the process since it will form white SiO2 dust in gas lines. The gas lines are hardware interlocked by 2 Nupro valves (1 normally open, 1 normally closed) in gas pod to provide maximum safety. However, in order to prevent dust build up in gas lines it is recommended that at least 2 pump/purge cycles (5min pump/5min purge 500sccm N2, 2Torr) are carried out between cleaning and deposition or vice versa.
Cleaning interval is lower for 80Plus due to flaking/peeling of film from walls as a result of frequent chamber venting. All figures given above may need to be reduced if a tight particle spec is required.