Abstract:
A method of depositing a silica glass insulating film over a substrate. In one embodiment the method comprises exposing the substrate to a silicon-containing reactant introduced into a chamber in which the substrate is disposed such that one or more layers of the silicon-containing reactant are adsorbed onto the substrate; purging or evacuating the chamber of the silicon-containing reactant; converting the silicon-containing reactant into a silica glass insulating compound by exposing the substrate to oxygen radicals formed from a second reactant while biasing the substrate to promote a sputtering effect, wherein an average atomic mass of all atomic constituents in the second reactant is less than or equal to an average atomic mass of oxygen; and repeating the exposing, purging/evacuating and exposing sequence a plurality of times until a desired film thickness is reached.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
       [0001]     One of the primary steps in the fabrication of modern semiconductor devices is the formation of an insulation film on a semiconductor substrate. Such insulation films are used for a variety of purposes including, among others, separating adjacent conductive layers (e.g., an intermetal dielectric (IMD) layer separates adjacent metal lines while a premetal dielectric (PMD) layer separates metal layer one from the conductive substrate) and separating adjacent active regions of the substrate (e.g., as part of a shallow trench isolation (STI) structure).  
         [0002]     For applications such as the deposition of IMD or PMD layers in an integrated circuit or the formation of STI structures, one important physical property of the insulation film is its ability to completely fill gaps between adjacent structures without leaving voids within the gap. This property is referred to as the film&#39;s gapfill capability. Gaps that may require filling include spaces between adjacent conductive lines, spaces formed by an etched trench or the like.  
         [0003]     As semiconductor device geometries have decreased in size over the years, the ratio of the height of such gaps to their width, the so-called “aspect ratio,” has dramatically increased. Gaps having a combination of a high aspect ratio and a small width present a challenge for semiconductor manufacturers to fill completely. In short, the challenge usually is to prevent the film from forming in a manner that closes off the gap before it is filled. Failure to fill a gap completely results in the formation of a void in the deposited layer, which may adversely affect device operation.  
         [0004]      FIG. 1  is a simplified cross-sectional view of a partially completed integrated circuit  10  that can help illustrate the gapfill issue. Partially formed integrated circuit  10  is formed over a silicon substrate  12  that includes a plurality of shallow trench isolation structures  14 . As shown in  FIG. 1 , integrated circuit  10  has a relatively densely packed area  16  where densely packed active devices (e.g., transistors are formed) and a relatively isolated area  18  (also referred to as an “open area”) where an active device may be separated from another active device by a distance that is an order of magnitude more than the spacing between devices in the densely packed area.  
         [0005]     A typical shallow trench isolation structure is created by first forming a thin pad oxide layer  20  over the surface of silicon substrate  12  and then form a silicon nitride layer  22  over pad oxide layer  20 . The nitride and oxide layers are then patterned using standard photolithography techniques and trenches  24  are etched through the nitride/oxide stack into silicon substrate  12 . Trenches  24  are then filled with an insulating material such as silicon dioxide using a deposition process that has good gapfill properties. Prior to the gapfill process, however, an initial lining layer  26 , such as an in situ steam generation (ISSG) oxide or other thermal oxide layer or a silicon nitride layer, is usually formed.  
         [0006]     In some applications trench  24  has an aspect ratio of between about 6:1 to 8:1 and the formation of a highly conformal film such as oxide liner  26  in trench  24  may increase the aspect ratio even further to, for example 10:1 or higher. Thus, the filling of trenches  24  is typically one of the most challenging gapfill applications in the formation of the integrated circuit.  
         [0007]     One known method of depositing thin films, including thin film insulation layers, is referred to as atomic layer deposition or “ALD”. ALD techniques have been known since the 1970&#39;s and have been investigated as a way of depositing a variety of materials including silicon oxide. Historically, an ALD process includes repetitively exposing a substrate to alternating flows of different gases, such as source and reactant gases, where a monolayer of the first gas is adsorbed on the surface of the substrate and the second gas reacts with the monolayer to form the desired material. In some instances the chamber is evacuated or purged between flows of the source and reactant gases to remove any excess gas and prevent gas phase reactions from occurring. For example, an ALD process used to form a layer of silicon oxide, includes exposing a substrate to a first silicon-containing gas so that an atomic layer of the silicon-containing gas is adsorbed on the substrate surface, evacuating the chamber to remove any excess silicon-containing gas and then exposing the substrate to an oxidizing agent that oxidizes the layer of silicon-containing material to form a solid thin film layer of silicon oxide. Each cycle of exposing the substrate to a silicon-containing gas followed by an oxidizing agent is then repeated multiple times until a desired film thickness is obtained.  
         [0008]     As can be appreciated, such ALD techniques typically result in a very controlled, slow growth of material. Thus, within a semiconductor manufacturing context, ALD techniques have been typically used to form very thin films, e.g., gate oxides, where precise control over film thickness is more important than a high film deposition rate pulse gases, generally slow deposition, not used commercially for oxide gapfill applications.  
         [0009]     Despite the efforts of these researches, however, to the best of the inventor&#39;s knowledge, no one has developed an ALD silicon oxide process to deposit relatively thick oxide layers such as those required in shallow trench isolation and other gapfill applications, suitable for commercial use.  
       BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
       [0010]     Embodiments of the present invention deposit an insulating material using atomic layer deposition (ALD) techniques. Some embodiments of the invention are particularly useful in filing narrow, high aspect ratio gaps formed between adjacent raised features, while other embodiments can be used to deposit blanket (non-gapfill) films. The techniques of the invention are useful for a variety of applications including, among others, the formation of premetal dielectric layers, intermetal dielectric layers and shallow trench isolation structures in integrated circuits. According to some embodiments of the invention, silicon oxide films can be deposited at a rate of 30 Å/cycle or more and can be used either alone or in conjunction with other deposition processes in a gapfill application.  
         [0011]     According to one embodiment of the invention, a method of depositing a silica glass insulating film over a substrate is disclosed. The method exposes the substrate to a silicon-containing reactant introduced into a chamber in which the substrate is disposed such that one or more layers of the silicon-containing reactant are adsorbed onto the substrate; purges or evacuates the chamber of the silicon-containing reactant; converts the silicon-containing reactant into a silica glass insulating compound by exposing the substrate to oxygen radicals formed from a second reactant while biasing the substrate to promote a sputtering effect, and then repeats the exposing, purging/evacuating and exposing sequence a plurality of times until a desired film thickness is reached. In one embodiment, an average atomic mass of all atomic constituents in the second reactant is less than or equal to an average atomic mass of oxygen.  
         [0012]     In another embodiment a method of depositing a silica glass insulating film over a substrate having a gap formed between two adjacent raised features, the gap having a bottom surface and a sidewall surface is disclosed. The method exposes the substrate to a silicon-containing reactant introduced into a chamber in which the substrate is disposed such that one or more layers of the silicon-containing reactant are adsorbed onto the substrate; purges or evacuates the chamber of the silicon-containing reactant; converts the silicon-containing reactant into a silica glass insulating compound by exposing the substrate to a plasma formed from a second reactant comprising oxygen atoms while biasing the substrate to promote a sputtering effect, wherein an average atomic mass of all atomic constituents in the second reactant is less than or equal to an average atomic mass of oxygen; and then repeats the exposing, purging/evacuating and exposing sequence multiple times. During growth of the silica glass film the substrate is maintained at a temperature between 300-800° C. during and the silica glass film grows up from the bottom surface of the gap at a rate greater than it grows inward on the sidewall surface of the gap.  
         [0013]     These and other embodiments of the invention along with many of its advantages and features are described in more detail in conjunction with the text below and attached figures. 
     
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0014]      FIG. 1  is a simplified cross-sectional view of a partially completed integrated circuit that includes a plurality of shallow trench isolation structures;  
         [0015]      FIG. 2  is a flowchart depicting the steps associated with one embodiment of the present invention;  
         [0016]      FIGS. 3A-3D  are graphs depicting gas flow sequences employed during the ALD process set forth in  FIG. 2  according to several different embodiments of the invention;  
         [0017]      FIG. 4  is a simplified, cross-sectional view of an exemplary substrate processing system in which the deposition processes associated with embodiments of the present invention may be carried out in. 
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION  
       [0018]     Embodiments of the invention pertain to a process for depositing a silica glass dielectric material using ALD techniques. Some embodiments of the invention permit the dielectric material to be deposited into closely-spaced gaps with substantially 100% gap fill for most currently envisioned small-width, high aspect ratio applications. For example, for gaps having a width of 0.10 microns substantially 100% gapfill can be achieved by embodiments of the invention for aspect ratios of 8:1 and even higher in both the active and open areas of an integrated circuit die. Other embodiments of the invention are particularly useful for depositing blanket silica glass films having a high density and exhibiting good stochiometry. Embodiments of the invention are useful for a variety of different applications and are particularly useful for the fabrication of integrated circuits having minimum feature sizes of 0.10 microns or less.  
         [0019]     In order to better appreciate and understand the present invention, reference is first made to  FIG. 1 , which is a flowchart depicting steps associated with one embodiment of the invention. The process discussed below with respect to  FIG. 1  is for an undoped silica glass (USG) film that may be used, for example, in a shallow trench isolation (STI) application. It is to be understood, however, that the techniques of the present invention are applicable to the deposition of silica glass films for other applications including intermetal dielectric (IMD) layers, premetal dielectric (PMD) layers and others. Also, the techniques of the present invention are applicable to the deposition of a variety of silica glass materials, the use of which is application dependent, including phosphosilicate glass (PSG), boron-doped silicate glass (BSG), borophosphosilicate glass (BPGS), fluorine-doped silicate glass (FSG) and carbon-doped silicate glass (SiOC) among others.  
         [0020]     As shown in  FIG. 2 , the process starts by loading a substrate into an appropriate substrate processing chamber (step  30 ), such as the exemplary chamber discussed below with respect to  FIG. 4 . The substrate typically, but not necessarily, has one or more gaps formed between adjacent raised features. The raised features may be, for example, adjacent metal lines, transistor gates or other features. After the substrate is positioned in the chamber, an atomic layer deposition (ALD) process is initiated to deposit the silica glass layer. During the ALD process the substrate is alternatively exposed to a flow of a silicon source (step  32 ), such as silane, and reactive oxygen radicals (step  36 ) until a desired film thickness is reached (step  40 ).  
         [0021]     In one particular embodiment during a first stage of the ALD process (step  32 ) the substrate is exposed to a brief flow of silane (e.g., 1-10 seconds) such that less than one or up to about 10 layers of silane molecules are adsorbed on the surface of substrate. Next, the silane flow is stopped in preparation for the second stage of the process in which the substrate is exposed to a second reactant that includes dissociated oxygen radicals (step  36 ).  
         [0022]     During the second stage of the ALD process, the oxygen radicals react with the adsorbed silane to convert the silane molecules into a thin layer of silica glass. Byproducts from the reaction (e.g., H 2 O vapor) are pumped out of the chamber along with unreacted oxygen radicals. In some embodiments the oxygen radicals are formed by flowing molecular oxygen (O 2 ) or a similar oxygen source into the substrate processing chamber and forming a plasma therein, while in other embodiments the oxygen radicals are formed remote from the substrate processing chamber in, for example, a remote plasma source, and moved into the substrate processing chamber under a pressure difference between the remote plasma chamber and substrate processing chamber as is known to those of skill in the art.  
         [0023]     It is desirable to fully oxidize the substrate surface during step  36  so that silicon-rich striations are not formed within the gapfill material. It is also desirable, however, to stop the reactive oxygen exposure step as soon as complete oxidation occurs in order to improve throughput of the process and save costs associated with excess gas. To this end, some embodiments of the invention employ an in situ monitor, such as an interferometer, in order to determine when full oxidation has occurred. The interferometer detects radiation reflected from the surface of the substrate and compares interference patterns to previous patterns that represent a fully oxidized film for the particular application. When it is determined full oxidation has occurred, the interferometer sends a signal that can be used to endpoint the second stage of the ALD process and initiate the next ALD cycle.  
         [0024]     After the adsorbed silane molecules are converted to silicon oxide, the sequence of alternating flows of silane and oxygen radicals is then repeated multiple times until the silica glass layer reaches a desired thickness (step  40 ) as shown in  FIG. 2 .  
         [0025]     Embodiments of the invention bias the oxygen radicals toward the substrate during the second stage in order to promote a sputter effect from the oxygen radicals simultaneous with the conversion of the silane molecules to silicon oxide. Such a bias can be provided, for example, by applying RF energy to a pedestal or other component that holds the substrate in the chamber. Generating sputtering simultaneous with oxide growth allows for anisotropic growth and control of the anisotropy by reducing sidewall growth. This, in turn, enables the ALD process to grow the silica glass layer in a bottom-up manner so that the growth of the layer proceeds faster on horizontal surfaces, such as the bottom of a trench, than on vertical surfaces, such as trench sidewalls. Applying bias power also results in a higher quality deposited film (e.g., higher density) and full oxidiation (and complete doping in the case of doped films) in a shorter time than if no bias power was applied.  
         [0026]     Some embodiments of the invention also add a flow of a light weight fluent gas, such as molecular hydrogen (H 2 ) or helium, to the second reactant in order to better control the reaction between the oxygen radicals and silane molecules and/or dilute the oxygen. In some embodiments the fluent includes a combination of molecular hydrogen and helium while in other embodiments it may hydrogen and/or helium mixed with include other gases, such as neon and/or argon. In some embodiments the gas introduced during step  36  does not significantly increase the amount of sputtering that is generated by the oxygen radicals. In such embodiments, the average atomic mass of all atomic constituents in the second reactant gas (the oxygen source gas and fluent gas) should be less than or equal to the average atomic mass of oxygen, which is approximately 16. In other embodiments the average atomic mass of the second reactant gas can be increased above that of oxygen by adding argon or another relatively heavy diluent gas to increase the sputter rate.  
         [0027]     Also, some embodiments of the invention heat the substrate to a temperature above 300° C. during the ALD process (steps  32 - 40 ) while other embodiments of the invention heat the substrate to a temperature between about 300-800° C. during the process. The inventors have found that at such increased temperatures multiple layers of silane molecules are adsorbed onto the surface of the substrate during the first stage of the ALD process which can then be converted to multiple layers of silicon oxide during the second stage. This allows the ALD process to proceed at a considerably higher deposition rate than single layer ALD processes.  
         [0028]     Some embodiments of the invention evacuate the ALD chamber between the first and second stages of the process (steps  32  and  36 , respectively) by stopping the flow of all gases into the chamber and pumping out residual silane molecules that are not adsorbed onto the wafer surface with a vacuum pump. Similarly, some embodiments evacuate or purge the chamber of residual oxygen after the second stage in preparation for the first stage in the next ALD cycle.  
         [0029]     One example of such an embodiment is set forth in  FIG. 2A  which shows that after each pulse  50  of silane, no gas flow is introduced into the chamber for a time period represented by reference number  52  before the substrate is exposed to a pulse  54  of oxygen radicals.  
         [0030]     Other embodiments purge residual silane out of the chamber between the first and second stages by flowing a gas that is chemically inert to the silica glass forming reactants used in the first and second stages as shown in  FIG. 2B . In  FIG. 2B , a flow of helium  60  is introduced into the chamber after exposing the substrate to silane molecules (pulse  50 ) and prior to exposing the substrate to oxygen radicals (pulse  52 ). In other embodiments purge gases other than helium may be used including, for example, molecular hydrogen and/or argon among others. In still other embodiments, the silicon source can be purged by a flow of helium or another appropriate chemically inert gas that is maintained throughout the ALD sequence as shown in  FIG. 2C .  
         [0031]     In still other embodiments, the silicon source is purged by a flow of oxygen that is maintained continuously during both the first and second stages of the ALD process as shown in  FIG. 2D . In these embodiments, chamber conditions are kept such that the combination of silane and oxygen in the first stage do not react in the gas phase to produce an oxide film. Instead, the silane flow  50  is alternated with the application of energy  62  to form reactive radicals from the oxygen flow  64 . During the stage where silane and oxygen are introduced into the chamber together without the dissociation of the gases, silane molecules are adsorbed onto the surface of the layer. Then, when silane flow is stopped the oxygen flow purges residual silane from the chamber. Afterwards, reactive oxygen radicals are formed from the flow of oxygen and the oxygen radicals convert the absorbed silane molecules to silicon oxide.  
         [heading-0032]     Exemplary ALD System:  
         [0033]      FIG. 4  is a simplified cross-sectional view of one embodiment of an exemplary chamber  100  that can be used to perform the atomic layer deposition step in accordance with the present invention. Chamber  100  includes a primary chamber wall  102  that encloses a process area  104 . A substrate pedestal  106  supports a substrate (not shown) within processing area  104  during ALD processing. Pedestal  106  can be raised and lowered within area  104  to a desired substrate processing position and bellows  108  prevent process gases from contacting the bottom portion of the pedestal.  
         [0034]     Gases, such as O 2 , SiH 4  and He (or another purge gas, diluent gas or sputtering agent) are introduced into processing area  104  through gas distribution channels  110   a  ,  110   b  and  110   c  , respectively, from gaseous sources  112   a  ,  112   b  and  112   c  , respectively. Switches  114   a  ,  114   b  and  114   c  enable the pulse-like flow of gases into area  104  employed by ALD operations. In some embodiments of the invention, switches  114   a  - c  are electrically or pneumatically operated. Gases introduced into area  104  from gas distribution channels  110   a - c  flow radially across the surface of the substrate positioned on substrate support  106  and out through the foreline  118  under the control of a vacuum pump (not shown). Also not shown are flow rate controllers coupled between each gas source and switch  114   a  - c  that control the flow rate of the gases to the switch.  
         [0035]     A narrow, upper portion of area  104  is surrounded by a coil  120 . RF energy from RF power source  122  can be applied to coil  120  to form a plasma from gases introduced into this region of area  104 . Dissociated species from the plasma are pumped along with the flow of gases through the chamber across the surface of the substrate. RF energy can also be applied to an electrode  126  within pedestal  106  from a bias RF power source  124  in order to promote a sputtering effect during selected stages of the ALD process. An RF shield  130  (e.g., grounded sheet metal) surrounds the upper portion of chamber  100  and coil  120 .  
         [0036]     In other embodiments, the ALD chamber may include a capacitively-coupled plasma system (e.g., a mixed frequency approach that may apply bias power to the substrate, the opposing surface or both) or other type of plasma formation system. Also, in other embodiments more or fewer gas sources  112   a  - c  may be employed with each source having a corresponding MFC, switch and gas channel.  
         [0037]     A system controller  160  controls the operation of both chamber  100  as well as other aspects of any multichamber system (e.g., a cluster tool) the chamber  100  may be part of. Such control is effected via connections to control lines  165  (which are only partially shown). Controller  160  controls, among other things, gas flow rates, RF power levels, gas pulses, pedestal spacing, chamber temperature and chamber pressure. Controller  160  may include, for example, a memory  162 , such as a hard disk drive and/or a floppy disk drive and a card rack coupled to a processor  161 . The card rack may contain a single-board computer (SBC), analog and digital input/output boards, interface boards and stepper motor controller boards. System controller  160  operates under the control of a computer program stored on the hard disk drive or through other computer programs, such as programs stored on a removable disk. The computer program dictates, for example, the timing, mixture of gases, RF power levels and other parameters of a particular process carried out in each chamber.  
         [0038]     Table 1 below lists the process parameters that can be used in ALD silica glass deposition process (one cycle) according to one exemplary embodiment of the present invention. In the table, stage 1 is the first portion of the ALD cycle where silane is adsorbed on the surface of the substrate and stage 2 is the later part of the ALD cycle where the adsorbed silane is converted to silica glass. Additional steps can be included in the ALD cycle to add a dopant gas and/or to evacuate or purge the chamber of selected gases between the various ALD stages as discussed above.  
                                 TABLE 2                           EXEMPLARY RANGES FOR ALD PROCESS PARAMETERS                    Stage 1   Stage 2           Parameter   Value   Value                       RF Power   —    10-1000 W           Bias Power   —    10-1000 W           Pressure    60-100 mTorr    2-100 mTorr           Temperature   300-800° C.   300-800° C.           SiH 4      10-100 sccm   —           O 2      0-100 sccm    10-100 sccm           He or H 2      0-100 sccm    0-100 sccm                      
 
         [0039]     The gas flow rates and RF values recited and described above are optimized for deposition processes executed in the exemplary chambers also described herein outfitted for 200 mm wafers. A person of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that these parameters and others are in part chamber specific and will vary if chambers of other design and or volume are employed.  
         [0040]     Having fully described several embodiments of the present invention, many other equivalents or alternative embodiments of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, while the invention described with respect to an undoped silicate glass layer, the invention can also be used to fill gaps with a variety of different insulating materials including, among others, of phosphosilicate glass (PSG), boron-doped silicate glass (BSG), borophosphosilicate glass (BPGS), fluorine-doped silica glass (FSG) and silicon oxynitride (SiON) by adding an appropriate dopant gas such as PH 3  for PSG, B 2 H 6  for BSG, PH 3  and B 2 H 6  for BPSG, SiF 4  for FSG or N 2 O for SiON in one of the ALD cycles. A person of skill in the art can determine which ALD cycle the dopant should be added to (or whether is should be introduced in a separate, additional cycle) based on the compatability of the dopant and the first or second reactant. For example, in one embodiment PH 3  may be added with SiH 4  in step  32  to form a PSG film. In another embodiment, N 2 O may be added with the oxidizer in step  36  to form an SiON film. Also, in some embodiments, an oxygen source such as N 2 O or CO 2  can be used instead of O 2  and a silicon source other than monosilane may be used. Examples of suitable silicon sources include other silane family members such as, Si 2 H 6 , Si 3 H 8 , etc.; TEOS, SiCl 4  or SiF 4  among others although sources such as SiCl 4  and SiF 4  will result in lower deposition rates because they generally will not yield a multilayer deposition process as used in some embodiments of the invention.  
         [0041]     Furthermore, while the invention was described primarily with respect to gapfill applications, embodiments of the invention are also useful in depositing blanket films. The techniques of the invention enhance film quality including film density and stochiometry among other factors and allow for complete oxidation of the film in less time than in ALD processes that do not use the sputtering techniques taught by the invention. As such, the above description is illustrative and not restrictive. These equivalents and/or alternatives are intended to be included within the scope of the present invention.