Abstract:
The present invention deposits a conductive material from an electrolyte solution to a predetermined area of a wafer. The steps that are used when making this application include applying the conductive material to the predetermined area of the wafer using an electrolyte solution disposed on a surface of the wafer, when the wafer is disposed between a cathode and an anode, and preventing accumulation of the conductive material to areas other than the predetermined area by mechanically polishing the other areas while the conductive material is being applied.

Description:
This is a division of application Ser. No. 09/201,929 filed Dec. 1, 1998 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,176,992 and claims the benefit of Provisional application No. 60/106,853, filed Nov. 3, 1998 abandoned. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     The present invention relates to a Method and Apparatus for Electro Chemical Mechanical Deposition, and more particularly, to a method and apparatus that provides for both the deposition and polishing of a conductive material on a semiconductor wafer. 
     2. Background of the Invention 
     Metallization of semiconductor wafers, i.e. deposition of a layer of metal on the face of wafers over a barrier/seed layer of metal has important and broad application in the semiconductor industry. Conventionally, aluminum and other metals are deposited as one of many metal layers that make up a semiconductor chip. More recently, there is great interest in the deposition of copper for interconnects on semiconductor chips, since, as compared to aluminum, copper reduces electrical resistance and allows semiconductor chips using copper to run faster with less heat generation, resulting in a significant gain in chip capacity and efficiency. 
     Conformal thin film deposition of copper into deep submicron via holes and trenches is becoming more difficult in ULSI chip processing, especially when the feature sizes are decreasing below 25 μm with aspect ratios of greater than 5 to 1. Common chemical vapor deposition and electro plating techniques have been used to fill these deep cavities etched into silicon substrates. These processes so far have yielded a very high cost and defect density for developing and integrating local interconnects for ULSI technology. 
     One of the factors that contributes to the high cost is the manner in which the conductive material, and particularly copper, is applied. Specifically, it is well known to apply certain contaminants, known as leveling agents, in the electrolyte solution that prevent or slow down the rate of deposition of the metal to the surface of the wafer substrate. Since these contaminants have a large size in comparison to the size of the typical via that needs to be filled, deposition of the metal on the surface of the wafer is, in part, prevented. This prevention, however, is achieved at the expense of adding contaminants to the electrolytic solution, which results, in part, in vias that do not have the desired conductive characteristics. In particular, the grain size of the deposited conductor, due to the use of such contaminants, is not as large as desired, which thereby results in quality problems for the resulting device, as well as increased expense due to significant annealing times that are subsequently required. 
     Further, the cost of achieving the desired structure, in which the conductive material exists in the via, but not on the substrate surface, still requires separate deposition and polishing steps. After the conventional deposition of the metal using an anode, cathode and electrolytic solution containing metal as is known, there is then required a polishing step, which polishing step is, for high performance devices at the present time, typically a chemical-mechanical polishing step. While chemical mechanical polishing achieves the desired result, it achieves it at considerable expense, and requires a great degree of precision in applying a slurry in order to achieve the desired high degree of polish on the conductive surface. 
     Accordingly, a less expensive and more accurate manner of applying a conductor to a semiconductor wafer is needed. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus that both deposits and polishes a conductive material on a semiconductor wafer. 
     It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus that simultaneously deposits and polishes a conductive material on a semiconductor wafer. 
     It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus that simultaneously deposits a conductive material in deep cavities of a semiconductor wafer and polishes/starves electrolytic solution from the top surface area of the semiconductor wafer. 
     It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus that recirculates the electrolytic solution used in depositing the conductive material on the semiconductor wafer. 
     These and other objects of the present invention are obtained by depositing a conductive material from an electrolyte solution to a predetermined area of a wafer. The steps that are used when making this application include applying the conductive material to the predetermined area of the wafer using an electrolyte solution disposed on a surface of the wafer, when the wafer is disposed in proximity to an anode, and preventing accumulation of the conductive material to areas other than the predetermined area by mechanically polishing, protecting or reducing from electrolyte contact to the other areas while the conductive material is being deposited. 
     An apparatus that performs this method includes an anode capable of receiving a first potential upon application of power. A cathode or the wafer is spaced from the anode and is capable of receiving a second potential opposite the first potential upon application of power. A pad or a multiple number of pads is/are disposed between the anode and the cathode, the pad being movable with respect to a surface of the wafer and inhibiting or reducing application of the conductive material to certain other areas when power is being supplied to the anode and the cathode. Further, a fluid chamber allows an electrolyte solution to be disposed on the surface of the wafer or the pad and the conductive material to be formed on desired areas of the wafer upon application of power. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following detailed description of the presently preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, of which: 
     FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate a first embodiment of the present invention; 
     FIG. 2 illustrates a second embodiment of the present invention; 
     FIG. 3 illustrates a representative via to be filled with a conductor according the present invention; and 
     FIGS. 4A-4C illustrate a third embodiment of the present invention. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     The preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described. As noted above, conventional processing uses different equipment, at different times, in order to obtain conductive material within vias or at other desired locations on the surface of a semiconductor wafer that contains many different semiconductor chips, but not have the conductive material disposed at undesired locations. Accordingly, the equipment cost needed to manufacture a high quality semiconductor integrated circuit device can be exorbitant. 
     The present invention contemplates different embodiments which allow for the same device, termed an “electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus”, to be used to both deposit a conductive material, as well as then polish or reduce the rate of deposition of conductive material. The “electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus” can also be used to simnultaneously deposit and/or polish the conductive material. While the present invention can be used with any conductive material or any workpiece suitable for plating, it is especially suited for use with copper is the conductor, and for use in the fabrication of ULSI integrated circuits having submicron features with large aspect ratios. In the various embodiments, the present invention uses conventional components, arranged in a unique manner, in order to achieve the functionalities described herein. 
     FIG. 3 is first referred to in order to illustrate a portion of an integrated circuit chip that includes an area in which a via is to be formed. The via, as known in the semiconductor arts, being a conductive material that electrically connects different circuit layers together. As shown in FIG. 3, a via contains a conductor  2  that can connect a lower level conductive area  4  with an upper level conductive area  6 , with insulative material  8  disposed therearound. Of course, it is understood that the present invention can operate upon any metal layer of a multi-layer integrated circuit chip. 
     FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate a first embodiment of the invention, which embodiment has two different modes of operation. In a first mode, a conductive metal, preferably copper, or other conductive material, is applied in vias and/or other desired areas using an electrolyte solution, while build-up of the conductive material on undesired areas is eliminated, or at least minimized, due to the mechanical polishing and/or electrolytic solution deprivation to top surface areas of the semiconductor wafer that is described hereinafter. In a second mode of operation, polishing of the wafer, using a conventional chemical mechanical polishing, can be performed using the same device, to the extent that such chemical mechanical polishing is needed. It is contemplated that according to this embodiment of the present invention that in most circumstances only the first mode of operation will be needed. The second mode of operation, and the structure corresponding thereto, are included for circumstances in which an extremely high degree of polish is desired. 
     FIG. 1A illustrates an overview of the electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus  10  according to the first embodiment of the invention, illustrating in perspective view the mechanical pad assembly  12  that has a mechanical pad  32  that rotates around a first axis  14 , and a wafer head assembly  16  that has a wafer that rotates around a second axis  18 . As illustrated, the wafer rotates within an area that is covered by the mechanical pad  32 , as will be described in further detail hereinafter, which area is within container  20  that keeps various solutions disposed therein. Although shown as operating upon a single wafer, it is understood that a plurality of wafer head assemblies  16  could be associated with each mechanical pad assembly  12 , and that the apparatus  10  could include a plurality of mechanical pad assemblies  12  as well, each operating on different wafers. 
     FIG. 1B illustrates a side cross sectional view of the apparatus  10  taken along line A—A of FIG. 1A according to the present invention. As illustrated, the system  10  is capable of depositing thin metal films onto the wafer. 
     Each wafer head assembly  16  includes a nonconductive, preferably circular, head assembly  22  with a cavity that is preferably a few millimeters deep at its center and which cavity may contain a resting pad  25 . The semiconductor wafer is loaded into this cavity  22 , backside first, against the resting pad  25  using a conventional type of transport or vacuum mechanism to ensure that the wafer is stationary with respect to the wafer head assembly while in use. A nonconductive retaining ring  24  at the periphery of the wafer head assembly  10  includes at least one O-ring or other rubber type seal  26  and a spring loaded cathode contact electrode  28 , which each push against the face of the wafer and hold the wafer in place at its very edge. A liquid-tight seal is thus obtained so that the cathode contact electrode  28  is kept isolated from the solution within the container  20 , as described hereinafter. The entire back side of the wafer which pushes again resting pad  25  and the front surface areas (typically the outer 1-10 mm surface of the front surface area) which are under this retaining ring  24  will thus be protected from any and all solutions, including electrolyte, as discussed hereinafter. 
     The mechanical pad assembly  12  is disposed within container  20 , which container  20  holds the various solutions that will be introduced, as described previously and hereinafter. Mechanical pad assembly  12  includes an anode plate  30  that preferably has a thin flat circular shape and is made of a porous or solid conductive material such as copper and/or platinum and is mounted so that it rotates about the second axis  18 , and rests upon a table and bearing support as is known. A mechanical pad  32 , as is known in the art and used, as example, in chemical mechanical polishing, and preferably one that is made of a nonconductive, porous type material such as polyurethane, is mounted onto the face of the anode plate  30 . Th mechanical pad  32  preferably has a circular shape, but may be shaped in any other form so long as it can effectively polish the wafer. The electrolyte can be fed to the pad  32  from a reservoir (not shown) located behind the anode plate  32  via a chamber  31 , which chamber  31  then feeds the electrolyte up through the anode plate  30  and pad  32  using the in-channel  34 . Alternatively, in-channel  44  can also be used to dispense the electrolyte directly down onto the surface of the pad  32 . 
     The wafer head assembly  16  faces toward the mechanical pad assembly  12 , and is pushed down with a controlled force. The wafer head assembly  16  rotates around axis  18  using a conventional motorized spindle  36 , whereas the mechanical pad assembly  12  rotates around axis  14  using a conventional motorized spindle  38 . 
     Proper drainage channels  40  provide a safe recycling or disposal of electrolyte. Thus, once the electrolyte is placed onto the pad  32  as described above, it can be drained via the drainage channels  40  to a resuscitating reservoir, also not shown, that can replenish and clean the electrolyte, thereby allowing re-use and being environmentally safe. 
     The inlet  44  can also be used to apply deionized water when operating in the second mode of the invention, as discussed hereinafter. 
     In operation according to the first mode of the invention, the apparatus  10  applies, using a power source, a negative potential to the cathode contact  28  and a positive potential to the anode  30 . The electrolytic solution is introduced through one or both of the in-channels  34  and  44  to the surface of the mechanical polishing pad  32 . When an electric current is established between the two electrodes, molecules of metals in electrolyte are ionized and deposited on the surface of the wafer, being attracted thereto by the cathode contact  28 . While this is taking place, there is also performed a mechanical polishing using the mechanical pad assembly  12 . This mechanical pad assembly  12  substantially prevents molecules of metals from becoming permanently deposited on surfaces of the wafer where such a deposit is undesired, due to the polishing or rubbing action of the mechanical pad  32 . Thus, the contaminants or additives referred to above that are presently used to prevent or reduce such depositing are not needed, or alternatively can be used in much smaller percentages. Accordingly, at the conclusion of the first mode of operation, metal is deposited in vias and the like where desired, and is substantially prevented from being deposited in undesired areas. 
     In a second mode of operation, a number of different conventional operations can be performed, depending upon the chemicals introduced via the in-channel  44 . If chemical mechanical polishing is desired, a slurry can be introduced, although this specific mode of operation is not preferred since it increases the amount of impurities introduced into the apparatus fluid chamber substantially. In the preferred second mode of operation, the apparatus  10  can be used to buff polish the seed layer or be used as an electro polisher by reversing the current polarity (cathode and anode polarity). Further, the apparatus  10  can also be purged with M water if it is necessary to leave the wafer clean but wet with deionized water, and polishing using the mechanical pad  32  with the deionized water can take place. Thereafter, after lifting the wafer off the pad  32 , spin drying of the wafer on the rotating wafer head assembly  12  can take place. 
     FIG. 2 illustrates another embodiment of the present invention. Like reference numerals are used to indicate structure that corresponds to that of FIGS. 1A and 1B described above. In this embodiment of the invention, the wafer is stationery, and electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus  100  is disposed within a container (not shown) that collects spent solutions. The electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus  100  corresponds in structure in large part to the wafer head assembly  16  previously described with reference to FIG.  1 B. In this embodiment, however, the electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus  100  includes a mechanical pad  32 , which is rotated by the spindle shaft  36 . Spindle shaft  36  is illustrated as being rotated and moved side to side and held in proper position using DC motor  102 , weights  104 , bearing sets  106  and  108  and springs  110 , all of which are conventional. 
     The electrolyte solution is introduced using in passage  34 , and it flows to the desired surface of the wafer through the porous anode  30  and mechanical pad  32 . It is expelled through out-channel  40 . 
     Operation of the FIG. 2 embodiment is very similar to that of the first mode described with respect to FIGS. 1A and 1B. Specifically, deposition of a conductive material using an electrolyte, such as described previously, in desired vias and/or other areas, is obtained at the same time that mechanical polishing of the surface of the wafer using rotating pad  32 , which may be the shape of a rectangle, a circle, or a pie or the like, takes place. 
     The electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus according to the present embodiment also reduces the need for pulse generating power supplies because the mechanical pulsing that is generated from the movement of the pad creates sufficient pulsing. This mechanical pulsing is created as a result of the wafer being in contact with the pad as it is moved in relation to the wafer. The benefit of the mechanical pulsing is that it improves grain size and copper film integrity without the need for power supplies with pulsing capabilities. 
     FIGS. 4A-4C illustrate yet another preferred embodiment of the present invention. Like reference numerals are used to indicate structure that corresponds to that of FIGS. 1A,  1 B, and  2  described above. In this embodiment of the invention, the electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus  200  contains a mechanical pad assembly  210  that corresponds to the mechanical pad assembly  12  and a wafer head assembly  240  that corresponds to the wafer head assembly  16 . In this embodiment, the electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus  200  includes a circular or square mechanical pad  212  mounted on a cylindrical anode  214  that rotates about a first axis  216  as illustrated in FIGS. 4A and 4C, whereas the wafer rotates about a second axis  242  as illustrated in FIG.  4 B. 
     The mechanical pad  212  can have a size that either polishes the entire useable portion of the wafer, or only a section of the wafer at any given time. If only a portion of the wafer is polished at any given time, a drive assembly (not shown) must also be included in order to move the anode  214 , and thereby the mechanical pad  212 , so that it is in contact with the portion of the wafer that needs to be acted upon at that moment in time. 
     In operation, it will be appreciated that the belt-shaped mechanical pad  212  polishes the wafer similar to the manner in which a roller paintbrush paints a wall. While operating, the electrolyte or other solution is introduced to the mechanical pad  212  from a reservoir (not shown) located in proximity to the anode  214 . In one specific embodiment, the anode  214  contains an in-channel  224  that includes a passageway  226  within anode  214  and holes  228  that are made in the anode  214 , which together provide a path for the solution to be fed to the mechanical pad  212 . Alternatively, the electrolyte solution can be dispensed directly onto the pad  212  through a channel  213  in accordance with the methods described earlier herein. The solution will be contained within a non-conductive chamber  230  that is created around the wafer head assembly  240 , and a non-conductive solution containment housing  250 , which housing contains an out-channel  252 . O-rings and other conventional structures, as described earlier herein, to seal the solution within the solution containment housing  250  may be used in this embodiment. 
     Again, the electro chemical mechanical deposition apparatus according to the present invention reduces the need for pulse generating power supplies because the mechanical pulsing that is generated from the rotating movement of the pad and wafer creates sufficient pulsing. 
     According to the present invention, in any of the embodiments, since mechanical action is used to prevent undesired build-up of a conductor on undesired areas of a wafer surface, leveling agents are not typically needed, or needed in a much smaller percentage than conventionally used. Further a polished smooth and shiny conductive surface can be obtained. 
     Although only the above embodiments have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications of the exemplary embodiment are possible without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of this invention.