Abstract:
A polishing method is provided which simultaneously supplies both a polishing fluid and a conditioning fluid to a polishing pad, while a substrate is in moving contact with the polishing pad.

Description:
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/359,141, filed Jul. 21, 1999, titled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CLEANING A POLISHING PAD,” which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/163,582, filed Sep. 30, 1998, titled “IMPROVED COPPER CLEANING SOLUTION AND METHOD FOR USING SAME,” which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/102,345, filed Sep. 29, 1998, titled “IMPROVED COPPER CLEANING SOLUTION AND METHOD FOR USING SAME.” 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to the field of semiconductor processing, and more particularly to a method and apparatus for polishing and/or planarizing semiconductor wafers and the thin films formed thereon. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Semiconductor devices are formed on silicon substrates and are typically multi-layered, having numerous metalization layers separated by numerous insulating oxides and interconnected with vias or contact holes. For instance, an interconnect for a typical multi-layer device is formed by depositing and patterning a first metal layer over the device, depositing an intermediate oxide over the patterned first metal layer, photolithographically defining a contact hole in the oxide, and depositing a second metal layer over the oxide that fills the contact hole and contacts the patterned first metal layer. 
     Often undesirable steps or undulations must be removed from the silicon substrate or from one of the metal or oxide layers before another layer can be formed thereon. To remove steps or undulations, the silicon oxide or metal is preferably planarized, removing any steps or undulations formed therein, prior to deposition of a layer thereon. Planarization is typically performed mechanically by forcing the semiconductor wafer face down against a polishing pad which is saturated with a polishing fluid (e.g., a slurry or polishing chemical) and by moving the polishing pad relative to the wafer. The relative movement between the polishing pad and the wafer mechanically removes layers of material and is continued until the steps or undulations are removed. This process is generally referred to as chemical mechanical polishing (CMP). 
     To facilitate material removal during the CMP process the polishing pad may be provided with grooves that channel polishing fluid to the polishing pad/wafer interface, and that provide a path for wafer material to be removed from the polished wafer surface, and/or the pad may be made porous to hold the slurry chemical and polishing by-product. 
     During polishing, however, the downward force of the wafer against the polishing pad compacts polishing fluid particles and polishing by products within these grooves and porous structures, reducing the supply of fresh polishing fluid or polishing chemical to the polishing pad/wafer interface, reducing friction between the wafer and the pad, reducing the removal rate of wafer material, and the overall polishing efficiency, uniformity and throughput of the CMP process, as well as giving rise to defects in the form of wafer scratches, as described below, and increasing dishing of the wafer surface. Additionally, the downward force of the wafer against the polishing pad causes the semi-porous surface of the polishing pad to pack down, causing polishing rates to become low and unpredictable, and necessitating frequent polishing pad replacement. 
     To extend the useful life of a polishing pad, a pad conditioner that roughens or “conditions” the polishing pad surface is employed in-situ, while the polishing pad polishes a wafer and while a polishing chemical/slurry is supplied to the pad surface; or ex-situ, after wafer polishing is complete, and while deionized water is supplied to the pad surface. A typical pad conditioner comprises a diamond surface that roughens the polishing pad surface by scribing additional “microgrooves” in the polishing pad surface. Roughening of the polishing pad surface ensures adequate abrasion (e.g., due to polishing fluid saturation of the roughened surface) at the polishing pad/wafer interface. In certain applications however, unstable polishing rates none-the-less persist. Accordingly, an improved polisher method and apparatus is needed. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present inventors have discovered that polishing of wafers having certain material layers (e.g., copper layers) deposited thereon results in the build up of materials on the polishing pad. Such build up is not removable via conventional conditioning methods. Accordingly the present invention provides a method and apparatus that avoids the build up of polishing by products from the polishing pad without the reduction in throughput associated with conventional ex-situ conditioning. Conventional ex-sit conditioning tends to reduce system throughput as additional time is required for moving the wafer into and out of contact with the polishing pad. Specifically, a polishing method is provided which simultaneously supplies both a polishing fluid and a conditioning fluid to a polishing pad, while a substrate is in moving contact with the polishing pad. 
     Other features and advantages of the present invention will become more fully apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments, the appended claims and the accompanying drawings. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic top plan view of a preferred embodiment of an inventive chemical mechanical polishing device which has a controller C programmed to perform the inventive polishing process; and 
     FIG. 2 is a top plan view of a system for polishing substrates in accordance with the invention. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic top plan view of a preferred embodiment of an inventive chemical mechanical polishing device  11  which has a controller C programmed to perform the inventive polishing process as further described below. Although merely exemplary, the polishing device  11  comprises a platen  15  on which a polishing pad  17  for polishing semiconductor wafers is mounted. In this embodiment the platen  15  preferably is rotatable and the polishing pad  17  has at least one groove  19  and typically has a plurality of concentric circumferential grooves  19 . 
     The polishing device  11  also comprises a pivot arm  21 , a holder or conditioning head  23  mounted to one end of the pivot arm  21 , a fluid arm  25  having a slurry/chemical polishing fluid supply line  25   a  for supplying polishing fluid to the polishing pad  17  from a polishing fluid source  26   a , a conditioning chemical fluid supply line  25   b  for supplying a conditioning fluid (e.g., Applied Materials&#39; ElectraClean™ (disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/359,141 filed Jul. 21, 1999 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/163,582 filed Sep. 30, 1998), solutions capable of removing CuOx (particularly Cu 1 ,Ox) by products, solutions capable of removing copper compounds, or solutions containing carboxylic salts, ammonium compounds, etc.), to the polishing pad  17  from a conditioning fluid source  26   b , a pad conditioner  27 , such as a disk embedded with diamond crystals, mounted to the underside of the conditioning head  23 , and a wafer mounting head  29  operatively coupled to the platen  15  so as to selectively press a wafer W against the polishing pad  17 . A controller C is coupled to the mechanisms which actuate the platen  15 , the pivot arm  21 , the conditioning head  23 , the polishing fluid supply line  25   a , and the conditioning fluid supply line  25   b  and is programmed to perform the inventive polishing process described below. 
     In operation, a wafer W having a material layer (e.g., a copper layer) deposited thereon, which conventionally results in the build up of material that is not removable via conventional conditioning methods (for example, methods that employ deionized water and/or a polishing chemical) is placed on the polishing pad  17 , and is held face down against the polishing pad  17  by the wafer mounting head  29  with a pressure for example of 1-7 psi, preferably 3 psi. Conditioning fluid (e.g., ElectraClean™ marketed by Applied Materials, Inc.) and a polishing chemical (e.g., Klebosol 1501, marketed by Rodel, Inc., EPC-C5001™ marketed by Cabot, Inc. diluted with 2.5% wt/vol Hydrogen Peroxide or with another oxidizing agent) is introduced to the polishing pad  17  via the conditioning fluid supply line  25   b , and via the polishing chemical supply line  25   a , at a flow rate of 200 ml/min and 50 ml/min, respectively (a polishing chemical/conditioning fluid ratio of 4:1, vol/vol). It will be understood that the conditioning fluid may be bought in concentrated form and then diluted before application to the polishing pad. For example, when the conditioning fluid is ElectraClean™ the 1 part conditioning fluid applied to the polishing pad may comprise 91.0-91.6% deionized water, 7.8-8.4% tribasic ammonium citrate, 0.6% ammonium hydroxide (each concentrations being in wt % (wt/wt)). 
     Alternatively, the conditioning fluid and polishing chemical may be introduced via a single line, either from a single source, or from individual sources, and may or may not be premixed. The conditioning fluid and/or polishing chemical optionally may be pressurized (e.g., by applying 0-15 psi to the pump which supplies the fluid/chemistry to the pad). The platen  15  rotates as indicated by the arrow R 1 . Throughout the above described process, the conditioning arm  21  preferably scans back and forth across the polishing pad  17 , aiding the distribution of the polishing and conditioning fluids. The preferred platen speed is in the range of 10-200 rpm, and most preferably is 93 rpm. As the polishing chemical aids the removal of material from the surface of the wafer W, the conditioning fluid, cleans, etches and/or otherwise prevents removed material and other polishing by products from building up on the polishing pad  17 . Accordingly, a stable polishing rate is maintained throughout the polishing process. Wafer throughput may also be maximized, as there is no need for a separate ex-situ conditioning step. 
     FIG. 2 is a top plan view of a system  38  for polishing substrates. The system  38  comprises a plurality of polishing apparatuses  11   1 - 11   3  each of which is preferably programmed to perform the inventive conditioning method described above. Among the polishing apparatuses  11   1 - 11   3  like reference numerals are used to identify corresponding components. 
     The system  38  also includes a load cup  40 , and a rotatable cross bar  42  to which a plurality of wafer mounting heads  29   a-d  are coupled. Thus, a wafer W may be loaded onto the load cup  40  and loaded or mounted therefrom to the first wafer mounting head  29   a  while wafer mounting heads  29   b-d  press wafers against the polishing pads of the various polishing apparatuses  11   1 - 11   3 . 
     In operation a first wafer W 1  is loaded (e.g., via a wafer handler that is not shown) onto the load cup  40  and mounted therefrom to the first wafer mounting head  29   a . The rotatable cross bar  42  is indexed carrying the first wafer W 1  to the first polishing apparatus  11   1  where the first wafer W 1  is polished as previously described, while a second wafer W 2  is loaded onto the load cup  40  and mounted therefrom to the second wafer mounting head  29   b . The rotatable cross bar  42  is indexed again; the wafer W 1  is polished by the second polishing apparatus  11   2  (e.g., via a different polishing fluid than that used by the first polishing apparatus  11   1 ); the second wafer W 2  is polished by the first polishing apparatus  11   1  and a third wafer W 3  is loaded into the load cup  40  and mounted to the third wafer mounting head  29   c.    
     Thereafter, the rotatable cross bar  40  indexes and the first wafer W 1  is carried to and polished by the third polishing apparatus  11   3 . Meanwhile the second wafer W 2  is polished by the second polishing apparatus  11   2 ; the third wafer W 3  is polished by the first polishing apparatus  11   1 , and a fourth wafer W 4  is loaded onto the load cup  40  and mounted to a fourth wafer mounting head  29   d.    
     The rotatable cross bar  42  then indexes carrying the first wafer W 1  to the load cup  40  (as shown in FIG. 6) where the first wafer mounting head  29   a  places the first wafer W 1  on the load cup  40  and a wafer handler (not shown) extracts the first wafer W 1  from the system  38 . The inventive polishing/conditioning process described above with reference to FIG. 1 may be performed by any number of the polishing apparatuses of the system  38  and is preferably performed by each of the polishing apparatuses  11   1 - 11   3  in order to maximize any throughput increases the inventive polishing/conditioning process provides. 
     The foregoing description discloses only the preferred embodiments of the invention, modifications of the above disclosed apparatus and method which fall within the scope of the invention will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. For instance, although the invention is described with reference to a horizontally oriented, rotational-polishing device, the invention advantageously may be employed with any polishing device including vertically oriented polishers and/or polishers which employ translating polishing pads or conveyor-type polishing bands such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,692,947. Preferably the cleaning fluid comprises citric acid and ammonium hydroxide. The specific composition of a suitable conditioning fluid is disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/359,141 (filed Jul. 21, 1999) and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/163,582 (filed Sep. 30, 1998). The entire disclosures of both applications are incorporated herein by this reference. 
     The invention may be employed with any type of polishing pad, hard polishing pads (e.g., cast polyurethane) soft, porous polishing pads (e.g., PVA or soft polyurethane) either of which may or may not have grooves formed or scribed therein. The grooves may form any pattern including an x-y grid, such as the grooves found in the fixed abrasive pads manufactured by the Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company and described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 5,378,251. 
     Accordingly, while the present invention has been disclosed in connection with the preferred embodiments thereof, it should be understood that other embodiments may fall within the spirit and scope of the invention, as defined by the following claims.