Title: EBB 323 Semiconductor Fabrication Technology
1EBB 323 Semiconductor Fabrication Technology
Oxidation
Dr Khairunisak Abdul Razak Room 2.03 School of
Material and Mineral Resources Engineering Univers
iti Sains Malaysia khairunisak_at_eng.usm.my
2Outcomes
- By the end of this topic, students should be able
to - List principle uses of silicon dioxide (SiO2)
layer in silicon devices - Describe the mechanism of thermal oxidation
- Draw a flow diagram of a typical oxidation
process - Describe the relationship of process time,
pressure, and temperature on the thickness of a
thermally grown SiO2 layer - Explain the kinetics of oxidation process
- Describe the principle uses of rapid thermal,
high pressure and anodic oxidation
3Uses of dielectric films in Semiconductor
technology
4- What is oxidation?
- Formation of oxide layer on wafer
- High temperature
- O2 environment
- Principle uses of Si dioxide (SiO2) layer in Si
wafer devices - Surface passivation
- Doping barrier
- Surface dielectric
- Device dielectric
51. Surface passivation
- SiO2 layer protect semiconductor devices from
contamination - Physical protection of the sample and underlying
devices - Dense and hard SiO2 layer act as contamination
barrier Hardness of the SiO2 layer protect the
surface from scratches during fabrication process
SiO2 passivation layer
Si
Si
6Cont..
- ii. Chemical in nature
- Avoid contamination from electrically active
contaminants (mobile ionic contaminants) of the
electrically active surface - e.g. early days, MOS device fabrication was
performed on oxidised Si? remove oxide layer to
get rid of the unwanted ionic contamination
surface before further processing
72. Doping barrier
- In doping ? need to create holes in a surface
layer in which specific dopants are introduced
into the exposed wafer surface through diffusion
or ion implantation - SiO2 on Si wafer block the dopants from reaching
Si surface - All dopants have slower rate of movement in SiO2
compared to Si - Relatively thin layer of SiO2 is required to
block the dopants from reaching SiO2
8Cont..
- SiO2 possesses a similar thermal expansion
coefficient with Si - At high temperature oxidation process, diffusion
doping etc, wafer expands and contracts when it
is heated and cooled - ? close thermal expansion coefficient, wafer does
not warp
Dopants
Si
SiO2 layer as dopant barrier
93. Surface dielectric
- SiO2 is a dielectric ? does not conduct
electricity under normal circumstances - SiO2 layer prevents shorting of metal layer to
underlying metal - Oxide layer
- MUST BE continuous no holes or voids
- Thick enough to prevent induction
- If too thin SiO2 layer, electrical charge in
metal layer cause a build-up charge in the wafer
surface ? cause shorting!! - Thick enough oxide layer to avoid induction
called field oxide
10Metal layer
Oxide layer
Wafer
Dielectric use of SiO2 layer
source
Drain
S
D
MOS gate
Field oxide
114. Device dielectric
- In MOS application
- Grow thin layer SiO2 in the gate region
- Oxide function as dielectric in which the
thickness is chosen specifically to allow
induction of a charge in the gate region under
the oxide - Thermally grown oxides is also used as dielectric
layer in capacitors - Between Si wafer and conduction layer
12Types of oxidation
- Thermal oxidation
- High pressure oxidation
- Anodic oxidation
13Device oxide thicknesses
- Most applications of semiconductor are dependent
on their oxide thicknesses
14Thermal oxidation mechanisms
- Chemical reaction of thermal oxide growth
- Si (solid) O2 (gas) ? SiO2 (solid)
- ?
- Oxidation temperature 900-1200?C
- Oxidation Si wafer ? placed in a heated chamber
? exposed to oxygen gas
15SiO2 growth stages
Si wafer
Initial
- In a furnace with O2 gas environment
- Oxygen atoms combine readily with Si atoms
- Linear- oxide grows in equal amounts for each
time - Around 500Å thick
Si wafer
Linear
- Above 500Å, in order for oxide layer to keep
growing, oxygen and Si atoms must be in contact - SiO2 layer separate the oxygen in the chamber
from the wafer surface - Si must migrate through the grown oxide layer to
the oxygen in the vapor - oxygen must migrate to the wafer surface
Si wafer
Parabolic
16Three dimension view of SiO2 growth by thermal
oxidation
SiO2 surface
Original SiO2 surface
SiO2
Si substrate
17- Linear oxidation
- Parabolic oxidation of silicon
- where X oxide thickness, B parabolic rate
constant, B/A linear rate constant, t
oxidation time - Parabolic relationship of SiO2 growth parameters
- where R SiO2 growth rate, X oxide thickness,
t oxidation time
18Cont..
- Implication of parabolic relationship
- Thicker oxides need longer time to grow than
thinner oxides - 2000Å, 1200?C in dry O2 6 minutes
- 4000Å, 1200?C in dry O2 220 minutes (36 times
longer) - Long oxidation time required
- Dry O2
- Low temperature
-
19Dependence of silicon oxidation rate constants on
temperature
20Oxide thickness vs oxidation time for silicon
oxidation in dry oxygen at various temperatures
21Oxide thickness vs oxidation time for silicon
oxidation in pyrogenic steam ( 640 Torr) at
various temperatures
22Kinetics of growth
- Si is oxidised by oxygen or steam at high
temperature according to the following chemical
reactions - Si (solid) O2 (gas) ? SiO2 (solid) (dry
oxidation) - Or
- Si (solid) 2H2O (gas) ? SiO2 (solid) 2H2(gas)
(wet oxidation) - Also called steam oxidation, wet oxidation,
pyrogenic steam - Faster oxidation OH- hydroxyl ions diffuses
faster in oxide layer than dry oxygen - 2H2 on the right side of the equation shows H2
are trapped in SiO2 layer - Layer less dense than oxide layer in dry
oxidation - Can be eliminated by heat treatment in an inert
atmosphere e.g. N2
23- 2 mechanisms influence the growth rate of the
oxide - Actual chemical reaction rate between Si and O2
- Diffusion rate of the oxidising species through
an already grown oxide layer - No or little oxide on Si the oxidising agent
easily reach the Si surface - Factor that determine the growth rate is kinetics
of the silicon-oxide chemical reaction - Si is already covered by a sufficiently thick
layer of oxide - Oxidation process is mass-transport limited
- Diffusion rate of O2 and H2O through the oxide
limit the growth rate is diffusion of O2 and H2O
through the oxide - A steam ambient is preferred for the growth of
thick oxidesH2O molecules smaller than O2 thus,
easier diffuse through SiO2 that cause high
oxidation rates
24Si oxidation
Oxygen concentration profile during oxidation
25- Mass transport of O2 molecules from gas ambient
towards the Si through a layer of already grown
oxide - Flux of O2 molecules is proportional to the
differential in O2 concentration between the
ambient (C) and oxide surface (C0) - Where h is the mass transport coefficient for O2
in the gas phase - Diffusion of O2 through the oxide is proportional
to the difference of oxygen concentration between
the oxide surface and the Si/SiO2 interface. The
flux of oxygen through the oxide, F2 becomes - Where,
- Ci oxygen concentration at theSi/SiO2
interface - D diffusion coefficient of O2 or H2O in oxide
- tox oxide thickness
26- Kinetics of the chemical reaction between silicon
and oxygen is characterised by reaction constant,
k - In steady state, all flux terms are equal F1
F2 F3. Eliminating C0 from the flux equations,
we can obtain
27- If N0x is a constant representing the number of
oxidising gas molecules necessary to grow a unit
thickness of oxide, one can write - The solution to this differential equation is
28- If tox0 when t0, th eintegration yields
- Or
- Defining new constant A and B in terms of D, ks,
Nox and C - We can obtain
- From which we find tox
29- ? is introduced to take into account the possible
presence of an oxide layer on the Si before
thermal oxide growth being carry out - Oxide layer can be a native oxide layer due to
oxidation of bare Si by ambient air or thermally
grown oxide produced during a prior oxidation
step - ?0 if the thickness of the initial oxide is
equal to zero - When thin oxides are formed the growth rate is
limited by the kinetics of chemical reaction
between Si and O2. - Eq. 5.12 becomes
- Which is linear with time.
- The ratio is called linear growth
coefficient, and is dependent on crystal
orientation of Si
30- When thick oxides are formed, the growth rate is
limited by the diffusion rate of oxygen through
the oxide. Eq 5.12 becomes - The coefficient B is called parabolic growth
coefficient and is independent on crystal
orientation of Si. - The parabolic growth coefficient can be
increased - Increase the pressure of the ambient oxygen up
to 10-20 atm (high pressure oxidation) - The linear growth coefficient can be increased
- Si consists of high concentration of impurities
e.g. phosphorous increase point defects in the
crystal which increase the oxidation reaction
rate at the Si/SiO2 interface - Oxidation process also generate point defects in
Si which enhance diffusion of dopants. Some
dopants diffuse faster when annealed in oxidising
ambient than in neutral gas such at N2
31Oxidation rate
- Controlled by
- Wafer orientation
- Wafer dopant
- Impurities
- Oxidation of polysilicon layers
- Wafer orientation
- Large no of atoms allows faster oxide growth
- lt111gt plane have more Si atoms than lt100gt plane
- Faster oxide growth in lt111gt Si
- More obvious in linear growth stage and at low
temperature
32Crystal structure of silicon
lt100gt plane
lt111gt plane
33Dependence of oxidation linear rate constant and
oxide fixed charge density on silicon orientation
34- Wafer dopant(s) distribution
- Oxidised Si surface always has dopants N-type or
P-type - Dopant may also present on the Si surface from
diffusion or ion implantation - Oxidation growth rate is influenced by dopant
element used and their concentration e.g. - Phosphorus-doped oxide less dense and etch
faster - Higher doped region oxidise faster than lesser
doped region e.g. high P doping can oxidise 2-5
times the undoped oxidation region - Doping induced oxidation effects are more obvious
in the linear stage oxidation
35Schematic illustration of dopant distribution as
a function of position is the SiO2/Si structure
indicating the redistribution and segregation of
dopants during silicon thermal oxidation
36- Distribution of dopant atoms in Si after
oxidation is completed - During thermal oxidation, oxide layer grows down
into Si wafer- behavior depends on conductivity
type of dopant - N-type higher solubility in Si than SiO2, move
down to wafer. Interface consists of high
concentration N-type doping - P-type opposite effect occurs e.g Boron doping
in Si move to SiO2 surface causes B pile up in
SiO2 layer and depletion in Si wafer ? change
electrical properties
37- Oxide impurities
- Certain impurities may influence oxidation rate
- e.g. chlorine from HCl from oxidation atmosphere
? increase growth rate 1-5
38- Oxidation of polysilicon
- Oxidation of polysilicon is essential for
polysilicon conductors and gates in MOS devices
and circuits - Oxidation of polysilicon is dependent on
- Polisilicon deposition method
- Deposition temperature
- Deposition pressure
- The type and concentration of doping
- Grain structure of polysilicon
39Thermal oxidation method
- Thermal oxidation ? energy is supplied by heating
a wafer - SiO2 layer are grown
- Atmospheric pressure oxidation ? oxidation
without intentional pressure control
(auto-generated pressure) also called
atmospheric technique - High pressure oxidation ? high pressure is
applied during oxidation - 2 atmospheric techniques
- Tube furnace
- Rapid thermal system
40Oxidation methods
41Horizontal tube furnace
- Quartz reaction tube reaction chamber for
oxidation - Muffle heat sink, more even heat distributing
along quartz tube - Thermocouple placed close to quartz tube. Send
temp to band controller - Controller send power to coil to heat the
reaction tube by radiation/conduction - Source zone- heating zone
Place the sample
42Horizontal tube furnace
- Integrated system of a tube furnace consists of
several sections - Reaction chamber
- Temperature control system
- Furnace section
- Source cabinet
- Wafer cleaning station
- Wafer load station
- Process automation
43Vertical tube furnaces
- Small footprint
- Maybe placed outside the cleanroom with only a
load station door opening into the cleanroom - Disadvantage expensive
44Rapid Thermal Processing
- Based on radiation principle heating
- Useful for thin oxides used in MOS gates
- Trend in device miniaturisation requires
reduction in thickness of thermally grown gate
oxides - lt 100Å thin gate oxide
- Hard to control thin film in conventional tube
furnace - Problem quick supply and remove O2 from the
system
45- RTP system able to heat and cool the wafer
temperature VERY rapidly - RTP used for oxidation is known as Rapid Thermal
Oxidation (RTO) - Have O2 atmosphere
- Other processes use RTP system
- Wet oxide (steam) growth
- Localised oxide growth
- Source/ drain activation after ion implantation
- LPCVD polysilicon, amorphous silicon, tungsten,
silicide contacts - LPCVD nitrides
- LPCVD oxides
46RTP design
e.g. RTP time/temperature curve
47High Pressure Oxidation
- Problems in high temperature oxidation
- Growth of dislocations in the bulk of the wafer ?
dislocations cause device performance problems - Growth of hydrogen-induced dislocations along the
edge of opening ? surface dislocations cause
electrical leakage along the surface or the
degradation of silicon layers grown on the wafer
for bipolar circuits - Solve low temperature oxidation BUT require a
longer oxidation time
48- High pressure system ? similar to conventional
horizontal tube furnace with several features - Sealed tube
- Oxidant is pumped into the tube at pressure 10-25
atm - The use of a high pressure requires encasing the
quartz tube in a stainless steel jacket to
prevent it from cracking - High pressure oxidation results in faster
oxidation rate - Rule of thumb 1 atm causes temperature drop of
30?C - In high pressure system, temperature drop of
300-750?C - ? This reduction is sufficient to minimise the
growth of dislocations in and on the wafers
49- Advantage of high pressure oxidation
- Drop the oxidation temperature
- Reduce oxidation time
- Thin oxide produced using high pressure oxidation
? higher dielectric strength than oxides grown at
atmospheric pressure
High pressure oxidation
50Oxidant sources
- Dry oxygen
- Water vapor sources
- Bubblers/ flash
- Dry oxidation
- Chlorine added oxidation
511. Dry oxygen
- Oxygen gas must dry ? not contaminated by water
vapor - If water present in the oxygen
- Increase oxidation rate
- Oxide layer out of specification
- Dry oxygen is preferred for growing very thin
gate oxides 1000Å
522a. Bubblers
- Bubbler liquid DI water heated close to boiling
point 98-99?C - create a water vapor in the space above liquid
- When carrier gas is bubbled through the water and
passes through the vapor ? saturated with water - Influence of elevated temp inside tube ? water
vapor becomes steam and results in oxidation of
Si surface - Problem contamination of tube and oxide layer
from dirty water and flask
532b. Dry oxidation (dryox)
- O2 and H2 are introduced directly into oxidation
tube ? mixes - High temperature in tube forms steam ? wet
oxidation in steam - Advantage
- Controllable gas flow can be controlled by flow
controllers - Clean can purchase gases in a very clean and dry
state - Disadvantage explosive property of H2 ? overcome
by flow in excess O2
542c. Chlorine added oxidation
- Chlorine addition
- Reduce mobile ionic charges in the oxide layer
- Reduce structural defects in oxide and Si surface
- Reduce charges at Si-SiO2 interface
- Chlorine sources
- Gas anhydrous chlorine (Cl2), anhydrous hydrogen
chloride - Liquid trichloroethylene (TCE), trichloroethane
(TCA) - TCA is preferred source for safety and ease of
delivery
55Post-oxidation evaluation
- Surface inspection
- quick check of the wafer surface using UV light
(surface particulates, irregularities, stains) - Oxide thickness
- several techniques such as color comparison,
fringe counting, interference, ellipsometers,
stylus apparatus, scanning electron microscope - Oxide and furnace cleanliness
- Ensure oxide consists of minimum number of mobile
ionic contaminants. Use capacitance/voltage (C/V)
evaluation detect total number of mobile ionic
contaminants NOT the origin of contaminants
56Thermal nitridation
- lt 100Å SiO2 film possesses poor quality and
difficult to control - Silicon nitride (Si3N4)
- Denser than SiO2 ? less pin holes in thin film
ranges - Good diffusion barrier
- Growth control of thin film is enhanced by a flat
growth mechanism (after an initial rapid growth)
57Nitridation of lt100gt silicon