Plasma immersion ion implantation system including an inductively coupled plasma source having low dissociation and low minimum plasma voltage

a plasma immersion and plasma technology, applied in the field of ion implantation using plasma immersion, can solve the problems of rapid thermal annealing by halogen lamps, loss of junction abruptness, and less efficiency of ion beam accelerators, and achieve the effect of higher ion flux

Inactive Publication Date: 2005-03-10
APPLIED MATERIALS INC
View PDF99 Cites 46 Cited by
  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Problems solved by technology

Such neutrals therefore impact the wafer at the original energy (e.g., 2 keV), so that they are implanted below the desired junction depth, due to the high energy tail, causing a loss of junction abruptness.
Moreover, rapid thermal annealing by halogen lamps, for example, tends to “wash out” the effect of the high energy tail due to diffusion.
However, as semiconductor circuit feature size decreases with progress in device speed, ion beam accelerators become less efficient.
However, dynamic surface annealing does not reduce the high energy tail.
Unfortunately, the lower ion energy in drift mode limits the ion beam flux (and current), so that the time required to reach the desired high dopant concentration can be as long as a half hour or one hour.
This problem arises particularly in shallow junction implant of light species such as Boron, in which the beam voltage must be reduced to avoid high velocity Boron ions being implanted below the desired junction depth.
The problem arises basically because the space charge effects in the ion beam produce repulsive forces between the ions in the beam in a radial direction, generally, limiting the beam density and therefore the beam current.
Such effects become more important as the beam energy is reduced (as it must be for implanting the lighter elements such as Boron), resulting in lower beam currents and longer implant times. Such long implant times greatly limit productivity and increase production costs.
In the future, feature sizes will decrease further, down to 45 nm, so that such problems will worsen in proportion as the technology advances.
These problems pertain particularly to cases in which the species to be implanted has a low atomic weight (such as Boron), so that the acceleration voltage must be small, which translates into a small ion beam flux and a long implant time.
However, while much of the implanted fluorine tends to diffuse out of the silicon crystal during annealing, a significant amount does not, leaving some crystal lattice sites that contain neither a semiconductor atom (Si) nor a dopant impurity atom (B), thus (for some applications) reducing the overall quality of the semiconductor material.
Therefore, this technique is not desirable universally for all applications.
Such advances in technology (where features size decreases to 65 nm and ultimately to 45 nm) render ion beam implantation of lighter dopants such as Boron impractical.
This is because the traditional ion beam implanter provides too little ion beam flux in such applications.
However, such plasma ion immersion implantation has been plagued by various difficulties.
Accordingly, such a reactor is unacceptably sensitive to changes in the condition of the chamber surfaces due, for example, to contamination of the chamber surfaces.
As a result, such a plasma ion immersion implantation reactor cannot maintain a target junction depth or abruptness, for example, and is plagued by contamination problems.
One problem inherent with D.C. voltage applied to the wafer support is that its pulse width must be such that the dopant ions (e.g., Boron) are accelerated across the plasma sheath near the wafer surface with sufficient energy to reach the desired junction depth below the surface, while the pulse width must be limited to avoid (discharge) any charge build-up on the wafer surface that would cause device damage (charging damage).
The limited pulse width is problematic in that the periodic decrease in ion energy can result in deposition on the semiconductor surface rather than implantation, the deposition accumulating in a new layer that can block implantation during the pulse on times. Another problem arises because ions must impact the wafer surface with at least a certain target energy in order to penetrate the surface up to a desirable depth (the as-implanted junction depth) and become substitutional below the surface and up to the desired annealed junction depth during the annealing process.
Unfortunately, due to resistive and capacitive charging effects (RC time constant) on dielectric films on the wafer that tend to accompany a D.C. discharge, the ions reach the target energy during only a fraction of each pulse period (e.g., during the first microsecond), so that there is an inherent inefficiency.
This problem cannot be solved by simply increasing the bias voltage, since this would increase the junction depth beyond the desired junction depth.
This type of reactor reduces the problems associated with plasma maintenance from secondary electrons, but still suffers from the problems associated with pulsed D.C. voltages on the wafer discussed immediately above.
While such a reactor has reduced sensitivity to chamber surface conditions as compared to reactors employing a pulsed DC bias, it is still quite sensitive.
Also, ion energy and flux cannot be independently selected with a single RF power source.
Ion flux may still be unacceptably low for high throughput applications with a single RF power source.
One problem is that the magnetic field gradient is non-uniform, so that the radial distribution of plasma ion energy is non-uniform, causing non-uniform junction depths across the wafer.
Another problem is the relatively high ion energy directed at the wafer, limiting the degree to which junction depths can be minimized.
The problem with such an approach is that the ion density and flux is at least proportionately decreased, thus reducing the productivity of the reactor.
A related problem is that, because the plasma ion density at the wafer surface is reduced by the increased source-to-wafer distance, the chamber pressure must be reduced in order to reduce recombination losses.
However, the additional magnetic field would increase magnetic flux at the wafer surface, increasing the risk of charge damage to semiconductor structures on the wafer.
In summary, plasma immersion ion implantation reactors have various limitations, depending upon the type of reactor: plasma reactors in which a pulsed D.C. voltage is applied to the wafer pedestal are too sensitive to chamber conditions and are inefficient; and plasma reactors with microwave ECR sources tend to produce non-uniform results.

Method used

the structure of the environmentally friendly knitted fabric provided by the present invention; figure 2 Flow chart of the yarn wrapping machine for environmentally friendly knitted fabrics and storage devices; image 3 Is the parameter map of the yarn covering machine
View more

Image

Smart Image Click on the blue labels to locate them in the text.
Viewing Examples
Smart Image
  • Plasma immersion ion implantation system including an inductively coupled plasma source having low dissociation and low minimum plasma voltage
  • Plasma immersion ion implantation system including an inductively coupled plasma source having low dissociation and low minimum plasma voltage
  • Plasma immersion ion implantation system including an inductively coupled plasma source having low dissociation and low minimum plasma voltage

Examples

Experimental program
Comparison scheme
Effect test

working examples

[0237]

[0238] An etch process was conducted on blanket oxide wafers at a chamber pressure of 40 mT, 4800 watts of 13.56 MHz RF bias power on the wafer pedestal and 1800 Watts of RF source power applied to each reentrant tube 150 at 11.5 MHz and 12.5 MHz, respectively. The magnetic field produced by the electromagnet assembly 4430 was set at the following levels in successive steps: (a) zero, (b) 6 Gauss and (c) 18 Gauss (where the more easily measured axial magnetic field component at the wafer center was observed rather than the more relevant radial component). The observed etch rate distribution on the wafer surface was measured, respectively, as (a) center low with a standard deviation of about 2% at zero Gauss, (b) slightly center fast with a standard deviation of about 1.2% at 6 Gauss, and (c) center fast with a standard deviation of 1.4%. These examples demonstrate the ability to provide nearly ideal compensation (step b) and the power to overcompensate (step c).

[0239] To test...

the structure of the environmentally friendly knitted fabric provided by the present invention; figure 2 Flow chart of the yarn wrapping machine for environmentally friendly knitted fabrics and storage devices; image 3 Is the parameter map of the yarn covering machine
Login to view more

PUM

PropertyMeasurementUnit
bias frequencyaaaaaaaaaa
bias frequencyaaaaaaaaaa
bias frequencyaaaaaaaaaa
Login to view more

Abstract

A system for processing a workpiece includes a plasma immersion implantation reactor with an enclosure comprising a side wall and a ceiling and defining a chamber, and a workpiece support pedestal within the chamber having a workpiece support surface facing the ceiling and defining a process region extending generally across the wafer support pedestal. The reactor includes a gas distribution apparatus for introducing a process gas containing a first species to be ion implanted into a surface layer of the workpiece, and inductively coupled source power applicator, and an RF plasma source power generator coupled to the inductively coupled source power applicator for inductively coupling RF source power into the process zone. The reactor further includes an RF bias generator having an RF bias frequency and coupled to the workpiece support pedestal for applying an RF bias to the workpiece. The system further includes a second wafer processing apparatus, and a wafer transfer apparatus for transferring the workpiece between the plasma immersion ion implantation reactor and the second wafer processing apparatus.

Description

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS [0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10 / 164,327 filed Jun. 5, 2003 by Kenneth Collins et al., entitled EXTERNALLY EXCITED TORROIDAL PLASMA SOURCE WITH MAGNETIC CONTROL OF ION DISTRIBUTION and assigned to the present assignee.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION [0002] The present invention is related to semiconductor microelectronic circuit fabrication, and particularly to ion implantation using plasma immersion. [0003] The formation of semiconductor junctions on the surface of a semiconductor crystal (such as silicon wafer) is generally carried out by implantation of ions of either acceptor or donor impurity species (e.g., Boron or Arsenic) into the surface. Currently, ion implantation is efficiently carried out by ion beam accelerators. An ion beam accelerator raster-scans a beam of donor or acceptor ions across the semiconductor wafer surface. The implanted semiconductor wafer surface is then annealed...

Claims

the structure of the environmentally friendly knitted fabric provided by the present invention; figure 2 Flow chart of the yarn wrapping machine for environmentally friendly knitted fabrics and storage devices; image 3 Is the parameter map of the yarn covering machine
Login to view more

Application Information

Patent Timeline
no application Login to view more
Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): H01J37/32
CPCH01J37/32082H01J37/32412H01J37/321H01J37/00H01J37/32
Inventor COLLINS, KENNETH S.HANAWA, HIROJIRAMASWAMY, KARTIKNGUYEN, ANDREWAL-BAYATI, AMIRGALLO, BIAGIOMONROY, GONZALO ANTONIO
Owner APPLIED MATERIALS INC
Who we serve
  • R&D Engineer
  • R&D Manager
  • IP Professional
Why Eureka
  • Industry Leading Data Capabilities
  • Powerful AI technology
  • Patent DNA Extraction
Social media
Try Eureka
PatSnap group products