US20010013615A1 - Integrated circuit fabrication - Google Patents
Integrated circuit fabrication Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US20010013615A1 US20010013615A1 US09/024,601 US2460198A US2001013615A1 US 20010013615 A1 US20010013615 A1 US 20010013615A1 US 2460198 A US2460198 A US 2460198A US 2001013615 A1 US2001013615 A1 US 2001013615A1
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- dielectric
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D1/00—Resistors, capacitors or inductors
- H10D1/60—Capacitors
- H10D1/68—Capacitors having no potential barriers
- H10D1/692—Electrodes
- H10D1/711—Electrodes having non-planar surfaces, e.g. formed by texturisation
- H10D1/716—Electrodes having non-planar surfaces, e.g. formed by texturisation having vertical extensions
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10B—ELECTRONIC MEMORY DEVICES
- H10B12/00—Dynamic random access memory [DRAM] devices
- H10B12/01—Manufacture or treatment
- H10B12/02—Manufacture or treatment for one transistor one-capacitor [1T-1C] memory cells
- H10B12/03—Making the capacitor or connections thereto
- H10B12/033—Making the capacitor or connections thereto the capacitor extending over the transistor
- H10B12/0335—Making a connection between the transistor and the capacitor, e.g. plug
Definitions
- This invention relates to methods of integrated circuit fabrication and the devices produced thereby.
- a first illustrative embodiment includes a method of integrated circuit fabrication which includes forming a conductive plug having an outer surface with grooves;
- a second illustrative embodiment includes a method of integrated circuit fabrication which includes forming a patterned photoresist upon a first material layer;
- a third illustrative embodiment includes a method of integrated circuit fabrication which includes forming a transistor upon a substrate;
- a fourth illustrative embodiment includes an integrated circuit which includes:
- a first conductor having a wall with grooves
- the first and second conductors and the dielectric together comprising a capacitor.
- a fifth illustative embodiment includes an integrated circuit which includes:
- a conductive plug partially embedded in said dielectric; the conductive plug having a top and a wall, the wall having grooves;
- FIGS. 1 and 2 are cross-sectional views of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 3 is plan view of a portion of the integrated circuit shown in FIG. 2;
- FIGS. 4, 5 and 6 are also partial cross-sectional views of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention.
- reference numeral 11 denotes a substrate which may be silicon, epitaxial silicon, doped silicon, etc.
- Reference numeral 13 denotes, illustratively a gate which may include spacers 16 and 18 , dielectric 14 , and conductor 20 .
- Reference numeral 15 denotes a source/drain.
- Reference numeral 17 denotes a dielectric which may, illustratively be an oxide of silicon, perhaps formed from a chemical precursor such as TEOS. Desirably, the upper surface 21 of dielectric 17 is planarized or considerably smoothed, illustratively by chemical mechanical polishing (CMP), or other means.
- CMP chemical mechanical polishing
- Reference numeral 19 denotes a conductive material, illustratively a plug contacting source/drain 15 .
- conductor 19 may be a tungsten plug (or a copper plug).
- Plug 19 may, if desired, be surrounded by layers of titanium or titanium nitride.
- dielectric 17 may be approximately 8000 ⁇ thick over source/drain 15 , and 6000 ⁇ thick over gate 13 .
- the dimensions of plug may be, for example, 0.24 microns by 0.24 microns. Should the titanium and titanium nitride be utilized with plug 19 , illustrative thicknesses are roughly 200 ⁇ of titanium, 600 ⁇ of titanium nitride.
- metal runner 25 is formed on top surface 21 of dielectric 17 .
- metal runner 25 might be formed from 300 ⁇ of titanium, 600 ⁇ of titanium nitride, with 4500 ⁇ of aluminum, capped with 250 ⁇ of titanium nitride.
- Dielectric 23 is next deposited over runner 25 .
- dielectric 23 may be an oxide of silicon, perhaps formed by the decomposition of the chemical precursor such as TEOS.
- the thickness of dielectric 23 may be 0.8 microns.
- window 27 is opened in dielectric 23 .
- window 27 also partially penetrates dielectric 17 due to over etching of the window.
- the over-etched window facilitates contact with later-formed layers 33 , 35 and 37 in FIG. 4.
- the dimensions of window 27 may be 0.24 microns by 0.74 microns.
- Applicants have discovered an etching process which creates a multiplicity of grooves 29 in the sidewall of window 27 .
- Subsequent processing steps, to be described in later detail below, will show how window 27 is filled with a conductive material which later forms the bottom plate of a capacitor.
- the creation of grooves 29 makes it possible to form a capacitor's bottom plate having increased surface area. Consequently, it is possible to form a capacitor with desirably increased capacitance within a small volume.
- dielectric 23 is a oxide of silicon, illustratively formed by the decomposition of a plasma precursor such as TEOS.
- window 27 is etched in a chemical reactor such as lam 9500, manufactured by Lam Research Corp., Fremont, Calif.
- a Shipley photoresist for example that designated SPR 950, manufactured by Shipley Company, Marlborough, Mass. illustratively may be used.
- a typical exposure time is 500 milliseconds.
- the thickness of the photoresist may be approximately 7600 ⁇ .
- a 600 watt bias power maybe applied to the lower electrode and zero watt source power may be used.
- Etching gases may be CHF 3 (170 cc/min.), C 2 F 6 (30 cc/min.) and Ar (120 cc/min.).
- Typical chamber pressure may be 30 milliTorr, with a range of 20-40 milliTorr being acceptable.
- Typical window depth may be approximately 1 micron. The tolerance for each of the above parameters is ⁇ 10%. Applicants have found that the above-described etching process tends to form grooves in the photoresist. These grooves are then transferred to the inside of the dielectric window 27 , thus forming grooves 29 . It is noticed that preferred processing tends toward thinner photoresist. Thinner photoresist has been observed to be more amenable to groove formation. Photoresist thicknesses above 10,000 ⁇ tend to produce very little or no grooving. More conventional oxide etch chemistries using C 4 F 8 and C 2 F 6 tend to produce smooth walls or at best, insignificant grooves.
- opening 31 is also formed over runner 25 . (Opening or window 31 also has the above-mentioned grooves since it is formed during the same etching process.)
- FIG. 3 shows a top down view of opening 27 with grooves 29 .
- the upper surface of plug 19 protruding into opening 27 is illustrated.
- the grooves are characterized by sharp exterior points and depths of 200-500 ⁇ .
- openings 27 and 31 are first filled with, illustratively 200 ⁇ titanium (reference numeral 33 ); 600 ⁇ titanium nitride (reference numeral 35 ); and a 4000 ⁇ tungsten plug (reference numeral 37 ).
- Other conductors may be used for plug 37 and layers 35 and 33 eliminated.
- CMP may be utilized to smooth the upper surfaces of tungsten plug 37 (and layers 35 and 33 ), thereby making it flush with the upper surface of dielectric 23 .
- Titanium layer 33 fills grooves 29 and opening 27 , thereby later creating a capacitor's bottom plate with greater surface area than would be obtained if opening 27 had conventional, comparatively smooth sides.
- opening 39 is created by anisotropically etching a trench around tungsten plug 37 together with titanium nitride 35 and titanium 33 .
- Outer surface 103 of titanium layer 33 exhibits grooves defined by its deposition within grooved dielectric 23 .
- grooved dielectric functions as a mold for the outer surface of titanium layer 33 .
- the grooves in surface 103 are complementary to grooves 29 in dielectric 23 .
- Opening 39 is filled, illustratively with a dielectric having a high dielectric constant, for example 100 ⁇ of Ta 2 O 5 (in FIG. 6).
- Ta 2 O 5 layer 43 coats the inside of opening 39 (generally conformal to the grooves in layer 33 ), covers the top surfaces of tungsten 37 , titanium nitride 35 , and titanium 33 , and also covers a small portion 91 of the upper surface 93 of dielectric 23 .
- dielectric 43 also exhibits grooves due to its conformal deposition.
- a variety of single or multi-layer conductors may be deposited over dielectric 43 to form the upper plate of the capacitor.
- reference numeral 45 may denote, illustratively 1000 ⁇ of titanium nitride (which becomes generally conformal to dielectric 43 ); reference numeral 47 may denote 300 ⁇ of titanium; reference numeral 49 may denote 600 ⁇ of titanium nitride; and reference numeral 51 may denote 4500 ⁇ of aluminum. Then conductors may also form runner 101 .
- Capacitors formed by applicants' process have been formed to exhibit 30-40% more capacitance per volume than capacitors formed without grooves.
- opening 27 is depicted with a round cross section, although many lithographic reticles have square shaped reticles.
- shape of the window produced in an oxide 23 is generally somewhat rounded as shown in FIG. 3. (Of course, as mentioned before, the overall shape of applicant's window is modulated by grooves 29 .)
- the thicknesses of layers of titanium, titanium nitride, tungsten, silicon dioxide, etc. above are ideal and may be expected to vary approximately ⁇ 10%.
- inventive concept may be also adapted by those skilled in the art to damascene processes which may illustratively use copper.
- the tungsten plug 37 (with or without additional layers such as 35 , 33 ) may be replaced by copper.
- Other conductors may also be damascene copper (e.g. 45 or 47 or 49 ).
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- Internal Circuitry In Semiconductor Integrated Circuit Devices (AREA)
Abstract
Description
- This invention relates to methods of integrated circuit fabrication and the devices produced thereby.
- It is becoming increasingly popular in the manufacture of modern integrated circuits to include intergral capacitors within the integrated circuit. For example, many DRAM designs and many analog designs include intergral capacitors within an integrated circuit chip. Often the capacitors are made by trenching into the silicon substrate.
- Those concerned with the development of integrated circuits have consistently sought new capacitor designs and methods for forming these designs. Of particular interest are fabrication methods which produce capacitors with increased capacitance within small volumes.
- An improved method of integrated circuit fabrication and an improved integrated circuit address the above concerns.
- A first illustrative embodiment includes a method of integrated circuit fabrication which includes forming a conductive plug having an outer surface with grooves;
- forming a dielectric which fills the grooves; and
- forming a conductive material over the dielectric; the conductive plug, the dielectric, and the conductive material together comprising a capacitor.
- A second illustrative embodiment includes a method of integrated circuit fabrication which includes forming a patterned photoresist upon a first material layer; and
- etching the first material layer by a process which forms grooves in the photoresist.
- A third illustrative embodiment includes a method of integrated circuit fabrication which includes forming a transistor upon a substrate;
- forming a first dielectric overlying the substrate and the transistor;
- forming an opening within the first dielectric; the opening being defined by a wall with grooves;
- forming at least one first conductive material within the opening, the first conductive material having a respective wall with grooves;
- forming a second dielectric covering a portion of the wall of the first conductive material; and
- forming a second conductor covering the second dielectric.
- A fourth illustrative embodiment includes an integrated circuit which includes:
- a first conductor having a wall with grooves;
- a dielectric contacting the conductor;
- a second dielectric contacting the dielectric;
- the first and second conductors and the dielectric together comprising a capacitor.
- A fifth illustative embodiment includes an integrated circuit which includes:
- a transistor;
- a first dielectric covering the transistor;
- a conductive plug partially embedded in said dielectric; the conductive plug having a top and a wall, the wall having grooves;
- a second dielectric covering the plug top and a portion of the grooved wall; and
- a patterned conductive layer covering the second dielectric.
- FIGS. 1 and 2 are cross-sectional views of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention; and
- FIG. 3 is plan view of a portion of the integrated circuit shown in FIG. 2; and
- FIGS. 4, 5 and6 are also partial cross-sectional views of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention.
- Turning to FIG. 1,
reference numeral 11 denotes a substrate which may be silicon, epitaxial silicon, doped silicon, etc.Reference numeral 13 denotes, illustratively a gate which may includespacers conductor 20. Reference numeral 15 denotes a source/drain.Reference numeral 17 denotes a dielectric which may, illustratively be an oxide of silicon, perhaps formed from a chemical precursor such as TEOS. Desirably, theupper surface 21 of dielectric 17 is planarized or considerably smoothed, illustratively by chemical mechanical polishing (CMP), or other means.Reference numeral 19 denotes a conductive material, illustratively a plug contacting source/drain 15. Illustratively,conductor 19 may be a tungsten plug (or a copper plug).Plug 19 may, if desired, be surrounded by layers of titanium or titanium nitride. By way of illustration, dielectric 17 may be approximately 8000 Å thick over source/drain 15, and 6000 Å thick overgate 13. The dimensions of plug may be, for example, 0.24 microns by 0.24 microns. Should the titanium and titanium nitride be utilized withplug 19, illustrative thicknesses are roughly 200 Å of titanium, 600 Å of titanium nitride. - Turning to FIG. 2,
metal runner 25 is formed ontop surface 21 of dielectric 17. By way of illustration,metal runner 25 might be formed from 300 Å of titanium, 600 Å of titanium nitride, with 4500 Å of aluminum, capped with 250 Å of titanium nitride. Dielectric 23 is next deposited overrunner 25. Illustratively, dielectric 23 may be an oxide of silicon, perhaps formed by the decomposition of the chemical precursor such as TEOS. Illustratively, the thickness of dielectric 23 may be 0.8 microns. - Next,
window 27 is opened in dielectric 23. Illustratively,window 27 also partially penetrates dielectric 17 due to over etching of the window. (The over-etched window facilitates contact with later-formedlayers window 27 may be 0.24 microns by 0.74 microns. - Applicants have discovered an etching process which creates a multiplicity of
grooves 29 in the sidewall ofwindow 27. (Subsequent processing steps, to be described in later detail below, will show howwindow 27 is filled with a conductive material which later forms the bottom plate of a capacitor. Thus, the creation ofgrooves 29 makes it possible to form a capacitor's bottom plate having increased surface area. Consequently, it is possible to form a capacitor with desirably increased capacitance within a small volume.) - As mentioned before, dielectric23 is a oxide of silicon, illustratively formed by the decomposition of a plasma precursor such as TEOS. Illustratively,
window 27 is etched in a chemical reactor such as lam 9500, manufactured by Lam Research Corp., Fremont, Calif. A Shipley photoresist, for example that designated SPR 950, manufactured by Shipley Company, Marlborough, Mass. illustratively may be used. A typical exposure time is 500 milliseconds. The thickness of the photoresist may be approximately 7600 Å. A 600 watt bias power maybe applied to the lower electrode and zero watt source power may be used. Etching gases may be CHF3 (170 cc/min.), C2F6 (30 cc/min.) and Ar (120 cc/min.). Typical chamber pressure may be 30 milliTorr, with a range of 20-40 milliTorr being acceptable. Typical window depth may be approximately 1 micron. The tolerance for each of the above parameters is ±10%. Applicants have found that the above-described etching process tends to form grooves in the photoresist. These grooves are then transferred to the inside of thedielectric window 27, thus forminggrooves 29. It is noticed that preferred processing tends toward thinner photoresist. Thinner photoresist has been observed to be more amenable to groove formation. Photoresist thicknesses above 10,000 Å tend to produce very little or no grooving. More conventional oxide etch chemistries using C4F8 and C2F6 tend to produce smooth walls or at best, insignificant grooves. - In addition, opening31 is also formed over
runner 25. (Opening orwindow 31 also has the above-mentioned grooves since it is formed during the same etching process.) - FIG. 3 shows a top down view of opening27 with
grooves 29. The upper surface ofplug 19 protruding intoopening 27 is illustrated. Typically, the grooves are characterized by sharp exterior points and depths of 200-500 Å. - Turning to FIG. 4,
openings plug 37 and layers 35 and 33 eliminated. CMP may be utilized to smooth the upper surfaces of tungsten plug 37 (and layers 35 and 33), thereby making it flush with the upper surface ofdielectric 23.Titanium layer 33 fillsgrooves 29 andopening 27, thereby later creating a capacitor's bottom plate with greater surface area than would be obtained if opening 27 had conventional, comparatively smooth sides. - Turning to FIG. 5, opening39 is created by anisotropically etching a trench around
tungsten plug 37 together withtitanium nitride 35 andtitanium 33.Outer surface 103 oftitanium layer 33 exhibits grooves defined by its deposition within grooveddielectric 23. Thus, grooved dielectric functions as a mold for the outer surface oftitanium layer 33. Of course, the grooves insurface 103 are complementary togrooves 29 indielectric 23.Opening 39 is filled, illustratively with a dielectric having a high dielectric constant, for example 100 Å of Ta2O5 (in FIG. 6). It will be noted that Ta2O5 layer 43 coats the inside of opening 39 (generally conformal to the grooves in layer 33), covers the top surfaces oftungsten 37,titanium nitride 35, andtitanium 33, and also covers a small portion 91 of the upper surface 93 ofdielectric 23. Thus, dielectric 43 also exhibits grooves due to its conformal deposition. - A variety of single or multi-layer conductors may be deposited over dielectric43 to form the upper plate of the capacitor. For example,
reference numeral 45 may denote, illustratively 1000 Å of titanium nitride (which becomes generally conformal to dielectric 43);reference numeral 47 may denote 300 Å of titanium;reference numeral 49 may denote 600 Å of titanium nitride; andreference numeral 51 may denote 4500 Å of aluminum. Then conductors may also formrunner 101. - Capacitors formed by applicants' process have been formed to exhibit 30-40% more capacitance per volume than capacitors formed without grooves.
- It will be noted in FIG. 3 that opening27 is depicted with a round cross section, although many lithographic reticles have square shaped reticles. However, as those skilled in the art know, the shape of the window produced in an
oxide 23 is generally somewhat rounded as shown in FIG. 3. (Of course, as mentioned before, the overall shape of applicant's window is modulated bygrooves 29.) - The thicknesses of layers of titanium, titanium nitride, tungsten, silicon dioxide, etc. above are ideal and may be expected to vary approximately ±10%.
- Further processing, including the deposition and planarization of additional dielectrics, etc., may take place at this point.
- The inventive concept may be also adapted by those skilled in the art to damascene processes which may illustratively use copper. For example, the tungsten plug37 (with or without additional layers such as 35, 33) may be replaced by copper.
- Other conductors may also be damascene copper (e.g.45 or 47 or 49).
Claims (18)
Priority Applications (1)
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US09/024,601 US6384446B2 (en) | 1998-02-17 | 1998-02-17 | Grooved capacitor structure for integrated circuits |
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US09/024,601 US6384446B2 (en) | 1998-02-17 | 1998-02-17 | Grooved capacitor structure for integrated circuits |
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Cited By (1)
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US20020185740A1 (en) * | 2001-06-07 | 2002-12-12 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Semiconductor device having multilevel interconnections and method of manufacturing the same |
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JP2000156480A (en) * | 1998-09-03 | 2000-06-06 | Hitachi Ltd | Semiconductor integrated circuit device and method of manufacturing the same |
JP2003051501A (en) * | 2001-05-30 | 2003-02-21 | Mitsubishi Electric Corp | Semiconductor device and manufacturing method thereof |
KR100408410B1 (en) * | 2001-05-31 | 2003-12-06 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Semiconductor device having MIM capacitor and fabrication method thereof |
US7781819B2 (en) | 2001-05-31 | 2010-08-24 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Semiconductor devices having a contact plug and fabrication methods thereof |
JP2004146748A (en) * | 2002-10-28 | 2004-05-20 | Alps Electric Co Ltd | Thin film capacitor element |
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JPS58137245A (en) * | 1982-02-10 | 1983-08-15 | Hitachi Ltd | Semiconductor memory and its manufacture |
JP2602219B2 (en) * | 1987-02-06 | 1997-04-23 | 株式会社日立製作所 | Semiconductor storage device |
KR930009594B1 (en) * | 1991-01-30 | 1993-10-07 | 삼성전자 주식회사 | Highly Integrated Semiconductor Memory Device and Manufacturing Method Thereof |
US5238862A (en) * | 1992-03-18 | 1993-08-24 | Micron Technology, Inc. | Method of forming a stacked capacitor with striated electrode |
JP3197064B2 (en) * | 1992-07-17 | 2001-08-13 | 株式会社東芝 | Semiconductor storage device |
JPH0714993A (en) * | 1993-06-18 | 1995-01-17 | Mitsubishi Electric Corp | Semiconductor device and manufacturing method thereof |
US5629539A (en) * | 1994-03-09 | 1997-05-13 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Semiconductor memory device having cylindrical capacitors |
US5612574A (en) * | 1995-06-06 | 1997-03-18 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | Semiconductor structures using high-dielectric-constant materials and an adhesion layer |
JPH10242411A (en) * | 1996-10-18 | 1998-09-11 | Sony Corp | Capacitor structure of semiconductor memory cell and method of manufacturing the same |
US5753948A (en) * | 1996-11-19 | 1998-05-19 | International Business Machines Corporation | Advanced damascene planar stack capacitor fabrication method |
TW345714B (en) * | 1997-03-22 | 1998-11-21 | United Microelectronics Corp | Capacitive structure of DRAM and process for producing the same |
US5773314A (en) * | 1997-04-25 | 1998-06-30 | Motorola, Inc. | Plug protection process for use in the manufacture of embedded dynamic random access memory (DRAM) cells |
US5796573A (en) * | 1997-05-29 | 1998-08-18 | International Business Machines Corporation | Overhanging separator for self-defining stacked capacitor |
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Cited By (4)
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US20020185740A1 (en) * | 2001-06-07 | 2002-12-12 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Semiconductor device having multilevel interconnections and method of manufacturing the same |
US6806574B2 (en) * | 2001-06-07 | 2004-10-19 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Semiconductor device having multilevel interconnections and method of manufacturing the same |
US20050003657A1 (en) * | 2001-06-07 | 2005-01-06 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Semiconductor device having multilevel interconnections and method of manufacturing the same |
US7074712B2 (en) | 2001-06-07 | 2006-07-11 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Semiconductor device having multilevel interconnections and method of manufacturing the same |
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