US20020081845A1 - Method for the formation of diffusion barrier - Google Patents
Method for the formation of diffusion barrier Download PDFInfo
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- US20020081845A1 US20020081845A1 US09/749,706 US74970600A US2002081845A1 US 20020081845 A1 US20020081845 A1 US 20020081845A1 US 74970600 A US74970600 A US 74970600A US 2002081845 A1 US2002081845 A1 US 2002081845A1
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- diffusion barrier
- silicon
- barrier layer
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- 238000009792 diffusion process Methods 0.000 title claims description 63
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- 239000010949 copper Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 41
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- RYGMFSIKBFXOCR-UHFFFAOYSA-N Copper Chemical compound [Cu] RYGMFSIKBFXOCR-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 claims abstract description 35
- 229910052710 silicon Inorganic materials 0.000 claims abstract description 25
- 239000010703 silicon Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 25
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- 230000007423 decrease Effects 0.000 description 2
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- HQVNEWCFYHHQES-UHFFFAOYSA-N silicon nitride Chemical compound N12[Si]34N5[Si]62N3[Si]51N64 HQVNEWCFYHHQES-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- HWEYZGSCHQNNEH-UHFFFAOYSA-N silicon tantalum Chemical compound [Si].[Ta] HWEYZGSCHQNNEH-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
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- 238000006467 substitution reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000004381 surface treatment Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052715 tantalum Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- GUVRBAGPIYLISA-UHFFFAOYSA-N tantalum atom Chemical compound [Ta] GUVRBAGPIYLISA-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
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- 229910052719 titanium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
Images
Classifications
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/70—Manufacture or treatment of devices consisting of a plurality of solid state components formed in or on a common substrate or of parts thereof; Manufacture of integrated circuit devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/71—Manufacture of specific parts of devices defined in group H01L21/70
- H01L21/768—Applying interconnections to be used for carrying current between separate components within a device comprising conductors and dielectrics
- H01L21/76838—Applying interconnections to be used for carrying current between separate components within a device comprising conductors and dielectrics characterised by the formation and the after-treatment of the conductors
- H01L21/76841—Barrier, adhesion or liner layers
- H01L21/76843—Barrier, adhesion or liner layers formed in openings in a dielectric
- H01L21/76846—Layer combinations
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/02—Manufacture or treatment of semiconductor devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/04—Manufacture or treatment of semiconductor devices or of parts thereof the devices having potential barriers, e.g. a PN junction, depletion layer or carrier concentration layer
- H01L21/18—Manufacture or treatment of semiconductor devices or of parts thereof the devices having potential barriers, e.g. a PN junction, depletion layer or carrier concentration layer the devices having semiconductor bodies comprising elements of Group IV of the Periodic Table or AIIIBV compounds with or without impurities, e.g. doping materials
- H01L21/28—Manufacture of electrodes on semiconductor bodies using processes or apparatus not provided for in groups H01L21/20 - H01L21/268
- H01L21/283—Deposition of conductive or insulating materials for electrodes conducting electric current
- H01L21/285—Deposition of conductive or insulating materials for electrodes conducting electric current from a gas or vapour, e.g. condensation
- H01L21/28506—Deposition of conductive or insulating materials for electrodes conducting electric current from a gas or vapour, e.g. condensation of conductive layers
- H01L21/28512—Deposition of conductive or insulating materials for electrodes conducting electric current from a gas or vapour, e.g. condensation of conductive layers on semiconductor bodies comprising elements of Group IV of the Periodic Table
- H01L21/28556—Deposition of conductive or insulating materials for electrodes conducting electric current from a gas or vapour, e.g. condensation of conductive layers on semiconductor bodies comprising elements of Group IV of the Periodic Table by chemical means, e.g. CVD, LPCVD, PECVD, laser CVD
- H01L21/28562—Selective deposition
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/70—Manufacture or treatment of devices consisting of a plurality of solid state components formed in or on a common substrate or of parts thereof; Manufacture of integrated circuit devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/71—Manufacture of specific parts of devices defined in group H01L21/70
- H01L21/768—Applying interconnections to be used for carrying current between separate components within a device comprising conductors and dielectrics
- H01L21/76838—Applying interconnections to be used for carrying current between separate components within a device comprising conductors and dielectrics characterised by the formation and the after-treatment of the conductors
- H01L21/76841—Barrier, adhesion or liner layers
- H01L21/76853—Barrier, adhesion or liner layers characterized by particular after-treatment steps
- H01L21/76855—After-treatment introducing at least one additional element into the layer
- H01L21/76856—After-treatment introducing at least one additional element into the layer by treatment in plasmas or gaseous environments, e.g. nitriding a refractory metal liner
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/70—Manufacture or treatment of devices consisting of a plurality of solid state components formed in or on a common substrate or of parts thereof; Manufacture of integrated circuit devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/71—Manufacture of specific parts of devices defined in group H01L21/70
- H01L21/768—Applying interconnections to be used for carrying current between separate components within a device comprising conductors and dielectrics
- H01L21/76838—Applying interconnections to be used for carrying current between separate components within a device comprising conductors and dielectrics characterised by the formation and the after-treatment of the conductors
- H01L21/76886—Modifying permanently or temporarily the pattern or the conductivity of conductive members, e.g. formation of alloys, reduction of contact resistances
- H01L21/76889—Modifying permanently or temporarily the pattern or the conductivity of conductive members, e.g. formation of alloys, reduction of contact resistances by forming silicides of refractory metals
Definitions
- This invention relates to the making of electronic components such as semiconductor wafer VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit devices, and, more particularly, to a method for forming a robust barrier layer in the device interconnects with excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and enhanced adhesion to CVD-copper and to the electronic components made by the method.
- such structures use silicon wafers with silicon dioxide (SiO 2 ) being the dielectric material and openings are formed in the SiO 2 dielectric layer in the shape of vias and trenches which are then metallized forming the interconnects.
- SiO 2 silicon dioxide
- Increased miniaturization is reducing the openings to submicron sizes (e.g., 0.2 micron and lower) and increasing the aspect ratio (ratio of the height of the opening to the width of the opening) of the features.
- Step coverage of the diffusion barrier is also critical for the interconnect. Normally, physical vapor deposition (PVD) does not produce enough material on the side wall of the contact hole or the via, and, as the minimum feature size decreases, this phenomenon gets more critical. On the other hand, chemical vapor deposition (CVD) offers much better step coverage on the side wall of the contact hole and so is the preferable method for the formation of the diffusion barriers. Furthermore, the diffusion barrier itself must be thin and uniform otherwise, the line resistance may be greater than the resistance of aluminum interconnects.
- the prior art method for the formation of a diffusion barrier is to deposit a material such as TiN, TiNSi, or Ta, or TaN, or TaSiN by CVD or PVD.
- CVD copper on these barrier materials has poor adhesion, however, and the copper peels out during a process such as chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) or in the following integration process.
- CMP chemical mechanical planarization
- PVD Ta and/or PVD TaN which is the most common barrier in the prior art, is normally followed by PVD copper as a seed for the electro-plating of bulk copper to fill the feature.
- PVD Ta and/or PVD TaN which is the most common barrier in the prior art, is normally followed by PVD copper as a seed for the electro-plating of bulk copper to fill the feature.
- Due to poor step coverage on the side wall of the contact or of the trench it is not easy to fill the three-dimensional structure completely. This phenomenon becomes more serious with the shrinkage of the minimum feature size of the semiconductor device.
- the typical multilayer IC electronic component is built up from a number of layers of a dielectric material layer such as silicon dioxide, fluorinated silicon oxide, polymers including polyimide and fluorinated polyimide, ceramics, carbon and other dielectric materials.
- a dielectric material layer such as silicon dioxide, fluorinated silicon oxide, polymers including polyimide and fluorinated polyimide, ceramics, carbon and other dielectric materials.
- the dielectric layer is patterned using known techniques such as the use of a photoresist material which is exposed to define the wiring pattern. After developing, the photoresist acts as a mask through which a pattern of the dielectric material is removed by a subtractive etch process such as plasma etching or reactive ion etching.
- openings defining wiring patterns are provided in the dielectric layer, extending from one surface of the dielectric layer to the other surface of the dielectric layer. These wiring patterns are then filled with a metal using a filling technique such as electroplating, electroless plating, chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition or a combination of methods. This process typically includes planarization of the interconnect metal by removing excess metal with a method such as chemical mechanical polishing or planarization.
- vias or openings are provided in the same dielectric layer and filled with metallization to provide electrical contact between layers of wiring levels.
- the via openings and the wiring pattern openings are both provided in the dielectric layer before filling with metallization. This process simplifies the procedure and eliminates some internal interfaces. These procedures are continued for each layer in the electronic component until the electronic component is completed.
- a dual Damascene line of the prior art is shown connecting two conductor containing dielectric layers.
- Dielectric layers 31 and 38 contain metallization 32 in layer 31 and metallization 39 in layer 38 .
- a stud 36 and trench 40 are shown encased by a wall 34 of a diffusion barrier liner. It is this type structure which has been shown to contribute to an interconnected electronic component having a low electromigration life.
- the dielectric material provides electrical insulation and electrical isolation between the copper wiring elements.
- the openings in the dielectric layer typically called vias, when filled with a conductive material, are typically referred to as studs.
- the studs and a trench for a dual Damascene structure provide the vertical interconnections between the horizontal copper metallization on the various layers of the electronic component.
- barrier layers also referred to as liners, are included in the structure to contain the copper or other metal and to provide improved adhesion of the copper lines and studs to the dielectric or other metallization.
- a multilayer electronic component including components made by using a single Damascene process or a dual Damascene process comprising at least one layer having through openings which are filled with a conductive material to form a trench and/or stud which trench and/or stud electrically connects metallization on other layers and which trench and/or stud has excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper.
- a further object of the invention is to provide an interconnect structure in an electronic component for connecting metallization on one layer to metallization on another layer with the interconnect having excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper.
- a dielectric layer having a through opening to a conductor in another layer
- a multilayer electronic component such as a VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit device comprising:
- a method for making multilayer electronic components such as VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit devices wherein interconnects in the devices have excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper comprising the steps of:
- the method comprises the steps of:
- the method comprises the steps of:
- FIGS. 1 A- 1 C show a sequence of steps for forming a metal rich surface on a dielectric according to a method of the invention.
- FIGS. 2 A- 2 B show a sequence of steps for forming a metal rich surface on the surface of a dielectric according to another method of the invention.
- FIGS. 3 A- 3 G show a sequence of steps for forming a dual Damascene line and interconnection stud structure according to a method of the invention.
- FIG. 4 shows an elevational view of an interconnect stud structure of the invention.
- FIG. 5 shows an elevational view of an interconnect dual Damascene line and interconnection stud structure of the prior art.
- FIGS. 1 A- 5 of the drawings in which like numerals refer to like features of the invention.
- Features of the invention are not necessarily shown to scale in the drawings.
- FIG. 1A part of a multilayer electronic component is shown schematically and comprises a dielectric layer 10 having a diffusion barrier layer 11 thereon.
- the dielectric layer 10 is used to form a multilayer electronic component and typically has openings therein in the form of vias and/or lines which are coated with a barrier layer 11 .
- FIG. 1A shows schematically the dielectric layer 10 and the diffusion barrier layer 11 for convenience.
- the dielectric layer 10 may be made of any suitable dielectric material depending on the application for the electronic component and includes materials such as silicon dioxide, fluorinated silicon oxide, a polymer such as polyimide, a diamond-like carbon or a spin on glass.
- the barrier layer 11 may likewise be any suitable material that provides a diffusion barrier between the conductor formed in the dielectric and the dielectric.
- Preferred diffusion barrier materials are refractory materials such as tantalum, tungsten, tantalum nitride, tungsten nitride, silicon nitride, titanium, titanium nitride, hafnium, hafnium nitride and the like.
- the diffusion barrier may be a silicon containing refractory material which is used in another aspect of the invention to provide a robust barrier layer.
- diffusion barrier 11 is surface treated with a metal replacing reactant, preferably a silicon reactant, to form a silicon rich surface 12 .
- Silicon may be also formed as a layer on the diffusion barrier 11 .
- the surface treatment may be made by reacting the diffusion barrier 11 with a reactant such as SiH 4 or other gases containing a silicon element or an amorphous silicon deposit may be formed on the surface of diffusion barrier 11 by known methods such as plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition and/or low pressure chemical vapor deposition.
- FIG. 1C the structure of FIG. 1B is reacted with a metal containing reactant such as WF 6 to replace the silicon layer 12 with the metal to form a metal (tungsten) rich surface 13 on the surface of diffusion barrier 11 .
- a metal containing reactant such as WF 6
- WF 6 metal containing reactant
- Such a reaction may be shown as:
- the finished coated dielectric 10 contains a layer of diffusion barrier layer 11 having a metal (such as tungsten) rich surface.
- a metal such as tungsten
- Such a structure will be used as shown hereinbelow to deposit a copper or other metal coating on the tungsten rich surface to provide the stud and/or line forming the interconnect.
- FIGS. 2 A- 2 B Another aspect in the invention is shown in FIGS. 2 A- 2 B wherein, as in FIGS. 1 A- 1 C, a sequence of steps is shown to form a metal rich surface on a dielectric having a diffusion barrier.
- a dielectric 14 has a diffusion barrier 15 which is a refractory material containing silicon or other replaceable metal.
- a material such as titanium silicon nitride (T I ,S I ,N), tantalum silicon nitride (T a S i N), tungsten silicon nitride (WS i N), and the like is deposited on the surface of the dielectric 14 .
- the silicon atoms in the diffusion barrier layer 15 are shown as numeral 16 .
- FIG. 2A The structure of FIG. 2A is reacted as above for FIGS. 1 A- 1 C using a metal containing reactant such as WF 6 to replace silicon atoms 16 in the diffusion barrier 15 with the metal to form a metal rich surface 17 , which for WF 6 is tungsten.
- a metal containing reactant such as WF 6 to replace silicon atoms 16 in the diffusion barrier 15 with the metal to form a metal rich surface 17 , which for WF 6 is tungsten.
- the final structure is shown in FIG. 2B and comprises a dielectric layer 14 , a silicon containing diffusion barrier layer 15 on the surface thereof with a tungsten rich surface 17 on top of the diffusion barrier layer 15 .
- This structure as in FIGS. 1 A- 1 C, will be used to deposit copper or other conductor on the surface thereof to form a stud or line interconnect in an electronic component.
- FIGS. 1 A- 1 C and 2 A- 2 B offer many advantages.
- a uniform thin tungsten or other metal layer can be formed on the top of the diffusion barrier, typically less than 100 ⁇ .
- This metal layer is in effect is a robust double structure diffusion barrier since tungsten is also another excellent diffusion barrier for the prevention of copper diffusion.
- Excellent step coverage of the tungsten layer can also be obtained since this method is a substitution of silicon and is not a conventional chemical vapor deposition from a gas phase.
- tungsten has a lower resistivity than most of the barrier metals such as T a , T a N, Ti, TiN, WN, SiN, and the like and thus a lower via contact resistance can be obtained using the barrier layer formed by the method of the subject invention.
- FIGS. 3 A- 3 G a sequence of steps is shown to form a line and stud interconnection using a dual Damascene process.
- a lower dielectric layer 18 is shown having a metal conductor 19 therein.
- An upper dielectric layer 20 is on the lower dielectric layer 18 and has an opening or via 21 through to the metal conductor 19 and an opening or trench 24 .
- the via has side walls 22 and a base 23 and the trench 24 has trench side walls 25 .
- This is a typical dual Damascene structure formed in a multilayer electronic component such as a VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit device.
- the structure of 3 A is coated with a diffusion barrier layer 26 which covers the upper dielectric layer 20 including the via side walls 22 and 23 and trench side walls 25 .
- a reactant such as SiH 4 is used to form a silicon rich surface 27 on the surface of diffusion barrier 26 .
- a reactant such as WF 6 is shown to react with the silicon rich surface 27 to form a tungsten rich surface 28 .
- the tungsten rich surface 28 of the structure is now ready as shown in FIG. 3E for deposition of a copper or other metal seed layer 29 which may be applied using known techniques such as PVD, CVD, electroless deposition and electrolytic deposition.
- the purpose of the copper seed layer is to promote deposition of copper to fill the via and trench.
- FIG. 3F shows electroplated copper 30 over the structure covering the copper seed layer 29 and filling the trench 24 and via 21 .
- the copper seed 29 is shown using a dotted to indicate that the electroplated copper 30 and copper seed layer 29 form a single metal structure.
- FIG. 3G The structure of FIG. 3F is now typically planarized using chemicalmechanical polishing and the final interconnect structure made according to the invention is shown in FIG. 3G wherein the lower dielectric layer 18 having a metal conductor 19 therein is electrically connected to via 21 and trench 24 in upper dielectric layer 20 .
- the via 21 and trench 24 comprise an outer layer of a diffusion barrier 26 , an inner layer of a tungsten rich surface 28 and the electroplated copper layer 30 filling the via 21 and trench 24 .
- Such a structure provides an interconnect with excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper and provides an electronic component having excellent electromigration resistance and other operating properties.
- FIG. 4 shows a multilayer interconnect structure of an electronic component of the invention comprising a lower dielectric layer 31 having a conductor 32 therein.
- Intermediate dielectric layer 33 has a via 36 comprising a diffusion barrier 34 , a tungsten layer 35 and a copper conductor 37 .
- the intermediate layer 33 is sandwiched between an upper dielectric layer 38 having a conductor 39 therein.
- the via has a double structure diffusion barrier comprising a diffusion barrier material 34 and a tungsten layer 35 and provides excellent electrical properties and provides the interconnect between conductor 32 in dielectric 31 and conductor 39 in dielectric 38 .
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Abstract
Electronic components such as semiconductor wafer VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit devices are provided having a robust barrier layer in the device interconnects. The robust barrier layer provides excellent step coverage, low resistance and enhanced adhesion to CVD copper and the interconnect has a double structure of a layer of a barrier material and a metal layer thereon. The metal layer is preferably tungsten and is formed by replacing silicon or other such atoms on the surface of the barrier layer with tungsten metal. A layer of silicon can be formed on the barrier layer, silicon atoms can be formed on the surface by reacting the barrier layer with a silicon containing reactant or a silicon containing barrier layer can be used.
Description
- 1. Field of the Invention
- This invention relates to the making of electronic components such as semiconductor wafer VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit devices, and, more particularly, to a method for forming a robust barrier layer in the device interconnects with excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and enhanced adhesion to CVD-copper and to the electronic components made by the method.
- 2. Description of Related Art
- The demand for manufacturing semiconductor integrated circuit (IC) devices such as computer chips with high circuit speed, high packing density and low power dissipation requires the downward scaling of feature sizes in ultralarge-scale integration (ULSI) and very-large-scale integration (VLSI) structures. The trend to smaller chip sizes and increased circuit density requires the miniaturization of interconnect features which severely penalizes the overall performance of the structure because of increasing interconnect resistance and reliability concerns such as fabrication of the interconnects and electromigration.
- In general, such structures use silicon wafers with silicon dioxide (SiO2) being the dielectric material and openings are formed in the SiO2 dielectric layer in the shape of vias and trenches which are then metallized forming the interconnects. Increased miniaturization is reducing the openings to submicron sizes (e.g., 0.2 micron and lower) and increasing the aspect ratio (ratio of the height of the opening to the width of the opening) of the features.
- With the decrease of the design rule, copper gets more focus as a conducting material for the interconnect in ULSI and VLSI devices since it has lower resistivity and higher electromigration resistance than aluminum. Copper easily diffuses through silicon dioxide and silicon, however, and a robust barrier layer to prevent copper diffusion is required to encapsulate the copper interconnect.
- Step coverage of the diffusion barrier is also critical for the interconnect. Normally, physical vapor deposition (PVD) does not produce enough material on the side wall of the contact hole or the via, and, as the minimum feature size decreases, this phenomenon gets more critical. On the other hand, chemical vapor deposition (CVD) offers much better step coverage on the side wall of the contact hole and so is the preferable method for the formation of the diffusion barriers. Furthermore, the diffusion barrier itself must be thin and uniform otherwise, the line resistance may be greater than the resistance of aluminum interconnects.
- The prior art method for the formation of a diffusion barrier is to deposit a material such as TiN, TiNSi, or Ta, or TaN, or TaSiN by CVD or PVD. CVD copper on these barrier materials has poor adhesion, however, and the copper peels out during a process such as chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) or in the following integration process. PVD Ta and/or PVD TaN, which is the most common barrier in the prior art, is normally followed by PVD copper as a seed for the electro-plating of bulk copper to fill the feature. However, due to poor step coverage on the side wall of the contact or of the trench, it is not easy to fill the three-dimensional structure completely. This phenomenon becomes more serious with the shrinkage of the minimum feature size of the semiconductor device.
- Broadly stated, the typical multilayer IC electronic component is built up from a number of layers of a dielectric material layer such as silicon dioxide, fluorinated silicon oxide, polymers including polyimide and fluorinated polyimide, ceramics, carbon and other dielectric materials. In the processing sequence known in the art as the “Damascene Process”, the dielectric layer is patterned using known techniques such as the use of a photoresist material which is exposed to define the wiring pattern. After developing, the photoresist acts as a mask through which a pattern of the dielectric material is removed by a subtractive etch process such as plasma etching or reactive ion etching. Using the Damascene Process, openings defining wiring patterns are provided in the dielectric layer, extending from one surface of the dielectric layer to the other surface of the dielectric layer. These wiring patterns are then filled with a metal using a filling technique such as electroplating, electroless plating, chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition or a combination of methods. This process typically includes planarization of the interconnect metal by removing excess metal with a method such as chemical mechanical polishing or planarization. In the Single Damascene Process, vias or openings are provided in the same dielectric layer and filled with metallization to provide electrical contact between layers of wiring levels. In the Dual Damascene Process, the via openings and the wiring pattern openings are both provided in the dielectric layer before filling with metallization. This process simplifies the procedure and eliminates some internal interfaces. These procedures are continued for each layer in the electronic component until the electronic component is completed.
- In FIG. 5, a dual Damascene line of the prior art is shown connecting two conductor containing dielectric layers.
Dielectric layers metallization 32 inlayer 31 andmetallization 39 inlayer 38. Astud 36 andtrench 40 are shown encased by awall 34 of a diffusion barrier liner. It is this type structure which has been shown to contribute to an interconnected electronic component having a low electromigration life. - The dielectric material provides electrical insulation and electrical isolation between the copper wiring elements. The openings in the dielectric layer typically called vias, when filled with a conductive material, are typically referred to as studs. The studs and a trench for a dual Damascene structure provide the vertical interconnections between the horizontal copper metallization on the various layers of the electronic component.
- To avoid metal diffusion between the metal and the dielectric, barrier layers, also referred to as liners, are included in the structure to contain the copper or other metal and to provide improved adhesion of the copper lines and studs to the dielectric or other metallization.
- Bearing in mind the problems and deficiencies of the prior art, it is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a multilayer electronic component including components made by using a single Damascene process or a dual Damascene process comprising at least one layer having through openings which are filled with a conductive material to form a trench and/or stud which trench and/or stud electrically connects metallization on other layers and which trench and/or stud has excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper.
- It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for making a multilayer electronic component having trench and/or stud interconnections including components made using a single Damascene process or a dual Damascene process wherein the trench and/or stud have excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper.
- A further object of the invention is to provide an interconnect structure in an electronic component for connecting metallization on one layer to metallization on another layer with the interconnect having excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper.
- Still other objects and advantages of the invention will in part be obvious and will in part be apparent from the specification.
- The above and other objects, which will be apparent to one skilled in the art, are achieved in the present invention which relates in one aspect to an interconnect structure in a multilayer electronic component for connecting metallization layers, the interconnect structure having excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper comprising:
- a dielectric layer having a through opening to a conductor in another layer;
- a diffusion barrier layer in the through opening in the dielectric layer;
- a metallic layer on the diffusion barrier layer; and
- copper or other metal filling the opening to form the interconnect structure.
- In a further aspect of the invention a multilayer electronic component is provided such as a VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit device comprising:
- a plurality of dielectric layers having metallization therein;
- openings in the form of a trench and/or via extending through at least one layer and connecting metallization in another layer;
- a diffusion barrier layer in the opening on the dielectric layer;
- a metallic layer on the diffusion barrier layer; and
- copper or other metal filling the opening to electrically connect the metallization in the dielectric layers.
- In a further aspect of the invention a method is provided for making multilayer electronic components such as VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit devices wherein interconnects in the devices have excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper comprising the steps of:
- forming a multilayer electronic component layer by layer with dielectric layers having openings therein with metallization formed in the openings to provide electrical connections between the layers;
- forming a diffusion barrier in the opening on the dielectric layer;
- forming a metallic layer on the diffusion barrier layer by reacting the barrier layer with a metal containing reactant; and
- filling the opening with copper or other metal to provide a conductor which contacts the metallization in the dielectric layer to another layer.
- In another aspect of the invention the method comprises the steps of:
- surface treating the diffusion barrier layer with SiH4 or other gases containing Si to form a Si rich surface, or forming a thin Si deposit on the diffusion barrier layer, preferably an amorphous Si deposit;
- exposing the treated surface to a conductive metal containing reactant to replace at least part of the Si with the conductive metal; and
- forming the metallic conductor in the opening.
- In a further aspect of the invention the method comprises the steps of:
- forming the diffusion barrier with a material containing silicon, such as titanium silicon nitride;
- exposing the diffusion barrier layer to a conductive metal containing reactant to replace at least some of the silicon with the conductive metal; and
- forming the metallic conductor in the opening.
- The features of the invention believed to be novel and the elements characteristic of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The figures are for illustration purposes only and are not drawn to scale. the invention itself, however, both as to organization and method of operation, may best be understood by reference to the detailed description which follows taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
- FIGS.1A-1C show a sequence of steps for forming a metal rich surface on a dielectric according to a method of the invention.
- FIGS.2A-2B show a sequence of steps for forming a metal rich surface on the surface of a dielectric according to another method of the invention.
- FIGS.3A-3G show a sequence of steps for forming a dual Damascene line and interconnection stud structure according to a method of the invention.
- FIG. 4 shows an elevational view of an interconnect stud structure of the invention.
- FIG. 5 shows an elevational view of an interconnect dual Damascene line and interconnection stud structure of the prior art.
- In describing the preferred embodiment of the present invention, reference will be made herein to FIGS.1A-5 of the drawings in which like numerals refer to like features of the invention. Features of the invention are not necessarily shown to scale in the drawings.
- Referring to FIG. 1A, part of a multilayer electronic component is shown schematically and comprises a
dielectric layer 10 having adiffusion barrier layer 11 thereon. As will be shown more fully hereinbelow, thedielectric layer 10 is used to form a multilayer electronic component and typically has openings therein in the form of vias and/or lines which are coated with abarrier layer 11. FIG. 1A shows schematically thedielectric layer 10 and thediffusion barrier layer 11 for convenience. - The
dielectric layer 10 may be made of any suitable dielectric material depending on the application for the electronic component and includes materials such as silicon dioxide, fluorinated silicon oxide, a polymer such as polyimide, a diamond-like carbon or a spin on glass. Thebarrier layer 11 may likewise be any suitable material that provides a diffusion barrier between the conductor formed in the dielectric and the dielectric. Preferred diffusion barrier materials are refractory materials such as tantalum, tungsten, tantalum nitride, tungsten nitride, silicon nitride, titanium, titanium nitride, hafnium, hafnium nitride and the like. As will be more fully discussed hereinbelow the diffusion barrier may be a silicon containing refractory material which is used in another aspect of the invention to provide a robust barrier layer. - Referring to FIG. 1B,
diffusion barrier 11 is surface treated with a metal replacing reactant, preferably a silicon reactant, to form a silicon rich surface 12. Silicon may be also formed as a layer on thediffusion barrier 11. The surface treatment may be made by reacting thediffusion barrier 11 with a reactant such as SiH4 or other gases containing a silicon element or an amorphous silicon deposit may be formed on the surface ofdiffusion barrier 11 by known methods such as plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition and/or low pressure chemical vapor deposition. - Referring to FIG. 1C, the structure of FIG. 1B is reacted with a metal containing reactant such as WF6 to replace the silicon layer 12 with the metal to form a metal (tungsten)
rich surface 13 on the surface ofdiffusion barrier 11. Such a reaction may be shown as: - 2WF6+3Si→2W+3SIF4
- As can be seen in FIG. 1C, the finished
coated dielectric 10 contains a layer ofdiffusion barrier layer 11 having a metal (such as tungsten) rich surface. Such a structure will be used as shown hereinbelow to deposit a copper or other metal coating on the tungsten rich surface to provide the stud and/or line forming the interconnect. - Another aspect in the invention is shown in FIGS.2A-2B wherein, as in FIGS. 1A-1C, a sequence of steps is shown to form a metal rich surface on a dielectric having a diffusion barrier. Accordingly, in FIG. 2A, a dielectric 14 has a
diffusion barrier 15 which is a refractory material containing silicon or other replaceable metal. A material such as titanium silicon nitride (TI,SI ,N), tantalum silicon nitride (TaSiN), tungsten silicon nitride (WSiN), and the like is deposited on the surface of the dielectric 14. The silicon atoms in thediffusion barrier layer 15 are shown asnumeral 16. - The structure of FIG. 2A is reacted as above for FIGS.1A-1C using a metal containing reactant such as WF6 to replace
silicon atoms 16 in thediffusion barrier 15 with the metal to form a metalrich surface 17, which for WF6 is tungsten. - The final structure is shown in FIG. 2B and comprises a
dielectric layer 14, a silicon containingdiffusion barrier layer 15 on the surface thereof with a tungstenrich surface 17 on top of thediffusion barrier layer 15. This structure, as in FIGS. 1A-1C, will be used to deposit copper or other conductor on the surface thereof to form a stud or line interconnect in an electronic component. - The methods used to form the structures shown in FIGS.1A-1C and 2A-2B offer many advantages. A uniform thin tungsten or other metal layer can be formed on the top of the diffusion barrier, typically less than 100Å. This metal layer is in effect is a robust double structure diffusion barrier since tungsten is also another excellent diffusion barrier for the prevention of copper diffusion. Excellent step coverage of the tungsten layer can also be obtained since this method is a substitution of silicon and is not a conventional chemical vapor deposition from a gas phase. Additionally, tungsten has a lower resistivity than most of the barrier metals such as Ta, TaN, Ti, TiN, WN, SiN, and the like and thus a lower via contact resistance can be obtained using the barrier layer formed by the method of the subject invention.
- Referring now to FIGS.3A-3G, a sequence of steps is shown to form a line and stud interconnection using a dual Damascene process. In FIG. 3A a lower
dielectric layer 18 is shown having ametal conductor 19 therein. Anupper dielectric layer 20 is on the lowerdielectric layer 18 and has an opening or via 21 through to themetal conductor 19 and an opening ortrench 24. The via has side walls 22 and a base 23 and thetrench 24 hastrench side walls 25. This is a typical dual Damascene structure formed in a multilayer electronic component such as a VLSI and ULSI integrated circuit device. - Referring to FIG. 3B, the structure of3A is coated with a
diffusion barrier layer 26 which covers theupper dielectric layer 20 including the via side walls 22 and 23 andtrench side walls 25. - In FIG. 3C a reactant such as SiH4 is used to form a silicon
rich surface 27 on the surface ofdiffusion barrier 26. In FIG. 3D a reactant such as WF6 is shown to react with the siliconrich surface 27 to form a tungstenrich surface 28. - The tungsten
rich surface 28 of the structure is now ready as shown in FIG. 3E for deposition of a copper or othermetal seed layer 29 which may be applied using known techniques such as PVD, CVD, electroless deposition and electrolytic deposition. The purpose of the copper seed layer is to promote deposition of copper to fill the via and trench. - FIG. 3F shows electroplated
copper 30 over the structure covering thecopper seed layer 29 and filling thetrench 24 and via 21. Thecopper seed 29 is shown using a dotted to indicate that the electroplatedcopper 30 andcopper seed layer 29 form a single metal structure. - The structure of FIG. 3F is now typically planarized using chemicalmechanical polishing and the final interconnect structure made according to the invention is shown in FIG. 3G wherein the lower
dielectric layer 18 having ametal conductor 19 therein is electrically connected to via 21 andtrench 24 inupper dielectric layer 20. The via 21 andtrench 24 comprise an outer layer of adiffusion barrier 26, an inner layer of a tungstenrich surface 28 and the electroplatedcopper layer 30 filling the via 21 andtrench 24. Such a structure provides an interconnect with excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper and provides an electronic component having excellent electromigration resistance and other operating properties. - FIG. 4 shows a multilayer interconnect structure of an electronic component of the invention comprising a lower
dielectric layer 31 having aconductor 32 therein.Intermediate dielectric layer 33 has a via 36 comprising adiffusion barrier 34, atungsten layer 35 and acopper conductor 37. Theintermediate layer 33 is sandwiched between anupper dielectric layer 38 having aconductor 39 therein. As can be seen from FIG. 4, the via has a double structure diffusion barrier comprising adiffusion barrier material 34 and atungsten layer 35 and provides excellent electrical properties and provides the interconnect betweenconductor 32 indielectric 31 andconductor 39 indielectric 38. - While the present invention has been particularly described, in conjunction with a specific preferred embodiment, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing description. It is therefore contemplated that the appended claims will embrace any such alternatives, modifications and variations as falling within the true scope and spirit of the present invention.
- Thus, having described the invention, what is claimed is:
Claims (21)
1. An interconnect structure in a multilayer electronic component for connecting metallization layers, the interconnect structure having excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper comprising:
a dielectric layer having a through opening to a conductor in another layer;
a diffusion barrier layer in the through opening in the dielectric layer;
a metallic layer on the diffusion barrier layer; and
copper filling the opening to form the interconnect structure.
2. The interconnect structure of claim 1 wherein the diffusion barrier has metal replaceable atoms on the surface thereof which are replaced by the metallic layer.
3. The interconnect structure of claim 2 wherein the metal replaceable atoms are silicon atoms.
4. The interconnect structure of claim 3 wherein the silicon atoms are formed by surface treating the diffusion barrier layer.
5. The interconnect structure of claim 3 wherein a layer of silicon is deposited on the diffusion barrier layer.
6. The interconnect structure of claim 3 wherein the diffusion barrier material contains silicon atoms.
7. The interconnect structure of claim 3 wherein the metallic layer is tungsten.
8. A multilayer electronic component integrated circuit device comprising:
a plurality of dielectric layers having metallization therein;
openings in the form of a trench and/or via extending through at least one layer and connecting metallization in another layer;
a diffusion barrier in the opening on the dielectric layer;
a metallic layer on the diffusion barrier layer; and
copper filling the opening to electrically connect the metallization in the dielectric layers.
9. The device of claim 8 wherein the diffusion barrier has metal replaceable atoms on the surface thereof which are replaced by the metallic layer.
10. The device of claim 9 wherein the metal replaceable atoms are silicon atoms.
11. The device of claim 10 wherein the silicon atoms are formed by surface treating the diffusion barrier layer.
12. The device of claim 10 wherein a layer of silicon is deposited on the diffusion barrier layer.
13. The device of claim 10 wherein the diffusion barrier material contains silicon atoms.
14. The device of claim 10 wherein the metallic layer is tungsten.
15. A method for making multilayer electronic component integrated circuit devices wherein interconnects in the devices have excellent step coverage, uniformity, low resistance and adhesion to CVD-copper comprising the steps of:
forming a multilayer electronic component layer by layer with dielectric layers having openings therein with metallization formed in the openings to provide electrical connections between the layers;
forming a diffusion barrier layer in the opening on the dielectric layer;
forming a metallic layer on the diffusion barrier layer by reacting the barrier layer with a metal containing reactant; and
filling the opening with copper to provide a conductor which contacts the metallization in the dielectric layer to another layer.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein the diffusion barrier layer is surface treated to form silicon atoms on the surface thereof.
17. The method of claim 16 wherein the diffusion barrier layer is surface treated by contacting the barrier layer with a silicon containing reactant to form silicon atoms on the surface thereof.
18. The method of claim 17 wherein the silicon containing reactant is SiH4.
19. The method of claim 15 wherein a layer of silicon is deposited on the diffusion barrier layer.
20. The method of claim 15 wherein the diffusion barrier material contains metal replaceable atoms.
21. The method of claim 20 wherein the metal replaceable atoms are silicon.
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US10/425,306 US6887781B2 (en) | 2000-12-27 | 2003-04-29 | Method for the formation of diffusion barrier |
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US09/749,706 US20020081845A1 (en) | 2000-12-27 | 2000-12-27 | Method for the formation of diffusion barrier |
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US6887781B2 (en) | 2005-05-03 |
US20030194858A1 (en) | 2003-10-16 |
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