Electricity: measuring and testing – Magnetic – With means to create magnetic field to test material
Reexamination Certificate
2001-09-17
2003-07-15
Snow, Walter E. (Department: 2862)
Electricity: measuring and testing
Magnetic
With means to create magnetic field to test material
C324S226000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06593738
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to the field of measurement of film thickness, more specifically, to measuring thickness of conductive coatings on various conductive substrates or on non-conductive substrates with electric properties different from those of the coating films. In particular, the invention may find use in measuring thickness of coating films on semiconductor wafers, hard drive disks, or the like.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
There exists a great variety of methods and apparatuses used in the industry for measuring thickness of coating films and layers applied or laid onto substrates. These methods and apparatuses can be classified in accordance with different criteria. Classification of one type divides these methods into direct and indirect.
An example of a direct method is measurement of a thickness in thin metal coating films by means of so-called X-ray reflectivity. One of these methods is based on a principle that X-rays and gamma-rays are absorbed by matter. When a beam of rays passes through a material, the amount of the beam absorbed depends on what elements the material consists of, and how much of the material the beam has to pass through. This phenomenon is used to measure the thickness or density of a material. The advantage of measuring in this way is that the gauge does not have to touch the material it is measuring. In other words, in thickness measurement, the surface of a web or strip product will not be scratched. The instrument for this method is e.g., RMS1000 Radiometric System produced by Staplethorne Ltd (UK). The instrument uses a suitable radiation source and one or more radiation detectors installed in a mechanical housing which also provides high quality radiological shielding. The source may be an X-ray tube or a radioactive source. The instrument also uses a set of beam defining collimators and one or more radiation detectors. The detectors measure the radiation absorbed within the object or flow being measured and output the signal data to a computer. For thickness gauging, the collimators usually define a single, narrow beam. This gives optimum spatial resolution.
A disadvantage of radiation methods is the use of X-ray or gamma radiation that requires special safety measures for protection of the users against the radiation. The instruments of this type are the most expensive as compared to metrological equipment of other systems.
Another example of direct measurement is a method of optical interferometry, described e.g., by I. Herman in “Optical Diagnostics for Thin Film Processing”, Academic Press, 1996, Chapter 9. Although the optical interferometry method produces the most accurate results in measuring the thickness of a coating film, it has a limitation. More specifically, for conductive films, to which the present invention pertains, this method is limited to measurement of extremely thin coating films which are thin to the extent that a nontransparent material, such as metal, functions as transparent. In other words, this method is unsuitable or is difficult to use for measuring conductive films thicker than 200 Å to 500 Å.
Another example of direct measurement methods is measuring thickness of a film in situ in the course of its formation, e.g., in sputtering, magnetron target sputtering, CVD, PVD, etc. These methods, which are also described in the aforementioned book of I. Herman, may involve the use of the aforementioned optical interferometry or ellipsometry. However, in this case measurement is carried out with reference to both the surface of the substrate and the surface of the growing layer. Therefore, this method is inapplicable to measuring thickness of the film that has been already deposited.
In view of the problems associated with direct methods, indirect non-destructive methods are more popular for measuring thickness of ready-made films. An example of a well-known non-destructive indirect method used for measuring thickness of a film is the so-called “four-point probe method”. This method is based on the use of four contacts, which are brought into physical contact with the surface of the film being measured. As a rule, all four contacts are equally spaced and arranged in line, although this is not a compulsory requirement. Detailed description of the four-point probe method can be found in “Semiconductor Material and Device Characterization” John Wiley & Sons, Inc., N.Y., 1990, pp. 2-40, by D. Schroder. The same book describes how to interpret the results of measurements. This method is classified as indirect because the results of measurement are indirectly related to the thickness of the film. It is understood that each measurement of electric characteristics has to correlated with the actual thickness of the film in each particular measurement, e.g., by cutting a sample from the object and measuring the thickness of the film in a cross-section of the sample, e.g., with the use of an optical or electron microscope. Nevertheless, in view of its simplicity, low cost, and convenience of handling, the four-point probe method is the most popular in the semiconductor industry.
However, the four-point method has some disadvantages. The main problem associated with the aforementioned four-point probe method consists in that in each measurement it is required to ensure reliable contact in each measurement point. This is difficult to achieve since conditions of contact vary from sample to sample as well as between the four pointed contact elements of the probe itself in repeated measurement with the same probe. Such non-uniformity affects the results of measurements and makes it impossible to perform precision calibration.
Known in the art are also methods for measuring film thickness with the use of an inductive sensors. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,072,313 issued in 2000 to L. Li et al. describes in-situ monitoring and control of conductive films by detecting changes in induced eddy currents. More specifically, the change in thickness of a film on an underlying body such as a semiconductor substrate is monitored in situ by inducing a current in the film, and as the thickness of the film changes (either increase or decrease), the changes in the current are detected. With a conductive film, eddy currents are induced in the film by generating an alternating electromagnetic field with a sensor, which includes a capacitor and an inductor. The main idea of the apparatus of U.S. Pat. No. 6,072,313 consists in using a resistor and a capacitor in a parallel resonance circuit. The resonance is caused by means of an oscillator. The inductive coupling between the oscillation circuit and the Eddy current inducted in the coating is used for improving a signal
oise ratio and can be used for improving quality of measurements. In fact, this is a method well known in the radioelectronics for measuring under conditions of the electrical resonance. The above patent describes the aforementioned inductive method for measuring thickness of a film in chemical mechanical polishing (CMP).
A similar inductive method, which was used for measuring thickness of a slag, is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,781,008 issued in 1998 to J. Muller et al. The invention relates to an apparatus for measuring the thickness of a slag layer on a metal melt in a metallurgical vessel. The apparatus comprises a first inductive eddy current sensor which indicates the distance of the apparatus from the metal melt as it is moved toward the melt. A second sensor detects when the apparatus reaches a predetermined distance relative to or contacts the slag layer and triggers the inductive eddy-current sensor when such distance is attained. The sensors are arranged in a predetermined spatial relation, and the thickness of the slag layer is determined by an evaluation device, which analyzes the received signals. The apparatus permits measurement of the thickness of the slag layer without the need of additional equipment (e.g. mechanical lance movement or distance measurement).
The method and apparatus of U.S. Pat. No. 5,781,008 relate to ma
Gershenzon Elik
Kesil Boris
Margulis David
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