Silicon oxynitride cap for fluorinated silicate glass film...

Active solid-state devices (e.g. – transistors – solid-state diode – With means to control surface effects – Insulating coating

Reexamination Certificate

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C438S624000, C257S639000, C257S632000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06300672

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a semiconductor device that includes a silicon oxynitride cap for a fluorinated silicate glass (FSG) film in intermetal dielectric semiconductor fabrication, and more particularly to a stable combination arrangement of a FSG film covered by a silicon oxynitride cap layer on a semiconductor substrate, as well as to a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device that includes forming a patterned conductive, i.e., electrically conductive, layer on a semiconductor substrate with a FSG film combined with a silicon oxynitride cap layer for intermetal dielectric application.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In the fabrication of microelectronic semiconductor devices on a wafer substrate, such as silicon, to form an integrated circuit (IC), various metal layers and insulation layers are deposited thereon in selective sequence. The insulation layers, e.g., of silicon dioxide, silicon oxynitride (SiO
x
N
y
), fluorinated silicate glass (FSG), also called fluorinated silicon oxide, spin-on glass (SOG), etc., serve as electrical insulation between metal layers, e.g., intermetal dielectric (IMD) layers, as protective layers, as gap filling layers to achieve planarization (layer flatness) in the wafer substrate, and the like, as the case may be. The individual layers are deposited by conventional technique such as plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), atmospheric pressure CVD, etc.
Typically, a first level metal layer, e.g., disposed on a silicon substrate containing devices, is separated by one or more insulation layers from a second level metal layer thereabove. This in turn may be separated by one or more further insulation layers from a third level metal layer thereabove, etc. These metal layers are interconnected by metallization through vias or small holes or apertures etched in the intervening insulation layers.
For this purpose, the stacked layers undergo photolithographic processing to provide a pattern thereon consonant with the IC design, e.g., to form vias. The top layer on the wafer substrate is covered with a photoresist layer of photo-reactive polymeric material for patterning via a mask. Light such as visible or ultraviolet (UV) light is directed through the mask onto the photoresist layer to expose it in the mask pattern. The polymeric material of the photoresist layer is transparent to the light yet photo-reactive to change its chemical properties, i.e., by photo-initiated reaction, thereby permitting its patterning.
An antireflective coating (ARC) layer such as an organic ARC layer, e.g., of light absorbing polymer, such as polyimide, is usually provided at the top portion of the wafer substrate to minimize reflection of light back to the photoresist layer for more uniform processing.
The photoresist may be of negative or positive type. In a negative photoresist, the exposed (polymerized) areas become insoluble while the unexposed (unpolymerized) areas dissolve in a later applied developer liquid. In a positive photoresist, the exposed (degraded) soluble areas dissolve in the developer liquid while the unexposed (insoluble) areas remain. In both instances, the photoresist material remaining on the wafer substrate forms the pattern to serve as a mask for etching in turn of the pertinent layers.
Where a layer material is of different physical and chemical characteristics from that of adjacent layers, its etching process is also different therefrom, e.g., in forming vias in dielectric layers to connect neighboring level metal layers. The etching is desirably anisotropic (high rate vertical direction etching and low rate or inhibited horizontal direction etching), as distinguished from isotropic (etching the exposed surfaces equally in all directions), for providing an etched structure of uniform vertical wall geometry or profile. Etching may be effected by wet etching (solution) or dry etching (plasma etching or reactive ion etching) technique, depending on the physical and chemical characteristics of the material being etched and of the neighboring material.
For maximizing the integration (connection) of device components in the available area on the wafer substrate to fit more components in the same area, increasing miniaturization is required. As narrower metal lines and closer pitch dimensions are needed to achieve increasingly dense packing of the components, they become more vulnerable to defects at the minute tolerances involved. This has become apparent as IC miniaturization has increased to what is now called very large scale integration (VLSI) at sub-quarter micron (0.25 micron, i.e., 250 nanometer (nm) or 2,500 angstrom), or less, dimensions.
By comparison, visible light has a wavelength spectrum of 400-700 nm (4,000-7,000 angstroms), and UV light has a wavelength spectrum of 100-400 nm (1,000-4,000 angstroms). Generally, mid UV (MUV) light has a wavelength of about 365 nm, while deep UV (DUV) light has a wavelength of about 248 nm or less.
At sub-quarter micron sizes, the desired high aspect ratios (depth to width) associated with photolithographic processing to form apertures or windows, fine conductive lines, etc., in various layers of the wafer substrate, require very strict tolerances to prevent undesired defects such as touching of closely spaced apart components that can cause short circuiting, etc.
During travel of the mask patterned incident light from the radiation source through the photo-reactive polymeric material of the photoresist layer, it is progressively absorbed as it photo-initiates reaction in the exposed pattern areas. As some incident light reaching the ARC layer is not absorbed thereby, but rather is reflected and scattered back into the photoresist layer, there is interference with the incident light and formation of standing waves.
Contaminants that are incompatible with the photoreactive polymeric material can migrate into the photoresist layer from the ARC layer or other vicinal layer. These contaminants can poison the photoresist layer, e.g., undergo interfering reactions therewith, causing non-uniformity of the reaction therein by extraneous chemical interaction with the polymeric material. This is commonly called photoresist poisoning.
These influences lead to formation of a photoresist footing where a positive photoresist is used, or of a photoresist pinching where a negative photoresist is used. Specifically, upon development, the exposed pattern areas of the photoresist layer have a photoresist profile or structure with non-uniform (non-vertical) side walls. After etching, the photoresist footing or photoresist pinching problem leads to imperfect transfer of the photoresist pattern to the underlying layer or layers, and ultimately limits the minimum spatial resolution since the etched structure is imprecise compared to the desired IC design.
FSG (fluorinated silicate glass) is one of the favorable low dielectric materials used for intermetal dielectric (IMD) application in sub-half micron (0.5 micron) semiconductor fabrication technology in connection with metallization techniques before so-called back end of the line operations (between metallization and sale). To deposit FSG, for example, either high density plasma (HDP) chemical vapor deposition (CVD) or plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) is commonly used.
The dielectric constant achievable for FSG is about 3.3 depending on the fluorine concentration in the FSG film and the precursor used to deposit the FSG film. A higher fluorine concentration usually provides a lower dielectric constant. However, a higher fluorine concentration makes the film unstable because free fluorine tends to diffuse or migrate out of the film to adjacent layers in the IC.
Out diffusion of fluorine substances (including fluorine itself and attendant self-generating contaminant compounds thereof with other contaminating precursor constituents) from FSG can create bubbles that collect at interfaces with metal layers, resulting in metal peeling problems due to corrosion or poisoning, and the like. In many cases, FSG use is combined

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