Patent application number | Description | Published |
20110034039 | FORMATION OF SILICON OXIDE USING NON-CARBON FLOWABLE CVD PROCESSES - A method of forming a silicon oxide layer is described. The method may include the steps of mixing a carbon-free silicon-and-nitrogen containing precursor with a radical precursor, and depositing a silicon-and-nitrogen containing layer on a substrate. The silicon-and-nitrogen containing layer is then converted to the silicon oxide layer. | 02-10-2011 |
20110081782 | POST-PLANARIZATION DENSIFICATION - Processes for forming high density gap-filling silicon oxide on a patterned substrate are described. The processes increase the density of gap-filling silicon oxide particularly in narrow trenches. The density may also be increased in wide trenches and recessed open areas. The densities of the gap-filling silicon oxide in the narrow and wide trenches/open areas become more similar following the treatment which allows the etch rates to match more closely. This effect may also be described as a reduction in the pattern loading effect. The process involves forming then planarizing silicon oxide. Planarization exposes a new dielectric interface disposed closer to the narrow trenches. The newly exposed interface facilitates a densification treatment by annealing and/or exposing the planarized surface to a plasma. | 04-07-2011 |
20110151676 | METHODS OF THIN FILM PROCESS - A method for forming a semiconductor structure includes forming a plurality of features across a surface of a substrate, with at least one space being between two adjacent features. A first dielectric layer is formed on the features and within the at least one space. A portion of the first dielectric layer interacts with a reactant derived from a first precursor and a second precursor to form a first solid product. The first solid product is decomposed to substantially remove the portion of the first dielectric layer. A second dielectric layer is formed to substantially fill the at least one space. | 06-23-2011 |
20110159213 | CHEMICAL VAPOR DEPOSITION IMPROVEMENTS THROUGH RADICAL-COMPONENT MODIFICATION - A method of forming a silicon oxide layer is described. The method may include the steps of mixing a carbon-free silicon-containing precursor with a radical-nitrogen precursor, and depositing a silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer on a substrate. The radical-nitrogen precursor is formed in a plasma by flowing ammonia and nitrogen (N | 06-30-2011 |
20110159703 | DIELECTRIC FILM GROWTH WITH RADICALS PRODUCED USING FLEXIBLE NITROGEN/HYDROGEN RATIO - Methods of forming dielectric layers are described. The method may include the steps of mixing a silicon-containing precursor with a radical-nitrogen precursor, and depositing a dielectric layer on a substrate. The radical-nitrogen precursor is formed in a remote plasma by flowing hydrogen (H | 06-30-2011 |
20110165781 | FLOWABLE DIELECTRIC USING OXIDE LINER - Methods of forming silicon oxide layers are described. The methods include mixing a carbon-free silicon-containing precursor with a radical-nitrogen precursor, and depositing a silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer on a substrate. The radical-nitrogen precursor is formed in a plasma by flowing a hydrogen-and-nitrogen-containing precursor into the plasma. Prior to depositing the silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer, a silicon oxide liner layer is formed to improve adhesion, smoothness and flowability of the silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer. The silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer may be converted to a silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer by curing and annealing the film. Methods also include forming a silicon oxide liner layer before applying a spin-on silicon-containing material. | 07-07-2011 |
20110212620 | POST-PLANARIZATION DENSIFICATION - Processes for forming high density gap-filling silicon oxide on a patterned substrate are described. The processes increase the density of gap-filling silicon oxide particularly in narrow trenches. The density may also be increased in wide trenches and recessed open areas. The densities of the gap-filling silicon oxide in the narrow and wide trenches/open areas become more similar following the treatment which allows the etch rates to match more closely. This effect may also be described as a reduction in the pattern loading effect. The process involves forming then planarizing silicon oxide. Planarization exposes a new dielectric interface disposed closer to the narrow trenches. The newly exposed interface facilitates a densification treatment by annealing and/or exposing the planarized surface to a plasma. | 09-01-2011 |
20110217851 | CONFORMAL LAYERS BY RADICAL-COMPONENT CVD - Methods, materials, and systems are described for forming conformal dielectric layers containing silicon and nitrogen (e.g., a silicon-nitrogen-hydrogen (Si—N—H) film) from a carbon-free silicon-and-nitrogen precursor and radical-nitrogen precursor. The carbon-free silicon-and-nitrogen precursor is predominantly excited by contact with the radical-nitrogen precursor. Because the silicon-and-nitrogen film is formed without carbon, the conversion of the film into hardened silicon oxide is done with less pore formation and less volume shrinkage. The deposited silicon-and-nitrogen-containing film may be wholly or partially converted to silicon oxide which allows the optical properties of the conformal dielectric layer to be selectable. The deposition of a thin silicon-and-nitrogen-containing film may be performed at low temperature to form a liner layer in a substrate trench. The low temperature liner layer has been found to improve the wetting properties and allows flowable films to more completely fill the trench. | 09-08-2011 |
20110294300 | SELECTIVE ETCH FOR SILICON FILMS - A method of etching patterned heterogeneous silicon-containing structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch with inverted selectivity compared to existing remote plasma etches. The methods may be used to conformally trim polysilicon while removing little or no silicon oxide. More generally, silicon-containing films containing less oxygen are removed more rapidly than silicon-containing films which contain more oxygen. Other exemplary applications include trimming silicon carbon nitride films while essentially retaining silicon oxycarbide. Applications such as these are enabled by the methods presented herein and enable new process flows. These process flows are expected to become desirable for a variety of finer linewidth structures. Methods contained herein may also be used to etch silicon-containing films faster than nitrogen-and-silicon containing films having a greater concentration of nitrogen. | 12-01-2011 |
20120003840 | IN-SITU OZONE CURE FOR RADICAL-COMPONENT CVD - Methods of forming a dielectric layer are described. The methods include the steps of mixing a silicon-containing precursor with a plasma effluent, and depositing a silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer on a substrate. The silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer is converted to a silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer by curing in an ozone-containing atmosphere in the same substrate processing region used for depositing the silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer. Another silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer may be deposited on the silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer and the stack of layers may again be cured in ozone all without removing the substrate from the substrate processing region. After an integral multiple of dep-cure cycles, the conversion of the stack of silicon-and-oxygen-containing layers may be annealed at a higher temperature in an oxygen-containing environment. | 01-05-2012 |
20120083133 | AMINE CURING SILICON-NITRIDE-HYDRIDE FILMS - Methods of forming dielectric layers are described. The methods may include forming a silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing layer on a substrate. The methods include ozone curing the silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing layer to turn the silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing layer into a silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer. Following ozone curing, the layer is exposed to an amine-water combination at low temperature before an anneal. The presence of the amine cure allows the conversion to silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer to occur more rapidly and completely at a lower temperature during the anneal. The amine cure also enables the anneal to use a less oxidative environment to effect the conversion to the silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer. | 04-05-2012 |
20120142192 | OXIDE-RICH LINER LAYER FOR FLOWABLE CVD GAPFILL - The formation of a gap-filling silicon oxide layer with reduced volume fraction of voids is described. The deposition involves the formation of an oxygen-rich less-flowable liner layer before an oxygen-poor more-flowable gapfill layer. However, the liner layer is deposited within the same chamber as the gapfill layer. The liner layer and the gapfill layer may both be formed by combining a radical component with an unexcited silicon-containing precursor (i.e. not directly excited by application of plasma power). The liner layer has more oxygen content than the gapfill layer and deposits more conformally. The deposition rate of the gapfill layer may be increased by the presence of the liner layer. The gapfill layer may contain silicon, oxygen and nitrogen and be converted at elevated temperature to contain more oxygen and less nitrogen. The presence of the gapfill liner provides a source of oxygen underneath the gapfill layer to augment the gas phase oxygen introduced during the conversion. | 06-07-2012 |
20120177846 | RADICAL STEAM CVD - Methods of forming silicon oxide layers are described. The methods include concurrently combining plasma-excited (radical) steam with an unexcited silicon precursor. Nitrogen may be supplied through the plasma-excited route (e.g. by adding ammonia to the steam) and/or by choosing a nitrogen-containing unexcited silicon precursor. The methods result in depositing a silicon-oxygen-and-nitrogen-containing layer on a substrate. The oxygen content of the silicon-oxygen-and-nitrogen-containing layer is then increased to form a silicon oxide layer which may contain little or no nitrogen. The increase in oxygen content may be brought about by annealing the layer in the presence of an oxygen-containing atmosphere and the density of the film may be increased further by raising the temperature even higher in an inert environment. | 07-12-2012 |
20120211462 | REMOTELY-EXCITED FLUORINE AND WATER VAPOR ETCH - A method of etching exposed silicon oxide on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents combine with water vapor. The chemical reaction resulting from the combination produces reactants which etch the patterned heterogeneous structures to produce, in embodiments, a thin residual structure exhibiting little deformation. The methods may be used to conformally trim silicon oxide while removing little or no silicon, polysilicon, silicon nitride, titanium or titanium nitride. In an exemplary embodiment, the etch processes described herein have been found to remove mold oxide around a thin cylindrical conducting structure without causing the cylindrical structure to significantly deform. | 08-23-2012 |
20120238108 | TWO-STAGE OZONE CURE FOR DIELECTRIC FILMS - A method of forming a silicon oxide layer is described. The method increases the oxygen content of a dielectric layer by curing the layer in a two-step ozone cure. The first step involves exposing the dielectric layer to ozone while the second step involves exposing the dielectric layer to ozone excited by a local plasma. This sequence can reduce or eliminate the need for a subsequent anneal following the cure step. The two-step ozone cures may be applied to silicon-and-nitrogen-containing film to convert the films to silicon oxide. | 09-20-2012 |
20120269989 | LOW TEMPERATURE SILICON OXIDE CONVERSION - A method of forming a silicon oxide layer is described. The method first deposits a silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing (polysilazane) film by radical-component chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The polysilazane film is converted to silicon oxide by exposing the polysilazane film to humidity at low substrate temperature. The polysilazane film may also be dipped in a liquid having both oxygen and hydrogen, such as water, hydrogen peroxide and or ammonium hydroxide. These conversion techniques may be used separately or in a sequential combination. Conversion techniques described herein hasten conversion, produce manufacturing-worthy films and remove the requirement of a high temperature oxidation treatment. An ozone treatment may precede the conversion technique(s). | 10-25-2012 |
20120309205 | CAPPING LAYER FOR REDUCED OUTGASSING - A method of forming a silicon oxide layer is described. The method first deposits a silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen containing (polysilazane) film by radical-component chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen containing film is formed by combining a radical precursor (excited in a remote plasma) with m unexcited carbon-free silicon precursor. A capping layer is formed over the silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing film to avoid time-evolution of underlying film properties prior to conversion into silicon oxide. The capping layer is formed by combining a radical oxygen precursor (excited in a remote plasma) with an unexcited silicon-and-carbon-containing-precursor. The films are converted to silicon oxide by exposure to oxygen-containing environments. The two films may be deposited within the same substrate processing chamber and may be deposited without breaking vacuum. | 12-06-2012 |
20130034968 | DRY-ETCH FOR SILICON-AND-CARBON-CONTAINING FILMS - A method of etching exposed silicon-and-carbon-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and an oxygen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon-and-carbon-containing material. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon-and-carbon-containing material from the exposed silicon-and-carbon-containing material regions while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The silicon-and-carbon-containing material selectivity results partly from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. The ion suppression element reduces or substantially eliminates the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon-and-carbon-containing material at more than twenty times the rate of silicon oxide. | 02-07-2013 |
20130045605 | DRY-ETCH FOR SILICON-AND-NITROGEN-CONTAINING FILMS - A method of etching exposed silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and an oxygen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material from the exposed silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material regions while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material selectivity results partly from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. The ion suppression element reduces or substantially eliminates the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material at more than twenty times the rate of silicon oxide. | 02-21-2013 |
20130052827 | SELECTIVE SUPPRESSION OF DRY-ETCH RATE OF MATERIALS CONTAINING BOTH SILICON AND OXYGEN - A method of suppressing the etch rate for exposed silicon-and-oxygen-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a two stage remote plasma etch. Examples of materials whose selectivity is increased using this technique include silicon nitride and silicon. The first stage of the remote plasma etch reacts plasma effluents with the patterned heterogeneous structures to form protective solid by-product on the silicon-and-oxygen-containing material. The plasma effluents of the first stage are formed from a remote plasma of a combination of precursors, including a nitrogen-containing precursor and a hydrogen-containing precursor. The second stage of the remote plasma etch also reacts plasma effluents with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove material which lacks the protective solid by-product. The plasma effluents of the second stage are formed from a remote plasma of a fluorine-containing precursor. | 02-28-2013 |
20130059440 | SELECTIVE SUPPRESSION OF DRY-ETCH RATE OF MATERIALS CONTAINING BOTH SILICON AND NITROGEN - A method of suppressing the etch rate for exposed silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a two stage remote plasma etch. The etch selectivity of silicon relative to silicon nitride and other silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material is increased using the method. The first stage of the remote plasma etch reacts plasma effluents with the patterned heterogeneous structures to form protective solid by-product on the silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material. The plasma effluents of the first stage are formed from a remote plasma of a combination of precursors, including nitrogen trifluoride and hydrogen (H | 03-07-2013 |
20130084711 | REMOTE PLASMA BURN-IN - Methods of treating the interior of a plasma region are described. The methods include a preventative maintenance procedure or the start-up of a new substrate processing chamber having a remote plasma system. A new interior surface is exposed within the remote plasma system. The (new) interior surfaces are then treated by sequential steps of (1) forming a remote plasma from hydrogen-containing precursor within the remote plasma system and then (2) exposing the interior surfaces to water vapor. Steps (1)-(2) are repeated at least ten times to complete the burn-in process. Following the treatment of the interior surfaces, a substrate may be transferred into a substrate processing chamber. A dielectric film may then be formed on the substrate by flowing one precursor through the remote plasma source and combining the plasma effluents with a second precursor flowing directly to the substrate processing region. | 04-04-2013 |
20130089988 | SELECTIVE ETCH OF SILICON BY WAY OF METASTABLE HYDROGEN TERMINATION - Methods of etching exposed silicon on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and a hydrogen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The silicon selectivity results, in part, from a preponderance of hydrogen-containing precursor in the remote plasma which hydrogen terminates surfaces on the patterned heterogeneous structures. A much lower flow of the fluorine-containing precursor progressively substitutes fluorine for hydrogen on the hydrogen-terminated silicon thereby selectively removing silicon from exposed regions of silicon. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon far faster than silicon oxide, silicon nitride and a variety of metal-containing materials. | 04-11-2013 |
20130130506 | SELECTIVE SUPPRESSION OF DRY-ETCH RATE OF MATERIALS CONTAINING BOTH SILICON AND NITROGEN - A method of suppressing the etch rate for exposed silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a two stage remote plasma etch. The etch selectivity of silicon relative to silicon nitride and other silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material is increased using the method. The first stage of the remote plasma etch reacts plasma effluents with the patterned heterogeneous structures to form protective solid by-product on the silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material. The plasma effluents of the first stage are formed from a remote plasma of a combination of precursors, including nitrogen trifluoride and hydrogen (H | 05-23-2013 |
20130130507 | DRY-ETCH FOR SILICON-AND-NITROGEN-CONTAINING FILMS - A method of etching exposed silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and an oxygen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material from the exposed silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material regions while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material selectivity results partly from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. The ion suppression element reduces or substantially eliminates the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon-and-nitrogen-containing material at more than twenty times the rate of silicon oxide. | 05-23-2013 |
20130149462 | SURFACE TREATMENT AND DEPOSITION FOR REDUCED OUTGASSING - A method of forming a dielectric layer is described. The method first deposits a silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing (polysilazane) layer by radical-component chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing layer is formed by combining a radical precursor (excited in a remote plasma) with an unexcited carbon-free silicon precursor. A silicon oxide capping layer may be formed from a portion of the carbon-free silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing layer to avoid time-evolution of underlying layer properties prior to conversion into silicon oxide. Alternatively, the silicon oxide capping layer is formed over the silicon-nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing layer. Either method of formation involves the formation of a local plasma within the substrate processing region. | 06-13-2013 |
20130177847 | PHOTORESIST FOR IMPROVED LITHOGRAPHIC CONTROL - Methods and corresponding photoresists are described for fine linewidth lithography using x-rays, e-beams, visible spectrum optical lithography, ultra-violet optical lithography or extreme ultra-violet lithography. The methods include the formation of a photoresist film including a dopant having an atomic mass greater than or equal to twenty two. The dopant may be introduced daring the formation of the photoresist. The photoresist includes the dopant to increase the absorption of radiation during lithography. The photoresist may be silicon-, germanium or carbon-based photoresists. | 07-11-2013 |
20130217239 | FLOWABLE SILICON-AND-CARBON-CONTAINING LAYERS FOR SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESSING - Methods are described for forming and curing a gapfill silicon-and-carbon-containing layer on a semiconductor substrate. The silicon and carbon constituents may come from a silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor excited by a radical hydrogen precursor that has been activated in a remote plasma region. Exemplary precursors include 1,3,5-trisilapentane (H | 08-22-2013 |
20130217240 | FLOWABLE SILICON-CARBON-NITROGEN LAYERS FOR SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESSING - Methods are described for forming a dielectric layer on a semiconductor substrate. The methods may include providing a silicon-containing precursor and an energized nitrogen-containing precursor to a chemical vapor deposition chamber. The silicon-containing precursor and the energized nitrogen-containing precursor may be reacted in the chemical vapor deposition chamber to deposit a flowable silicon-carbon-nitrogen material on the substrate. The methods may further include treating the flowable silicon-carbon-nitrogen material to form the dielectric layer on the semiconductor substrate. | 08-22-2013 |
20130217241 | TREATMENTS FOR DECREASING ETCH RATES AFTER FLOWABLE DEPOSITION OF SILICON-CARBON-AND-NITROGEN-CONTAINING LAYERS - Methods are described for forming and curing a flowable silicon-carbon-and-nitrogen-containing layer on a semiconductor substrate. The silicon and carbon constituents may come from a silicon and carbon containing precursor while the nitrogen may come from a nitrogen-containing precursor that has been activated to speed the reaction of the nitrogen with the silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor at lower deposition chamber temperatures. The initially-flowable silicon-carbon-and-nitrogen-containing layer is treated to remove components which enabled the flowability, but are no longer needed after deposition. Removal of the components increases etch resistance in order to allow the gapfill silicon-carbon-and-nitrogen-containing layer to remain intact during subsequent processing. The treatments have been found to decrease the evolution of properties of the film upon exposure to atmosphere. | 08-22-2013 |
20130217243 | DOPING OF DIELECTRIC LAYERS - Methods are described for forming and treating a flowable silicon-carbon-and-nitrogen-containing layer on a semiconductor substrate. The silicon and carbon constituents may come from a silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor while the nitrogen may come from a nitrogen-containing precursor that has been activated to speed the reaction of the nitrogen with the silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor at lower deposition temperatures. The initially-flowable silicon-carbon-and-nitrogen-containing layer is ion implanted to increase etch tolerance, prevent shrinkage, adjust film tension and/or adjust electrical characteristics. Ion implantation may also remove components which enabled the flowability, but are no longer needed after deposition. Some treatments using ion implantation have been found to decrease the evolution of properties of the film upon exposure to atmosphere. | 08-22-2013 |
20130267079 | MOLECULAR LAYER DEPOSITION OF SILICON CARBIDE - Molecular layer deposition of silicon carbide is described. A deposition precursor includes a precursor molecule which contains silicon, carbon and hydrogen. Exposure of a surface to the precursor molecule results in self-limited growth of a single layer. Though the growth is self-limited, the thickness deposited during each cycle of molecular layer deposition involves multiple “atomic” layers and so each cycle may deposit thicknesses greater than typically found during atomic layer depositions. Precursor effluents are removed from the substrate processing region and then the surface is irradiated before exposing the layer to the deposition precursor again. | 10-10-2013 |
20130298942 | ETCH REMNANT REMOVAL - Methods of removing residual polymer from vertical walls of a patterned dielectric layer are described. The methods involve the use of a gas phase etch to remove the residual polymer without substantially disturbing the patterned dielectric layer. The gas phase etch may be used on a patterned low-k dielectric layer and may maintain the low dielectric constant of the patterned dielectric layer. The gas phase etch may further avoid stressing the patterned low-k dielectric layer by avoiding the use of liquid etchants whose surface tension can upset delicate low-K features. The gas phase etch may further avoid the formation of solid etch by-products which cars also deform the delicate features. | 11-14-2013 |
20140045342 | FLOWABLE CARBON FOR SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESSING - Methods are described for forming flowable carbon layers on a semiconductor substrate. A local excitation (such as a hot filament in hot wire CVD, a plasma in PECVD or UV light) may be applied as described herein to a silicon-free carbon-containing precursor containing a hydrocarbon to form a flowable carbon-containing film on a substrate. A remote excitation method has also been found to produce flowable carbon-containing films by exciting a stable precursor to produce a radical precursor which is then combined with unexcited silicon-free carbon-containing precursors in the substrate processing region. | 02-13-2014 |
20140051264 | FLOWABLE FILMS USING ALTERNATIVE SILICON PRECURSORS - Methods of depositing initially flowable dielectric films on substrates are described. The methods include introducing silicon-containing precursor to a deposition chamber that contains the substrate. The methods further include generating at least one excited precursor, such as radical nitrogen or oxygen precursor, with a remote plasma system located outside the deposition chamber. The excited precursor is also introduced to the deposition chamber, where it reacts with the silicon-containing precursor in a reaction zone deposits the initially flowable film on the substrate. The flowable film may be treated in, for example, a steam environment to form a silicon oxide film. | 02-20-2014 |
20140073144 | LOW COST FLOWABLE DIELECTRIC FILMS - A method of forming a dielectric layer is described. The method deposits a silicon-containing film by chemical vapor deposition using a local plasma. The silicon-containing film is flowable during deposition at low substrate temperature. A silicon precursor (e.g. a silylamine, higher order silane or halogenated silane) is delivered to the substrate processing region and excited in a local plasma. A second plasma vapor or gas is combined with the silicon precursor in the substrate processing region and may include ammonia, nitrogen (N | 03-13-2014 |
20140080308 | RADICAL-COMPONENT OXIDE ETCH - A method of etching exposed silicon oxide on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents combine with a nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing precursor. Reactants thereby produced etch the patterned heterogeneous structures with high silicon oxide selectivity while the substrate is at high temperature compared to typical Siconi™ processes. The etch proceeds without producing residue on the substrate surface. The methods may be used to remove silicon oxide while removing little or no silicon, polysilicon, silicon nitride or titanium nitride. | 03-20-2014 |
20140080309 | DIFFERENTIAL SILICON OXIDE ETCH - A method of etching exposed silicon oxide on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a gas phase etch created from a remote plasma etch. The remote plasma excites a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents combine with water vapor. Reactants thereby produced etch the patterned heterogeneous structures to remove two separate regions of differing silicon oxide at different etch rates. The methods may be used to remove low density silicon oxide while removing less high density silicon oxide. | 03-20-2014 |
20140080310 | SILICON-CARBON-NITRIDE SELECTIVE ETCH - A method of etching exposed silicon-nitrogen-and-carbon-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and an oxygen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon-nitrogen-and-carbon-containing material. The plasma effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon-nitrogen-and-carbon-containing material from the exposed silicon-nitrogen-and-carbon-containing material regions while very slowly removing selected other exposed materials. The silicon-nitrogen-and-carbon-containing material selectivity results partly from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. The ion suppression element controls the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon-nitrogen-and-carbon-containing material at a faster rate than exposed silicon oxide or exposed silicon nitride. | 03-20-2014 |
20140099794 | RADICAL CHEMISTRY MODULATION AND CONTROL USING MULTIPLE FLOW PATHWAYS - Systems and methods are described relating to semiconductor processing chambers. An exemplary chamber may include a first remote plasma system fluidly coupled with a first access of the chamber, and a second remote plasma system fluidly coupled with a second access of the chamber. The system may also include a gas distribution assembly in the chamber that may be configured to deliver both the first and second precursors into a processing region of the chamber, while maintaining the first and second precursors fluidly isolated from one another until they are delivered into the processing region of the chamber. | 04-10-2014 |
20140134842 | DRY ETCH PROCESS - A method for conformal dry etch of a liner material in a high aspect ratio trench is achieved by depositing or forming an inhomogeneous passivation layer which is thicker near the opening of a trench bat thinner deep within the trench. The methods described herein use a selective etch following formation of the inhomogeneous passivation layer. The selective etch etches liner material faster than the passivation material. The inhomogeneous passivation layer suppresses the etch rate of the selective etch near the top of the trench (where it would otherwise be fastest) and gives the etch a head start deeper in the trench (where it would otherwise be slowest). This method may also find utility in removing bulk material uniformly from within a trench. | 05-15-2014 |
20140141621 | DRY-ETCH SELECTIVITY - A method of etching exposed patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a reactive precursor. The plasma power is pulsed rather than left on continuously. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents selectively remove one material faster than another. The etch selectivity results from the pulsing of the plasma power to the remote plasma region, which has been found to suppress the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The etch selectivity may also result from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between a portion of the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. | 05-22-2014 |
20140154889 | DRY-ETCH FOR SELECTIVE TUNGSTEN REMOVAL - Methods of selectively etching tungsten relative to silicon-containing films (e.g. silicon oxide, silicon carbon nitride and (poly)silicon) as well as tungsten oxide are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and/or hydrogen (H | 06-05-2014 |
20140166617 | NON-LOCAL PLASMA OXIDE ETCH - A method of etching exposed titanium oxide on heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flawed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents may combine with a nitrogen-containing precursor such as an amine (N:) containing precursor. Reactants thereby produced etch, the patterned heterogeneous structures with high titanium oxide selectivity while the substrate is at elevated temperature. Titanium oxide etch may alternatively involve supplying a fluorine-containing precursor and a source of nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing precursor to the remote plasma. The methods may be used to remove titanium oxide while removing little or no low-K dielectric, polysilicon, silicon nitride or titanium nitride. | 06-19-2014 |
20140179111 | SELECTIVE TITANIUM NITRIDE ETCHING - Methods of etching exposed titanium nitride with respect to other materials on patterned heterogeneous structures are described, and may include a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Precursor combinations including plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region to etch the patterned structures with high titanium nitride selectivity under a variety of operating conditions. The methods may be used to remove titanium nitride at faster rates than a variety of metal, nitride, and oxide compounds. | 06-26-2014 |
20140199850 | DRY-ETCH FOR SELECTIVE OXIDATION REMOVAL - Methods of selectively etching tungsten oxide relative to tungsten, silicon oxide, silicon nitride and/or titanium nitride are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and/or hydrogen (H | 07-17-2014 |
20140213070 | LOW SHRINKAGE DIELECTRIC FILMS - Methods of forming a dielectric layer on a substrate are described, and may include introducing a first precursor into a remote plasma region fluidly coupled with a substrate processing region of a substrate processing chamber A plasma may be formed in the remote plasma region to produce plasma effluents. The plasma effluents may be directed into the substrate processing region. A silicon-containing precursor may be introduced into the substrate processing region, and the silicon-containing precursor may include at least one silicon-silicon bond. The plasma effluents and silicon-containing precursor may be reacted in the processing region to form a silicon-based dielectric layer that is initially flowable when formed on the substrate. | 07-31-2014 |
20140248754 | CONTROLLED AIR GAP FORMATION - A method of forming and controlling air gaps between adjacent raised features on a substrate includes forming a silicon-containing film in a bottom region between the adjacent raised features using a flowable deposition process. The method also includes forming carbon-containing material on top of the silicon-containing film and forming a second film over the carbon-containing material using a flowable deposition process. The second film fills an upper region between the adjacent raised features. The method also includes curing the materials at an elevated temperature for a period of time to form the air gaps between the adjacent raised features. The thickness and number layers of films can be used to control the thickness, vertical position and number of air gaps. | 09-04-2014 |
20140248780 | ENHANCED ETCHING PROCESSES USING REMOTE PLASMA SOURCES - Methods of etching a patterned substrate may include flowing an oxygen-containing precursor into a first remote plasma region fluidly coupled with a substrate processing region. The oxygen-containing precursor may be flowed into the region while forming a plasma in the first remote plasma region to produce oxygen-containing plasma effluents. The methods may also include flowing a fluorine-containing precursor into a second remote plasma region fluidly coupled with the substrate processing region while forming a plasma in the second remote plasma region to produce fluorine-containing plasma effluents. The methods may include flowing the oxygen-containing plasma effluents and fluorine-containing plasma effluents into the processing region, and using the effluents to etch a patterned substrate housed in the substrate processing region. | 09-04-2014 |
20140256131 | SELECTIVE TITANIUM NITRIDE REMOVAL - Methods are described herein for selectively etching titanium nitride relative to dielectric films, which may include, for example, alternative metals and metal oxides lacking in titanium and/or silicon-containing films (e.g. silicon oxide, silicon carbon nitride and low-K dielectric films). The methods include a remote plasma etch formed from a chlorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the titanium nitride. The plasma effluents react with exposed surfaces and selectively remove titanium nitride while very slowly removing the other exposed materials. The substrate processing region may also contain a plasma to facilitate breaking through any titanium oxide layer present on the titanium nitride. The plasma in the substrate processing region may be gently biased relative to the substrate to enhance removal rate of the titanium oxide layer. | 09-11-2014 |
20140262038 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 09-18-2014 |
20140268083 | ULTRA-SMOOTH LAYER ULTRAVIOLET LITHOGRAPHY MIRRORS AND BLANKS, AND MANUFACTURING AND LITHOGRAPHY SYSTEMS THEREFOR - An extreme ultraviolet mirror or blank production system includes: a first deposition system for depositing a planarization layer over a semiconductor substrate; a second deposition system for depositing an ultra-smooth layer over the planarization layer, the ultra-smooth layer having reorganized molecules; and a third deposition system for depositing a multi-layer stack over the ultra-smooth layer. The extreme ultraviolet blank includes: a substrate; a planarization layer over the substrate; an ultra-smooth layer over the planarization layer, the ultra-smooth layer having reorganized molecules; a multi-layer stack; and capping layers over the multi-layer stack. An extreme ultraviolet lithography system includes: an extreme ultraviolet light source; a mirror for directing light from the extreme ultraviolet light source; a reticle stage for placing an extreme ultraviolet mask blank with a planarization layer and an ultra-smooth layer over the planarization layer; and a wafer stage for placing a wafer. | 09-18-2014 |
20140271097 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 09-18-2014 |
20140273406 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 09-18-2014 |
20140273451 | TUNGSTEN DEPOSITION SEQUENCE - Methods of filling gaps with tungsten are described. The methods include a tungsten dep-etch-dep sequence to enhance gapfilling yet avoid difficulty in restarting deposition after the intervening etch. The first tungsten deposition may have a nucleation layer or seeding layer to assist growth of the first tungsten deposition. Restarting deposition with a less-than-conductive nucleation layer would impact function of an integrated circuit, and therefore avoiding tungsten “poisoning” during the etch is desirable. The etching step may be performed using a plasma to excite a halogen-containing precursor while the substrate at relatively low temperature (near room temperature or less). The plasma may be local or remote. Another method may be used in combination or separately and involves the introduction of a source of oxygen into the plasma in combination with the halogen-containing precursor. | 09-18-2014 |
20140273481 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 09-18-2014 |
20140273488 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 09-18-2014 |
20140273489 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 09-18-2014 |
20140273491 | DRY-ETCH FOR SILICON-AND-CARBON-CONTAINING FILMS - A method of etching exposed silicon-and-carbon-containing material on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and an oxygen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon-and-carbon-containing material. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon-and-carbon-containing material from the exposed silicon-and-carbon-containing material regions while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The silicon-and-carbon-containing material selectivity results partly from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. The ion suppression element reduces or substantially eliminates the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon-and-carbon-containing material at more than twenty times the rate of silicon oxide. | 09-18-2014 |
20140302688 | FLOWABLE SILICON-CARBON-OXYGEN LAYERS FOR SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESSING - Methods are described for forming a dielectric layer on a patterned substrate. The methods may include combining a silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor and a radical oxygen precursor in a plasma free substrate processing region within a chemical vapor deposition chamber. The silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor and the radical oxygen precursor react in to deposit a flowable silicon-carbon-oxygen layer on the patterned substrate. The resulting film possesses a low wet etch rate ratio relative to thermal silicon oxide and other standard dielectrics. | 10-09-2014 |
20140302690 | CHEMICAL LINKERS TO IMPART IMPROVED MECHANICAL STRENGTH TO FLOWABLE FILMS - Methods forming a low-κ dielectric material on a substrate are described. The methods may include the steps of producing a radical precursor by flowing an unexcited precursor into a remote plasma region, and reacting the radical precursor with a gas-phase silicon precursor to deposit a flowable film on the substrate. The gas-phase silicon precursor may include at least one silicon-and-oxygen containing compound and at least one silicon-and-carbon linker. The flowable film may be cured to form the low-κ dielectric material. | 10-09-2014 |
20140308816 | SELECTIVE ETCH OF SILICON BY WAY OF METASTABLE HYDROGEN TERMINATION - Methods of etching exposed silicon on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and a hydrogen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the exposed regions of silicon. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The silicon selectivity results, in part, from a preponderance of hydrogen-containing precursor in the remote plasma which hydrogen terminates surfaces on the patterned heterogeneous structures. A much lower flow of the fluorine-containing precursor progressively substitutes fluorine for hydrogen on the hydrogen-terminated silicon thereby selectively removing silicon from exposed regions of silicon. The silicon selectivity also results from the presence of an ion suppressor positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. The ion suppressor reduces or substantially eliminates the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The methods may be used to selectively remove silicon far faster than silicon oxide, silicon nitride and a variety of metal-containing materials. | 10-16-2014 |
20140308818 | CONFORMAL OXIDE DRY ETCH - A method of etching silicon oxide from a trench is described which allows more homogeneous etch rates up and down the sides of the trench. One disclosed method includes a sequential introduction of (1) a hydrogen-containing precursor and then (2) a fluorine-containing precursor into a substrate processing region. The temperature of the substrate is low during each of the two steps in order to allow the reaction to proceed and form solid residue by-product. A second disclosed method reverses the order of steps (1) and (2) but still forms solid residue by-product. The solid residue by-product is removed by raising the temperature in a subsequent sublimation step regardless of the order of the two steps. | 10-16-2014 |
20140329027 | LOW TEMPERATURE FLOWABLE CURING FOR STRESS ACCOMMODATION - Methods of forming gapfill silicon-containing layers are described. The methods may include providing or forming a silicon-and-hydrogen-containing layer on a patterned substrate. The methods include non-thermally treating the silicon-and-hydrogen-containing layer at low substrate temperature to increase the concentration of Si—Si bonds while the silicon-and-hydrogen-containing layer remains soft. The flaccid layer is able to adjust to the departure of hydrogen from the film and retain a high density without developing a stress. Film qualify is further improved by then inserting O between Si—Si bonds to expand the film in the trenches thereby converting the silicon-and-hydrogen-containing layer to a silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer. | 11-06-2014 |
20150079797 | SELECTIVE ETCH OF SILICON NITRIDE - A method of etching silicon nitride on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and a nitrogen-and-oxygen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from two remote plasmas are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the silicon nitride. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon nitride while very slowly removing silicon, such as polysilicon. The silicon nitride selectivity results partly from the introduction of fluorine-containing precursor and nitrogen-and-oxygen-containing precursor using distinct (but possibly overlapping) plasma pathways which may be in series or in parallel. | 03-19-2015 |
20150118857 | SELECTIVE TITANIUM NITRIDE ETCHING - Methods of etching exposed titanium nitride with respect to other materials on patterned heterogeneous structures are described, and may include a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Precursor combinations including plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region to etch the patterned structures with high titanium nitride selectivity under a variety of operating conditions. The methods may be used to remove titanium nitride at faster rates than a variety of metal, nitride, and oxide compounds. | 04-30-2015 |
20150126039 | ETCH SUPPRESSION WITH GERMANIUM - Methods of selectively etching silicon relative to silicon germanium are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch using plasma effluents formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and a hydrogen-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the silicon. The plasmas effluents react with exposed surfaces and selectively remove silicon while very slowly removing other exposed materials. The methods are useful for removing Si | 05-07-2015 |
20150126040 | SILICON GERMANIUM PROCESSING - Methods of selectively etching silicon germanium relative to silicon are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch using plasma effluents formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the silicon germanium. The plasmas effluents react with exposed surfaces and selectively remove silicon germanium while very slowly removing other exposed materials. Generally speaking, the methods are useful for removing Si | 05-07-2015 |
20150126045 | LOW TEMPERATURE SILICON NITRIDE FILMS USING REMOTE PLASMA CVD TECHNOLOGY - Embodiments of the present invention generally provide methods for forming a silicon nitride layer on a substrate. In one embodiment, a method of forming a silicon nitride layer using remote plasma chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at a temperature that is less than 300 degrees Celsius is disclosed. The precursors for the remote plasma CVD process include tris(dimethylamino)silane (TRIS), dichlorosilane (DCS), trisilylamine (TSA), bis-t-butylaminosilane (BTBAS), hexachlorodisilane (HCDS) or hexamethylcyclotrisilazane (HMCTZ). | 05-07-2015 |
20150129541 | ALUMINUM SELECTIVE ETCH - Methods of selectively etching aluminum and aluminum layers from the surface of a substrate are described. The etch selectively removes aluminum materials relative to silicon-containing films such as silicon, polysilicon, silicon oxide, silicon carbon nitride, silicon oxycarbide and/or silicon nitride. The methods include exposing aluminum materials (e.g. aluminum) to remotely-excited chlorine (Cl | 05-14-2015 |
20150129545 | SELECTIVE ETCH FOR METAL-CONTAINING MATERIALS - Methods of selectively etching metal-containing materials from the surface of a substrate are described. The etch selectively removes metal-containing materials relative to silicon-containing films such as silicon, polysilicon, silicon oxide, silicon germanium and/or silicon nitride. The methods include exposing metal-containing materials to halogen containing species in a substrate processing region. A remote plasma is used to excite the halogen-containing precursor and a local plasma may be used in embodiments. Metal-containing materials on the substrate may be pretreated using moisture or another OH-containing precursor before exposing the resulting surface to remote plasma excited halogen effluents in embodiments. | 05-14-2015 |
20150129546 | PLASMA-FREE METAL ETCH - Methods of selectively etching metal-containing materials from the surface of a substrate are described. The etch selectively removes metal-containing materials relative to silicon-containing films such as silicon, polysilicon, silicon oxide, silicon germanium, silicon carbide, silicon carbon nitride and/or silicon nitride. The methods include exposing metal-containing materials to halogen containing species in a substrate processing region. No plasma excites the halogen-containing precursor either remotely or locally in embodiments. | 05-14-2015 |
20150132968 | DRY-ETCH SELECTIVITY - A method of etching exposed patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a reactive precursor. The plasma power is pulsed rather than left on continuously. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents selectively remove one material faster than another. The etch selectivity results from the pulsing of the plasma power to the remote plasma region, which has been found to suppress the number of ionically-charged species that reach the substrate. The etch selectivity may also result from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between a portion of the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. | 05-14-2015 |
20150179464 | DRY-ETCH FOR SELECTIVE TUNGSTEN REMOVAL - Methods of selectively etching tungsten relative to silicon-containing films (e.g. silicon oxide, silicon carbon nitride and (poly)silicon) as well as tungsten oxide are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and/or hydrogen (H | 06-25-2015 |
20150206764 | TITANIUM OXIDE ETCH - Methods of selectively etching titanium oxide relative to silicon oxide, silicon nitride and/or other dielectrics are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch using plasma effluents formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and/or a chlorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the titanium oxide. The plasmas effluents react with exposed surfaces and selectively remove titanium oxide while very slowly removing other exposed materials. A direction sputtering pretreatment is performed prior to the remote plasma etch and enables an increased selectivity as well as a directional selectivity. In some embodiments, the titanium oxide etch selectivity results partly from the presence of an ion suppression element positioned between the remote plasma and the substrate processing region. | 07-23-2015 |
20150214092 | AIR GAPS BETWEEN COPPER LINES - Methods are described for forming “air gaps” between adjacent copper lines on patterned substrates. The common name “air gap” will be used interchangeably the more technically accurate “gas pocket” and both reflect a variety of pressures and elemental ratios. The gas pockets may be one or more pores within dielectric material located between copper lines. Adjacent copper lines may be bordered by a lining layer and air gaps may extend from one lining layer on one copper line to the lining layer of an adjacent copper line. The gas pockets can have a dielectric constant approaching one, favorably reducing interconnect capacitance compared with typical low-K dielectric materials. | 07-30-2015 |
20150235863 | RADICAL-COMPONENT OXIDE ETCH - A method of etching exposed silicon oxide on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents combine with a nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing precursor. Reactants thereby produced etch the patterned heterogeneous structures with high silicon oxide selectivity while the substrate is at high temperature compared to typical Siconi™ processes. The etch proceeds without producing residue on the substrate surface. The methods may be used to remove silicon oxide while removing little or no silicon, polysilicon, silicon nitride or titanium nitride. | 08-20-2015 |
20150235865 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 08-20-2015 |
20150249018 | DIFFERENTIAL SILICON OXIDE ETCH - A method of etching exposed silicon oxide on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a gas phase etch created from a remote plasma etch. The remote plasma excites a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents combine with water vapor. Reactants thereby produced etch the patterned heterogeneous structures to remove two separate regions of differing silicon oxide at different etch rates. The methods may be used to remove low density silicon oxide while removing less high density silicon oxide. | 09-03-2015 |
20150270366 | FLASH GATE AIR GAP - Flash memory cells and methods of formation are described for flash memory cells having air gaps through which electrons may pass to alter the charge state of the floating gate. A dummy gate is initially deposited and a polysilicon gate is deposited on the dummy gate. A silicon oxide film is then deposited on the sides of the active area, the dummy gate and the polysilicon. The silicon oxide film holds the polysilicon in place while the dummy gate is selectively etched away. The dummy gate may be doped to increase etch rate. Formerly, silicon oxide was used as a dielectric barrier through which electrons were passed to charge and discharge the floating gate (polysilicon). Eliminating material in the dielectric barrier reduces the tendency to accumulate trapped charges during use and increase the lifespan of flash memory devices. | 09-24-2015 |
20150311089 | DRY-ETCH FOR SELECTIVE OXIDATION REMOVAL - Methods of selectively etching tungsten oxide relative to tungsten, silicon oxide, silicon nitride and/or titanium nitride are described. The methods include a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor and/or hydrogen (H | 10-29-2015 |
20150318186 | METHODS FOR ETCH OF METAL AND METAL-OXIDE FILMS - A method of selectively etching a metal-containing film from a substrate comprising a metal-containing layer and a silicon oxide layer includes flowing a fluorine-containing gas into a plasma generation region of a substrate processing chamber, and applying energy to the fluorine-containing gas to generate a plasma in the plasma generation region. The plasma comprises fluorine radicals and fluorine ions. The method also includes filtering the plasma to provide a reactive gas having a higher concentration of fluorine radicals than fluorine ions, and flowing the reactive gas into a gas reaction region of the substrate processing chamber. The method also includes exposing the substrate to the reactive gas in the gas reaction region of the substrate processing chamber. The reactive gas etches the metal-containing layer at a higher etch rate than the reactive gas etches the silicon oxide layer. | 11-05-2015 |
20150332930 | PROCESSING SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HALIDE SCAVENGING - Systems, chambers, and processes are provided for controlling process defects caused by moisture contamination. The systems may provide configurations for chambers to perform multiple operations in a vacuum or controlled environment. The chambers may include configurations to provide additional processing capabilities in combination chamber designs. The methods may provide for the limiting, prevention, and correction of aging defects that may be caused as a result of etching processes performed by system tools. | 11-19-2015 |
20150345028 | OXIDE AND METAL REMOVAL - Methods are described herein for etching metal films which are difficult to volatize. The methods include exposing a metal film to a chlorine-containing precursor (e.g. Cl | 12-03-2015 |
20150345029 | METAL REMOVAL - Methods are described herein for etching metal films, such as cobalt and nickel, which are difficult to volatize. The methods include exposing a metal film to a chlorine-containing precursor (e.g. Cl | 12-03-2015 |
20150357201 | NON-LOCAL PLASMA OXIDE ETCH - A method of etching exposed titanium oxide on heterogeneous structures is described and includes a remote plasma etch formed from a fluorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents may combine with a nitrogen-containing precursor such as an amine (N:) containing precursor. Reactants thereby produced etch the patterned heterogeneous structures with high titanium oxide selectivity while the substrate is at elevated temperature. Titanium oxide etch may alternatively involve supplying a fluorine-containing precursor and a source of nitrogen-and-hydrogen-containing precursor to the remote plasma. The methods may be used to remove titanium oxide while removing little or no low-K dielectric, polysilicon, silicon nitride or titanium nitride. | 12-10-2015 |
20150357205 | SELECTIVE TITANIUM NITRIDE REMOVAL - Methods are described herein for selectively etching titanium nitride relative to dielectric films, which may include, for example, alternative metals and metal oxides lacking in titanium and/or silicon-containing films (e.g. silicon oxide, silicon carbon nitride and low-K dielectric films). The methods include a remote plasma etch formed from a chlorine-containing precursor. Plasma effluents from the remote plasma are flowed into a substrate processing region where the plasma effluents react with the titanium nitride. The plasma effluents react with exposed surfaces and selectively remove titanium nitride while very slowly removing the other exposed materials. The substrate processing region may also contain a plasma to facilitate breaking through any titanium oxide layer present on the titanium nitride. The plasma in the substrate processing region may be gently biased relative to the substrate to enhance removal rate of the titanium oxide layer. | 12-10-2015 |
20150371864 | LOW TEMPERATURE GAS-PHASE CARBON REMOVAL - A method of etching carbon films on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a gas phase etch using remote plasma excitation. The remote plasma excites a fluorine-containing precursor and an oxygen-containing precursor, the plasma effluents created are flowed into a substrate processing region. The plasma effluents etch the carbon film more rapidly than silicon, silicon nitride, silicon carbide, silicon carbon nitride and silicon oxide. | 12-24-2015 |
20150371865 | HIGH SELECTIVITY GAS PHASE SILICON NITRIDE REMOVAL - A method of etching silicon nitride on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a gas phase etch using partial remote plasma excitation. The remote plasma excites a fluorine-containing precursor and the plasma effluents created are flowed into a substrate processing region. A hydrogen-containing precursor, e.g. water, is concurrently flowed into the substrate processing region without plasma excitation. The plasma effluents are combined with the unexcited hydrogen-containing precursor in the substrate processing region where the combination reacts with the silicon nitride. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove silicon nitride while retaining silicon, such as polysilicon. | 12-24-2015 |
20150371866 | HIGHLY SELECTIVE DOPED OXIDE REMOVAL METHOD - A method of etching doped silicon oxide on patterned heterogeneous structures is described and includes a gas phase etch using partial remote plasma excitation. The remote plasma excites a fluorine-containing precursor and the plasma effluents created are flowed into a substrate processing region. A hydrogen-containing precursor, e.g. water, is concurrently flowed into the substrate processing region without plasma excitation. The plasma effluents are combined with the unexcited hydrogen-containing precursor in the substrate processing region where the combination reacts with the doped silicon oxide. The plasmas effluents react with the patterned heterogeneous structures to selectively remove doped silicon oxide. | 12-24-2015 |