Patents by Inventor Nitin K. Ingle

Nitin K. Ingle has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 8642481
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 18, 2013
    Date of Patent: February 4, 2014
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Yunyu Wang, Anchuan Wang, Jingchun Zhang, Nitin K. Ingle, Young S. Lee
  • Patent number: 8629067
    Abstract: 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 (H2) and nitrogen (N2) into the plasma in order to allow adjustment of the nitrogen/hydrogen ratio. The dielectric layer is initially a silicon-and-nitrogen-containing layer which may be converted to a silicon-and-oxygen-containing layer by curing and/or annealing the film in an oxygen-containing environment.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 16, 2010
    Date of Patent: January 14, 2014
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Xiaolin Chen, Matthew L. Miller, Nitin K. Ingle, Shankar Venkataraman
  • Publication number: 20130298942
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 8, 2013
    Publication date: November 14, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: He Ren, Nitin K. Ingle, Anchuan Wang
  • Patent number: 8563445
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 10, 2011
    Date of Patent: October 22, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Xiaolin Chen, DongQing Li, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Publication number: 20130267079
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 27, 2012
    Publication date: October 10, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Brian Underwood, Abhijit Basu Mallick, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Patent number: 8551891
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 2012
    Date of Patent: October 8, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Lili Ji, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Patent number: 8541312
    Abstract: 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 (H2). 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.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 18, 2013
    Date of Patent: September 24, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Yunyu Wang, Anchuan Wang, Jingchun Zhang, Nitin K. Ingle, Young S. Lee
  • Publication number: 20130217241
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 21, 2012
    Publication date: August 22, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Brian S. Underwood, Linlin Wang, Sanjay Kamath, Abhijit Basu Mallick, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Publication number: 20130217239
    Abstract: 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 (H3Si—CH2—SiH2—CH2—SiH3) as the silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor and hydrogen (H2) as the hydrogen-containing precursor. The hydrogen-containing precursor may also be a hydrocarbon, such as acetylene (C2H2) or ethylene (C2H4). The hydrogen-containing precursor is passed through a remote plasma region to form plasma effluents (the radical hydrogen precursor) which are flowed into the substrate processing region. When the silicon-and-carbon-containing precursor combines with the plasma effluents in the substrate processing region, they form a flowable silicon-carbon-and-hydrogen-containing layer on the semiconductor substrate.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 20, 2012
    Publication date: August 22, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Abhijit Basu Mallick, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Publication number: 20130217240
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 21, 2012
    Publication date: August 22, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Abhijit Basu Mallick, Nitin K. Ingle, Linlin Wang, Brian S. Underwood
  • Publication number: 20130217243
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 21, 2012
    Publication date: August 22, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Brian S. Underwood, Nitin K. Ingle, Abhijit Basu Mallick
  • Patent number: 8466067
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 8, 2011
    Date of Patent: June 18, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Nitin K. Ingle, Shankar Venkataraman
  • Patent number: 8466073
    Abstract: 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 an 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.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 17, 2012
    Date of Patent: June 18, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Linlin Wang, Abhijit Basu Mallick, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Patent number: 8465903
    Abstract: Methods for forming photoresists sensitive to radiation on a substrate are provided. Described are chemical vapor deposition methods of forming films (e.g., silicon-containing films) as photoresists using a plasma which may be exposed to radiation to form a pattern. The deposition methods utilize precursors with cross-linkable moieties that will cross-link upon exposure to radiation. Radiation may be carried out in the with or without the presence of oxygen. Exposed or unexposed areas may then be developed in an aqueous base developer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 6, 2011
    Date of Patent: June 18, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Timothy W. Weidman, Timothy Michaelson, Paul Deaton, Nitin K. Ingle, Abhijit Basu Mallick, Amit Chatterjee
  • Publication number: 20130149462
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 12, 2012
    Publication date: June 13, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Xiaolin Chen, Nitin K. Ingle, Shankar Venkataraman
  • Patent number: 8445078
    Abstract: 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).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 20, 2011
    Date of Patent: May 21, 2013
    Assignee: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Nitin K. Ingle, Sukwon Hong, Anjana M. Patel
  • Publication number: 20130089988
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 4, 2012
    Publication date: April 11, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Anchuan Wang, Jingchun Zhang, Nitin K. Ingle, Young S. Lee
  • Publication number: 20130084711
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 20, 2012
    Publication date: April 4, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Jingmei Liang, Lili Ji, Nitin K. Ingle
  • Publication number: 20130059440
    Abstract: 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 (H2). 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 18, 2012
    Publication date: March 7, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Yunyu Wang, Anchuan Wang, Jingchun Zhang, Nitin K. Ingle, Young S. Lee
  • Publication number: 20130052827
    Abstract: 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.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 18, 2012
    Publication date: February 28, 2013
    Applicant: Applied Materials, Inc.
    Inventors: Yunyu Wang, Anchuan Wang, Jingchun Zhang, Nitin K. Ingle, Young S. Lee