DOPED NITRIDE FILM, DOPED OXIDE FILM AND OTHER DOPED FILMS AND DEPOSITION RATE IMPROVEMENT FOR RTCVD PROCESSES

- IBM

When forming a silicon nitride film from a nitrogen precursor, using a silicon precursor combination rather than a single silane precursor advantageously increases the deposition rate. For example, adding silane during formation of a silicon nitride film made using BTBAS and ammonia improves (increases) the deposition rate while still yielding a film with a favorably high stress.

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Description
RELATED APPLICATION

This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 10/710245 filed Jun. 29, 2004.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention generally relates to films used in manufacture of semiconductor devices, especially to nitride films and oxide films.

2. Background

In order to improve drive current in complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) devices, stressed films have been used either as spacers or middle-of-the-line (MOL) liners (also known as pre-metal dielectric (PMD) liners. Deposition regimes that result in either highly tensile or highly compressive nitride films are well known (e.g., rapid thermal chemical vapor deposition (RTCVD), plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), high density plasma (HDP) using silicon (Si) precursor such as silane (SiH4), di chloro silane (DCS), Disilane, Hexachlorodisilane, bis-tertiary butyl amino silane (BTBAS), and ammonia (NH3)). However, within a given deposition regime it only has been possible to modulate the stress within a small range. It has been very difficult to modulate the stress to a large extent without comprising the film quality.

Also, there has been a growing need for nitride/oxide films deposited at a lower temperature for MOL driven by the introduction of nitride silicon (NiSi) processes. Many low temperature precursors have been investigated, and none has turned out to be ideal.

Typically, in an LPCVD furnace, DCS and NH3 are used for depositing silicon nitride film at temperatures of 700 C and higher.

The following are cited as background:

U.S. Pat. No. 5,347,100 to Fukuda et al.;

U.S. published Pat. Application No. 2004/0013009 by Tsunoda et al.;

U.S. published Pat. Application No. 2004/0029323 by Shimizu;

U.S. published Pat. Application No. 2005/0093078 by Chan et al.;

EerNisse, “Stress in ion-implanted CVD Si3N4 films,” Journal of Applied Physics, August, 1977, vol. 48, No. 8, pp. 3337-3341.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide increased deposition rate compared to conventional processes, thus providing for more manufacturable films, especially silicon nitride films, silicon oxide films, silicon oxynitride films, and silicon carbide films.

Another object of the present invention is to provide the ability to produce good quality nitride films of varying stress levels, thus enhancing device performance as a “plug-in” solution, i.e., with no integration changes needed.

Another object of the present invention is to lower the temperature for deposition of a silicon nitride film, a silicon oxide film, a silicon oxynitride film or a silicon carbide film.

A further object of the present invention is to manipulate germanium addition during production of a silicon nitride film, silicon oxide film, silicon oxynitride film or silicon carbide film, to control stress in the produced film.

Yet another object of the present invention is to increase the deposition rate when depositing a film.

The present invention, in one preferred embodiment which is a process in which at least one Si precursor is deposited, at least one Ge precursor and/or at least one C precursor is added, to produce a Ge- and/or C-doped silicon nitride or silicon oxide film with a tunable stress.

Thus, at least one chemical or physical property (such as a stress property) of a silicon nitride or a silicon oxide film being produced may be tuned by at least one precursor modification during deposition of the film.

Advantageously, lower-than-conventional temperature deposition can be obtained in depositing a silicon nitride, silicon oxide, silicon oxynitride or silicon carbide film according to the present invention.

The invention in one preferred embodiment provides a method of producing a doped nitride film, a doped oxide film, a doped oxynitride film or a doped carbide film, the method comprising at least: providing at least one silicon precursor (such as, e.g., SiH4, DCS, BTBAS, HCD, disilane, trisilane, etc.); providing at least one of: a nitrogen precursor (which may be the same as or different from the silicon precursor) or an oxygen precursor; further providing at least one non-silicon precursor (which may be the same as or different from the silicon precursor, the nitrogen precursor and/or the oxygen precursor); wherein a doped silicon nitride film, doped silicon oxide film, doped silicon oxynitride film or doped silicon carbide film is formed (provided that when the film is a doped oxide, the non-silicon precursor is not boron and not phosphorous).

Recently, a combination of silane and BTBAS has been discovered to produce particularly advantageous results when reacted in mixture with a nitrogen precursor (with NH3 being preferred).

Examples of the non-silicon precursor for use in the inventive method are, e.g., a germanium (Ge) precursor (such as, e.g., an organogermanium compound, etc.; GeH4, GeH3CH3, etc.), a carbon precursor (such as, e.g., C2H4, etc.); diborane; an aluminum (Al) precursor (such as, e.g., trimethyl aluminum (TMA), AlH3, aluminum isopropoxide etc.); a boron (B) precursor; an arsenic precursor; a hafnium precursor; a gallium precursor (such as trimethyl Ga, trialkyl amino Ga, GaH3, etc.); an indium precursor (such as trimethyl In, trialkyl amino In, InH3, etc.); etc. Additionally, alkyl hydrides or alkyl amino hydrides of germanium, carbon, boron, aluminum, aluminum, arsenic, hafnium, gallium, indium, etc., may be used as precursors. In a particularly preferred example of an inventive method, the providing of at least one silicon precursor and the providing of at least one non-silicon precursor occurs simultaneously and is in a form of providing flow of a gas.

The inventive methods may be used for producing a variety of doped films, such as, e.g., a germanium- and/or carbon-doped silicon nitride or silicon oxide or silicon oxynitride or silicon carbide; etc.; a silicon nitride, a silicon oxide, a silicon oxynitride or a silicon carbide film with a tunable stress; a doped silicon nitride film having a uniformly distributed dopant concentration (such as, e.g., a Ge-doped silicon nitride film having a uniformly distributed Ge concentration); etc. One example of a method according to the invention is, e.g., adding germane (a germanium precursor) to a mixture of silane and ammonia, and forming a Ge-doped Si nitride film.

In a further preferred embodiment of an inventive method, a precursor modification (such as, e.g., a mixture of at least two precursors, etc.) may be applied to tune at least one chemical or physical property of a produced film (such as, e.g., stress of a produced film, wet etch rate; dry etch rate; etch end point; deposition rate; physical, electrical and/or optical property; etc.).

The inventive method optionally may further comprise a step of measuring a signal for a non-silicon dopant from the non-silicon precursor, said signal measuring for controlling an etch.

In certain embodiments of inventive methods, deposition advantageously may be at a lower temperature than if the non-silicon precursor were omitted, such as, e.g., a deposition temperature below about 700° C. (including but not limited to a deposition temperature as low as room temperature), etc. Preferred examples of depositions in which the inventive method may be used are, e.g., RTCVD, PECVD, LPCVD, remote plasma nitride, atomic layer deposition (ALD), etc.

The invention in other preferred embodiments provides certain films, such as, e.g., a silicon nitride, silicon oxide, silicon oxynitride or silicon carbide film (such as, e.g., a germanium-doped film, etc.), having a tunable stress in a range of about 3 G Pa (compressive) to 3 G Pa (tensile); a silicon nitride film, wherein the film is a Ge-doped silicon nitride film with uniformly distributed Ge; an aluminum-doped silicon oxide film; a germanium-doped silicon nitride film; etc.; a Ge-doped film wherein the Ge-doped film has a stress that is at least about 1.0 G Pa greater (preferably, 1.2 G Pa greater) than a film that has been made by a same process except without Ge-doping.

Inventive films may include one or more dopants, such as a multitude of dopants. Examples of dopants for use in inventive films include, e.g., germanium (Ge), carbon (C), boron (B), aluminum (Al), gallium (Ga), indium (In), etc., which dopants may be used singly or in combination.

Recently, reacting silane, BTBAS and NH3 in mixture has been found to be particularly preferred. Advantageously, using a combination of silane, BTBAS and NH3 in mixture to produce films has been found to produce films of high stress at a desirably fast deposition rate.

The invention in another preferred embodiment provides a method of producing a doped silicon nitride film or doped silicon oxynitride film, the method comprising at least: providing a silicon precursor combination (such as, e.g., a silicon precursor combination comprising silane and BTBAS) comprising (A) an inorganic Si precursor (e.g., silane, disilane, trisilane, dicholorosilane, etc.) and (B) an organic-based Si precursor (e.g., SiHx(NHR)4-x, SiHx(NRR′)4-x, SiHxR4-x, etc., where x=0, 1, 2 or 3, R, R′ may be any alkyl group, with a preferred example of an organic-based Si precursor being BTBAS); and providing at least one nitrogen precursor (such as, e.g., NH3); and producing a doped silicon nitride film or a doped silicon oxynitride film through deposition.

The invention in another preferred embodiment provides a method of increasing deposition rate during producing a silicon nitride film from a nitrogen precursor (such as, e.g., NH3), the method comprising: reacting the nitrogen precursor with a silicon precursor combination (such as, e.g., a silicon precursor combination comprising BTBAS and silane), such as, e.g., deposition rate increasing methods comprising increasing the deposition rate by at least 10 angstroms/minute (preferably, increasing the deposition rate by at least 50 angstroms/minute) when using the silicon precursor combination compared to with a single component.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The foregoing and other objects, aspects and advantages will be better understood from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is a chart of ellipsometry measurements (49 points) for one silicon nitride film and two LPCVD SiGe Nitride films.

FIG. 2 is a chart of etch rate of one silicon nitride film and two SiGe nitride films, based on ellipsometry, 49 points, with FIG. 2 relating to the films charted in FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is a chart of deposition rate as function of Ge incorporation, with plots for with and without Ge, with FIG. 3 relating to the films charted in FIG. 1.

FIG. 4 is a side view showing a stressed liner according to an embodiment of the invention, with the stressed liner in use with a spacer, a gate and a channel.

FIGS. 5A-5C depict an endpoint detection method according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 6 is a table of deposition rates obtained experimentally for nitride wafers produced using BTBAS and silane according to embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 7 is a graph showing, respectively, deposition rate (DR) and stress for BTBAS plus silane nitride wafers, produced using BTBAS at 585 mgm with varying amounts of silane.

FIG. 8 is a graph showing, respectively, deposition rate (DR) and stress for BTBAS plus silane nitride wafers, produced using silane at 60 sccm with varying amounts of BTBAS.

FIGS. 9, 10, 11 are graphs showing deposition rate data for inventive embodiments in which BTBAS and silane are used together during deposition.

FIGS. 12, 13 are FTIR spectra for films deposited according to FIGS. 9, 10, 11.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION

During production of a doped nitride film, a doped oxide film, a doped oxynitride film or a doped carbide film, at least one of the following is manipulated: the deposition rate; a chemical and/or physical property (such as, e.g., tunable stress) of the formed film. This manipulation is accomplished by introducing an additional non-silicon precursor that is otherwise not a traditional reagent for producing a nitride film, an oxide film, an oxynitride film, or a carbide film, with examples of the additional non-silicon precursor being a germanium precursor and a carbon precursor.

The inventors accomplish such advantages by including a non-silicon precursor dopant (such as, e.g., a Ge precursor, etc.) during the deposition process, such as deposition of a silicon nitride film, deposition of a silicon oxide film, deposition of a silicon oxynitride film, deposition of a silicon carbide film, etc.

For example, in one embodiment, the invention makes possible low-temperature deposition of a nitride film, an oxide film, an oxynitride film and/or a carbide film, by adding germanium to deposition of nitride films and oxide films and oxynitride films and carbide films, especially doped nitride or oxide films. The inventors exploit the fact that silicon germanium (SiGe) epitaxy can be done at a lower temperature than silicon epitaxy, and further have discovered that the addition of a germanium (Ge) precursor to a silicon precursor lowers the temperature of the deposition of the film.

A germanium precursor used in the present invention may be, e.g., a known germanium precursor such as the germanium precursors mentioned, e.g., in U.S. Pat. No. 6,429,098 issued Aug. 6, 2002 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,117,750 issued Sep. 12, 2000 to Bensahel et al. (France Telecom) or in U.S. Pat. No. 6,258,664 issued Jul. 10, 2001 to Reinberg (Micron Technology, Inc.). Germanium precursors are commercially available. An example of a germanium precursor used in the invention is GeH4.

The invention provides for use of at least one germanium precursor in deposition of a silicon nitride, a silicon oxide, a silicon oxynitride, a silicon carbide, etc., which deposition advantageously may, if desired, by a low-temperature deposition, such as, e.g., a deposition at 700° C. or lower, such as, e.g., room temperature and other temperatures. In a preferred example, an inventive method may proceed at room temperature in a P3i plasma immersion tool, to deposit nitride.

When including the non-silicon precursor in the present invention for producing a silicon nitride or silicon oxide film or silicon oxynitride film or silicon carbide film, the production process otherwise may proceed conventionally with regard to ingredients, for example, use of a nitrogen precursor (such as, e.g., NH3, etc.) and a silicon precursor (such as DCS, etc.), etc. For producing a silicon nitride film, a nitrogen precursor is included. For producing a silicon oxide film, an oxygen precursor is included. For producing a silicon nitride or a silicon oxide film, a silicon precursor is included. It will be appreciated that the silicon precursor may be different or the same as the nitride or oxide precursor. For example, BTBAS may serve as a silicon precursor and a nitrogen precursor. In the present invention, in some embodiments a reagent (such as, e.g., BTBAS, etc.) optionally may be used as two or more kinds of precursors.

An exemplary temperature for nitride or oxide or oxynitride or carbide film forming using a germanium precursor and/or a carbon precursor according to the invention is preferably at a temperature less than 700° C., more preferably at a temperature less than 650° C., even more preferably at a temperature of 500° C. or lower. For example, in the case of Ge-doping, an advantageous temperature of 500° C. or lower may be used for the deposition of a Ge-doped silicon nitride film. It will be appreciated that, while the present invention advantageously makes possible relatively low deposition temperatures that are desirable, low deposition temperatures are not necessarily required to be used in all embodiments, such as, for example, a film may be advantageously stress-tuned according to the invention at a variety of deposition temperatures.

The non-silicon precursor mentioned for use in the present invention is not particularly limited, and as examples may be mentioned a germanium precursor, a carbon precursor, an aluminum precursor, a boron precursor, an arsenic precursor, a hafnium precursor, a gallium precursor, an indium precursor, and, without limitation, other dopant precursors, etc.

The present invention also may be applied to MOL barrier technology. For example, it is well known that the MOL barrier nitride can enhance device reliability (negative bias temperature instability (NBTI), etc.). The present invention provides, through use of the germanium precursor and/or the carbon precursor, an ability to tune the chemical and/or physical properties of the barrier nitride film using different precursor combinations. Such an ability may be used to achieve a significant device reliability gain.

Thickness of a film produced according to the present invention is not particularly limited, and a thickness may be selected depending on the application. The film thickness may range from, on the thin end (such as, e.g., a film of 500 Angstroms, or of 10 Angstroms, or thinner), to the thick end (such as, e.g., a film of 1,000 Angstroms, or a film of 5,000 Angstroms, or thicker), and thicknesses in between, such as films in a range of about 10 to 5,000 Angstroms, and thinner or thicker as called for by the application.

The dopant concentration of a film made according to the invention is not particularly, and may be adjusted as desired. An example of a dopant (such as Ge, etc.) concentration is in a range of, e.g., about 1 to 10%, or, in another example, about 1 to 50%.

The present invention includes an embodiment in which multiple non-silicon precursors are used, such as a germanium precursor and a carbon precursor; a germanium precursor and a boron precursor; etc. For example, adding multiple precursors during deposition of a silicon nitride or a silicon oxide film may provide an enhanced effect, as may be desired. The present invention may be used, e.g., for signaling an etch end point. For example, when conventional silicon nitride etching is performed, there has been a problem with wanting to stop the etch at the end of the silicon nitride and not etch over onto the silicon. However, such an etch end point many times has not been sharp and etching into the silicon has been common with the conventional methods. With the present invention, if a doped silicon nitride is used (such as a Ge-doped silicon nitride), the presence of the Ge in the silicon nitride may be used to signal the endpoint of the etch, thereby advantageously preventing over-etching, such as, e.g., by using optical emission spectroscopy to detect the Ge (e.g., a Ge-Fluoride signal may be searched-for).

Such an aforementioned etch-stop example is not limiting, and the invention is extended to a variety of signaling uses of a dopant in a doped nitride film or a doped oxide film. For example, there may be provided a thin silicon nitride layer doped as an etch stop layer (such as a Ge-doped silicon nitride layer, etc.), and the dopant signal (e.g., the Ge signal, etc.) may be monitored for determining where the layer begins. A number of different implementations of the present invention may be provided, in the etching context. Another example is a thin layer of carbon or boron doped oxide under a Ge-doped nitride. For such a structure, drop in Ge signal and advent of C signal can be monitored, for better etching results. A further example of using the invention in an etching process is use of two different dopants, such as providing one dopant in each of the respective layers, or providing the two different dopants in a same layer. It will be appreciated that the present invention includes use of different signals being controlled for maximal sensitivity, and that the above-mentioned are only some examples.

Another use of the present invention is to change stress of a produced film (e.g., a silicon nitride, silicon oxide) by including a dopant, compared to a film in which the dopant is not included. For example, for a case of a silicon nitride film, inclusion of a Ge dopant has been found to change stress of the film to the tensile region. Conventionally, RTCVD silicon nitride films have a stress of about 1 to 1.5 G Pa (tensile). Including Ge in the silicon nitride films provides a significant change raising the stress of the film, such as a doped Ge-silicon nitride film with a stress exceeding 1.5 G Pa (tensile), such as a stress of 2 G Pa (tensile), or higher, etc. When measuring a film doped according to the invention and a comparable non-doped film on the same stress tool, a delta of 1 G Pa or greater (preferably, such as a delta of 1.2 G Pa or greater) may be obtained in the doped film. Also, the present invention may be used to change the stress of a film from compressive to tensile, which signifies a significant change in the nature of a film.

Thus, the present invention advantageously may be used to tune stress of a silicon nitride or silicon oxide film or silicon oxynitride or silicon carbide film as desired.

Also, the present invention may be used to produce doped silicon nitride films, doped silicon oxide films, doped silicon oxynitride films, and doped silicon carbide films, such as, e.g., a Ge-doped silicon nitride film, an Al-doped silicon oxide film, a boron-doped silicon nitride film, etc.

The invention also provides production methods in which a doped silicon nitride film or doped silicon oxynitride film is produced by a method comprising at least: providing a silicon precursor combination comprising (A) an inorganic Si precursor (such as silane, disilane, trisilane, hexachloro disilane, di chloro silane (DCS), etc.) and (B) an organic-based Si precursor (such as BTBAS, etc.); and providing at least one nitrogen precursor (such as, e.g., NH3); and producing a doped silicon nitride film or a doped silicon oxynitride film through deposition; and methods of increasing deposition rate during producing a silicon nitride film from a nitrogen precursor, the method comprising: reacting the nitrogen precursor with a silicon precursor combination. In inventive methods using a silicon precursor combination, the silicon precursor combination and the at least one nitrogen precursor may be provided simultaneously and in a form of providing flow of a gas. In inventive methods using a silane precursor, optionally, at least one additional precursor may be provided in addition to BTBAS, silane and the at least one nitrogen precursor.

A silicon precursor combination may be used in a deposition process that is, e.g., RTCVD, PECVD, LPCVD, remote plasma nitride, ALD, etc. A preferred example of a deposition method in which a silicon precursor combination is used is RTCVD deposition in which a silicon nitride film is produced. When producing a silicon nitride film by RTCVD using a silicon precursor combination, deposition may proceed at an advantageous rate, such as, e.g., a deposition rate exceeding about 128 angstroms/minute, preferably, a deposition rate exceeding about 190 angstroms/minute.

Films produced using a silicon precursor combination may be, e.g., silicon nitride films; germanium- and/or carbon-doped silicon nitride films; films having a tunable stress; a film having a tunable stress in a range of about 3 G Pa (compressive) to 3 G Pa (tensile); a film that includes at least one dopant.

When using a silicon precursor combination, deposition may proceed at various temperatures (such as, e.g., at a temperature in a range of about 400-800° C.) and at various pressures (such as, e.g., at a pressure in a range of about 10-650 torr).

EXAMPLE 1

In an LPCVD furnace, GEH4 was added to a mixture of DCS and NH3 at two different temperatures, 700 and 650° C. respectively. A standard silicon nitride film was also deposited at 785° C. as a control. Two germanium-doped silicon nitride films and one standard silicon nitride film were thus deposited. The results are summarized in the charts which are FIGS. 1, 2 and 3.

In FIG. 1, the top plot is for the film deposited at 785° C., with DCS/NH3=0.3 The middle plot in FIG. 1 is for the film deposited at 700° C., with (DCS+Ge)/NH3=0.3, Ge/DCS=0.25. The bottom plot in FIG. 1 is for the film deposited at 650° C., with the same ratios as for the film deposited at 700° C.

From FIG. 3, it is clear that by adding GeH4 to the process gas, a significant increase in the deposition rate has been achieved. Also, the germanium-doped films of this Example 1 have a similar property (determined by wet etch rate) to the standard high temperature films.

The addition of germane to a mixture of a silicon precursor and ammonia allows for: increasing the deposition rate of an existing process making the process more manufacturable; lowering the deposition rate of a process to make it extendable to future technology; and/or manipulating stress of the formed film.

EXAMPLE 2

Importantly, the present inventors have recognized that stress in a film may be modified by germanium addition during nitride film formation. There may be considered the following results, both for silicon substrates:

TABLE 1 Film Stress (in E9 Dyne/cm2) Si—N   4 (compressive) SiGe—N 8.2 (tensile)

As the above Table 1 shows, there is almost an order of magnitude stress difference between a conventional silicon nitride film and an inventive germanium-doped silicon nitride film.

It will be appreciated that the advantages of the present invention with regard to deposition rate and/or stress tuning are not limited to nitride films, and may be applicable for oxide films (such as silicon oxide films, etc.) and other films, such as other amorphous films.

EXAMPLE 3

Ge was added to a mixture of silane and ammonia, forming a Ge-doped Si nitride film. The deposition rate was increased for the germane process, compared to an equivalent no-germane process. For the no-Ge processs, the stress of the produced film was 0.4 GPa (compressive). For the inventive process using Ge, the stress was 0.8 GPa (tensile). Thus, the use of Ge according to the invention achieved a change in stress of 1.2 GPa, which was a substantial improvement.

EXAMPLE 3A BTBAS, NH3

Previously, one way to improve drive current in CMOS devices was to use stressed films that can be used as spacers or MOL liners. Recently much work has been done to produce films with high compressive stress using plasma techniques, which is a relatively easy to deposit films with high compressive stress using plasma techniques. On the other hand, the deposition of films with high tensile stress (>1.6 GPa) has not been achieved in the industry as desired. Much work has been done to synthesize new precursors, without achieving the goal of providing needed stress. The only precursor that gives stress above 1.5 GPa consistently thus far has been BTBAS.

COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 3A.1

For example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,001,844 issued Feb. 21, 2006 to Chakravarti discloses (abstract) that an ammonia-treated BTBAS film is particularly excellent in providing a high-stress property, and further having maintainability of that high-stress property over repeated annealing. Example 2 in the '844 patent discloses an RTCVD process in which BTBAS and NH3 are reacted, under the following conditions, without any other silicon precursor, to form films of thickness 500 or 750 angstroms:

Carbon concentration: ˜6 to 10% Temperature 650° C. Pressure 140 torr

However, BTBAS is expensive and by using BTBAS, the cost of producing a wafer becomes unreasonable. In order to reduce the cost per wafer, the deposition temperature can be increased; in practice, however, a temperature-increasing approach generally is not easy to implement where the technology is already in manufacturing, and the thermal budget already has been established.

INVENTIVE EXAMPLE 3A.2

Therefore, the inventors set about to increase the deposition rate of the BTBAS/NH3 process without changing any of the main parameters but by adding a chemical which is already present in the manufacturing tool sets, and is not foreign to the process environment.

The inventors already have demonstrated (see Example 3 herein) that by addition of GeH4, the deposition rate increases for many RTCVD processes.

The inventors then experimented as follows to determine whether deposition rate would increase by adding (rather than GeH4) silane to a BTBAS/NH3 mixture, by adding different amounts of silane to a BTBAS/NH3 mixture. The results of the experimentation are shown in FIGS. 8, 9 and 10.

By addition of silane to a BTBAS/NH3 mixture, the deposition rate increased compared to a BTBAS/NH3 mixture without silane being used in a film production process.

According to the data, the stress of a silane-only film is considerably less than the stress of a BTBAS film or a BTBAS/silane mixture film.

Particularly, by using BTBAS and silane (FIG. 6), wafers were produced at a deposition rate in a range of from 190.1 to 315.1 angstroms/minute and with a stress in a range of from 1600.83 to 1661.48 M Pa.

Thus, adding silane to a reaction mixture of BTBAS and NH3 has been found to be being particularly advantageous in terms of stress of the produced film, with the production process proceeding at an increased deposition rate which is advantageous from a manufacturing perspective when working with BTBAS.

EXAMPLE 3B

Silicon nitride films were prepared using BTBAS (585 mgm) and silane flow, at 700° C. with a deposition time of 105 sec, and deposition rate and stress were measured as reported in FIG. 9.

EXAMPLE 3C

Silicon nitride films were prepared using BTBAS (585 mgm) and silane flow, at 675° C. with a deposition time of 350 sec. Stress was measured as reported in FIG. 10. Deposition rates were measured as reported in FIG. 11. FTIR spectra were measured for a series of films produced using a combination of BTBAS and silane, including, respectively, POR 0 silane 2.24 g/cc; 20 sccm silane 2.46 g/cc; 40 sccm silane 2.18 g/cc; and 60 sccm silane 2.50 g/cc. Results are shown in FIGS. 12 and 13. In FIG. 12, all spectra are normalized to film thickness and plotted on a common scale. FIG. 12 shows NHx and SiH stretching FTIR spectra. FIG. 13 shows SiN bonding from FTIR spectra.

EXAMPLE 4

With reference to FIG. 4, an example of a stressed film according to one embodiment of the invention is shown. Stressed nitride liner 40 (produced according to the invention) is shown in use with spacer 41, gate (POLY) with a layer 44 (silicide), with the gate being over a channel (SOI).

EXAMPLE 5

With reference to FIGS. 5A-5C, an example of a counter-doped nitride or oxide layer for endpoint detection according to the invention is shown. Referring to FIG. 5A, in a device including gate 52, a spacer nitride 51 (with a first dopant) is provided over a nitride or oxide layer 50 (with a second dopant). The as-deposited films of FIG. 5A are processed according to an initial RIE step shown in FIG. 5B, wherein during initial RIE, the first dopant is detected. Next, a step of final RIE is performed, as shown in FIG. 5C, wherein an etch endpoint is reached. During the final RIE step, a smaller amount of the first dopant (in the spacer nitride 51 or etched spacer nitride 51′) is detected, and detection of the second dopant (in the nitride or oxide layer 50) begins. After the etch endpoint step, a controllably etched spacer nitride 51′ remains.

While the invention has been described in terms of its preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.

Claims

1. A method of producing a doped silicon nitride film or a doped silicon oxynitride film, the method comprising at least:

providing a silicon precursor combination comprising (A) an inorganic Si precursor and (B) an organic-based Si precursor;
providing at least one nitrogen precursor; and
producing said doped silicon nitride film or said doped silicon oxynitride film through deposition.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein the silicon precursor combination comprises BTBAS and silane.

3. The method of claim 1, comprising providing the silicon precursor combination and providing the at least one nitrogen precursor at substantially the same time and in a form of providing flow of a gas.

4. The method of claim 2, wherein at least one additional precursor is provided in addition to the BTBAS, the silane and the at least one nitrogen precursor.

5. The method of claim 1, wherein NH3 is the at least one nitrogen precursor.

6. The method of claim 1, wherein a produced film is germanium- and/or carbon-doped silicon nitride film.

7. The method of claim 1, wherein a produced film has a tunable stress.

8. The method of claim 1, comprising producing said film at a temperature below about 700° C.

9. The method of claim 1, wherein the deposition is RTCVD, PECVD, LPCVD, remote plasma nitride or ALD.

10. The method of claim 1, wherein the deposition is RTCVD and a silicon nitride film is produced.

11. The method of claim 1, wherein a deposition rate of the film is in a range of about 190.1 to 315.1 angstroms/minute.

12. The method of claim 1, wherein a deposition rate of the film exceeds about 128 angstroms/minute.

13. The method of claim 1, wherein a deposition rate of the film exceeds about 190 angstroms/minute.

14. The method of claim 1, wherein a produced film has a tunable stress in a range of about 3 GPa (compressive) to 3 GPa (tensile).

15. The method of claim 1, wherein a produced film includes at least one dopant.

16. The method of claim 1, wherein the method is conducted at a temperature in a range of about 400-800° C. and at a pressure in a range of about 10-650 torr.

17. A method of increasing deposition rate during producing a silicon nitride film from a nitrogen precursor, the method comprising reacting the nitrogen precursor with a silicon precursor combination.

18. The method of claim 17, wherein the silicon precursor combination comprises silane and BTBAS, and the nitrogen precursor comprises NH3.

19. The method of claim 17, comprising using the silicon precursor combination to increase the deposition rate by at least 10 angstroms/minute in comparison with using a single component.

20. The method of claim 19, comprising using the silicon precursor combination to increase the deposition rate by 50 angstroms/minute or more in comparison with using a single component.

Patent History
Publication number: 20060237846
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 5, 2006
Publication Date: Oct 26, 2006
Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION (Armonk, NY)
Inventors: Ashima Chakravarti (Hopewell Junction, NY), Shawn Smith (Phoenix, AZ), Dominic Schepis (Wappingers Falls, NY), Rangarajan Jagannathan (Hopewell Junction, NY), Anita Madan (Danbury, CT)
Application Number: 11/428,648
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: 257/751.000
International Classification: H01L 23/52 (20060101);