Methods for Linewidth Modification and Apparatus Implementing the Same
A linear-shaped core structure of a first material is formed on an underlying material. A layer of a second material is conformally deposited over the linear-shaped core structure and exposed portions of the underlying material. The layer of the second material is etched so as to leave a filament of the second material on each sidewall of the linear-shaped core structure, and so as to remove the second material from the underlying material. The linear-shaped core structure of the first material is removed so as to leave each filament of the second material on the underlying material. Each filament of the second material provides a mask for etching the underlying material. Each filament of the second material can be selectively etched further to adjust its size, and to correspondingly adjust a size of a feature to be formed in the underlying material.
This application is a continuation application under 35 U.S.C. 120 of prior U.S. application Ser. No. 14/875,570, filed Oct. 5, 2015, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 9,704,845, on Jul. 11, 2017, which is a continuation application under 35 U.S.C. 120 of prior U.S. application Ser. No. 13/373,470, filed Nov. 14, 2011, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 9,159,627, on Oct. 13, 2015, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/413,284, filed Nov. 12, 2010. The disclosure of each above-identified patent application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUNDA push for higher performance and smaller die size drives the semiconductor industry to reduce circuit chip area by approximately 50% every two years. The chip area reduction provides an economic benefit for migrating to newer technologies. The 50% chip area reduction is achieved by reducing the feature sizes between 25% and 30%. The reduction in feature size is enabled by improvements in manufacturing equipment and materials. For example, improvement in the lithographic process has enabled smaller feature sizes to be achieved, while improvement in chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) has in-part enabled a higher number of interconnect layers.
In the evolution of lithography, as the minimum feature size approached the wavelength of the light source used to expose the feature shapes, unintended interactions occurred between neighboring features. Today minimum feature sizes are being reduced below 45 nm (nanometers), while the wavelength of the light source used in the photolithography process remains at 193 nm. The difference between the minimum feature size and the wavelength of light used in the photolithography process is defined as the lithographic gap. As the lithographic gap grows, the resolution capability of the lithographic process decreases.
An interference pattern occurs as each shape on the mask interacts with the light. The interference patterns from neighboring shapes can create constructive or destructive interference. In the case of constructive interference, unwanted shapes may be inadvertently created. In the case of destructive interference, desired shapes may be inadvertently removed. In either case, a particular shape is printed in a different manner than intended, possibly causing a device failure. Correction methodologies, such as optical proximity correction (OPC), attempt to predict the impact from neighboring shapes and modify the mask such that the printed shape is fabricated as desired. The quality of the light interaction prediction is declining as process geometries shrink and as the light interactions become more complex.
In view of the foregoing, solutions are sought for improvements in integrated circuit design, layout, and fabrication that can improve management of lithographic gap issues as technology continues to progress toward smaller semiconductor device feature sizes.
SUMMARYIn one embodiment, a method is disclosed for fabricating a mask for etching of linear-shaped structures for an integrated circuit. The method includes forming a plurality of linear-shaped core structures of a first material on an underlying material. The method also includes conformally depositing a layer of a second material over each of the linear-shaped core structures and exposed portions of the underlying material. The method also includes etching the layer of the second material so as to leave a filament of the second material on each sidewall of each of the linear-shaped core structures, and so as to remove the second material from the underlying material. The method also includes depositing a third material over each filament of the second material. The method also includes removing a portion of the third material to as to expose one or more of the filaments of the second material. The method also includes etching the exposed filaments of the second material so as to leave thinner filaments of the second material. The method also includes removing the third material and the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material so as to leave the filaments of the second material on the underlying material, whereby the filaments of the second material provides a mask for etching the underlying material.
In one embodiment, a method is disclosed for fabricating linear-shaped conductive structures for an integrated circuit. The method includes depositing a layer of a conductive material over a substrate. The method also includes forming a plurality of linear-shaped core structures of a first material on the conductive material. The method also includes conformally depositing a layer of a second material over each of the linear-shaped core structures and exposed portions of the conductive material. The method also includes etching the layer of the second material so as to leave a filament of the second material on each sidewall of each of the linear-shaped core structures and so as to remove the second material from the conductive material. The method also includes depositing a third material over each filament of the second material. The method also includes removing a portion of the third material to as to expose one or more of the filaments of the second material. The method also includes etching the exposed filaments of the second material so as to leave thinner filaments of the second material. The method also includes removing the third material and the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material so as to leave the filaments of the second material on the conductive material, whereby the filaments of the second material provide a mask for etching the conductive material. The method also includes etching the conductive material so as to leave linear-shaped portions of the conductive material beneath the filaments of the second material. The method also includes removing the filaments of the second material from the linear-shaped portions of the conductive material.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, illustrating by way of example the present invention.
In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without some or all of these specific details. In other instances, well known process operations have not been described in detail in order not to unnecessarily obscure the present invention.
Integrated circuit scaling has been enabled to a large extent by improvements in photolithography equipment resolution and overlay. The resolution capability was such that random logical functions could be drawn with two-dimensional (2D) bent layout shapes with few restrictions on layout shape dimensions or relationships between layout shapes. Some parts of certain types of integrated circuits (IC's), for example memory cells in a DRAM or Flash memory, were drawn with more regular layout patterns to permit reducing the feature sizes and hence the memory bit size.
As optical lithography has reached a cost-driven limit of the 193 nm ArF excimer laser light source and a lens numerical aperture of 0.93 (or 1.35 for water immersion systems), other approaches are being considered. One such approach is double patterning, in which the layout pattern is split into two parts, each of which can be separately processed with optical lithography equipment.
One approach to double patterning for regular layout patterns is SDP (spacer double patterning). This approach uses the following sequence to reduce the layout pattern shape-to-shape pitch by a factor of two:
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- 1. standard optical lithography to pattern a “core”
- 2. etch the core and remove the resist
- 3. deposit a different material which can be etched selectively relative to the core
- 4. etch the deposited film, leaving sidewall material and the core
- 5. etch the core, leaving only the sidewall material
- 6. cut the sidewall material to create separate parts
- 7. etch the underlying material using the sidewall material as the mask
- 8. remove the sidewall material, leaving the underlying material with the desired pattern.
One attribute of this approach is that all of the sidewall filaments are uniform in line-width. This is desirable for the gate electrode layer, since uniform MOS transistor lengths give uniform circuit speed and leakage.
However, there are cases in which different gate electrode line-widths are useful, such as in analog circuits, in SRAM bit cells, in IO (input/output) cells, and for power optimization using several gate electrode critical dimensions (CD's) or line-widths, by way of example. Therefore, it can be necessary to design circuits that have different gate line-widths and/or MOS transistor structures with different line-widths. Accordingly, methods are needed to design and manufacture these types of circuits. Embodiments of such methods are disclosed herein.
Although the exemplary descriptions herein are provided within the context of the gate electrode layer, the approaches and principles illustrated herein can be applied to any masking layer/device layer in which SDP is done. Also, in some cases, multiple applications of SDP can be performed to obtain a pitch division by 4 or more. The “core” as depicted in the figures herein can either be a directly patterned core, or a line coming from a first SDP sequence which is now used as the “core” for a second SDP sequence. The linewidth modifications could be applied either after the first sequence, the second sequence, or both.
Gate linewidth modification is an effective method to control MOS transistor “off” or “leakage” current since. At technology nodes roughly below 28 nm (nanometers), the gate electrode is not patterned directly from a mask pattern. Instead, because of photolithography limits on pitch and the need for reduced LER (line-edge-roughness), the fabrication is done with the SDP process sequence. A “mold” or “core” is patterned and etched, then a filament is created around the edge. The width of the filament is uniform, and becomes the linewidth of the gate electrode. Hence, the gate linewidths are the same within the tolerance of the filament process.
A chip design is proposed which uses multiple gate electrode line-widths. The line-width is chosen based on requirements such as:
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- 1. Relative current at a given gate bias for analog circuits
- 2. Ratio of current for select and pull-down transistors in an SRAM bit cell
- 3. Field-dependent breakdown voltage for IO transistors
- 4. Power optimized timing path, in which some transistors have gate lengths adjusted to reduce speed and leakage current or to increase speed and leakage current
Structures on the chip are proposed with different gate electrode line-widths. These structures can be applied to functions such as:
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- 1. Analog circuits
- 2. SRAM bit cells
- 3. IO cells
- 4. Logic cells selected for power/speed optimization
Example methods to create the structures on the chip include:
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- 1. Individually patterned lines with different widths
- 2. SDP pitch division flow to create lines, followed by circuit customization with cuts
- a. SDP to create uniform lines
- b. SDP with different sidewall filaments created with optical resolution or sub-optical resolution (e.g., e-beam)
- c. SDP with multiple film depositions and patterned etches to achieve different line-widths (combinations of etch selectivity are required, but the CD is well controlled by the film thicknesses)
- d. SDP with patterned etches, each etch creating a different line-width through etch time or etch rate or both
Considering that the conductive segment formed within the gate conductor material layer 801 below the sidewall filament 850 is a gate electrode of a transistor, the width size 870 of the gate electrode of the transistor (which may also be referred to as the transistor's channel length) can be adjusted by adjusting the width size 870 of the sidewall filament.
The examples of
For example,
It may be necessary to form gate electrode layer conductive segments of reduced size. In this case, the etching of the sidewall filaments can continue until the desired width size is obtained. Again, it should be understood that appropriately formed mask patterns can expose any one or more sidewall filaments for etching and size adjustment. For example,
Additionally,
The embodiments illustrated herein provide for patterning of the gate electrode layer, or for any layer that uses patterning that cannot be achieved by litho in a single step. Examples of other layers that may benefit from the embodiments shown herein can include metallization layers requiring multiple widths for power bussing etc. The patterning can be SDP patterning or litho-based double patterning. In one embodiment, the gate electrode layer (or other layer) line widths are selectively decreased by using a patterned trim step. In one embodiment, the gate electrode layer (or other layer) line widths are selectively increased by using a patterned resist reflow step. In one embodiment, the gate electrode layer (or other layer) patterning is completed by cutting the filaments based on a pattern set by the circuit layout.
In one embodiment, the linear-shaped core structure of the first material is formed on the underlying material in operation 1201 using a mask material patterned by an optical lithography process. Also, in this embodiment, the filaments of the second material on the underlying material collectively have dimensions and spacings too small to be directly formed by the optical lithography process. In another embodiment, the linear-shaped core structure of the first material is formed on the underlying material in operation 1201 using a multiple mask patterning process, wherein each mask of the multiple mask patterning process is formed by an optical lithography process. Also, in this embodiment, the filaments of the second material on the underlying material collectively have dimensions and spacings too small to be directly formed by the optical lithography process.
In one embodiment, operation 1205 for etching the layer of the second material includes removing the second material from a top surface of the linear-shaped core structure of the first material so as to expose the top surface of the linear-shaped core structure of the first material. Also, in one embodiment, etching the layer of the second material in operation 1205 includes biasing an etching front in a direction toward the underlying material. It should be appreciated that the first material and the second material have different etching selectivities to enable removal of the first material without substantial removal of the second material during a given etching process.
In one embodiment, the method further includes an operation in which a cut mask is formed over the filaments of the second material so as to expose portions of the filaments of the second material for removal, so as to form ends of linear segments of the filaments of the second material. In this embodiment, the method correspondingly includes an operation for removing exposed portions of the filaments of the second material, whereby the linear segments of the filaments of the second material provide the mask for etching the underlying material.
The method further includes an operation 1307 for depositing a third material over each filament of the second material. Then, in an operation 1309, a portion of the third material is removed so as to expose one or more filaments of the second material. The method continues with an operation 1311 for etching the exposed filaments of the second material so as to leave thinner filaments of the second material. The method also includes an operation 1313 for removing the third material and the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material so as to leave the filaments of the second material on the underlying material, whereby the filaments of the second material provides a mask for etching the underlying material.
In one embodiment, each of the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material is formed on the underlying material in operation 1301 using a mask material patterned by an optical lithography process. In this embodiment, the filaments of the second material on the underlying material collectively have dimensions and spacings too small to be directly formed by the optical lithography process. In another embodiment, each of the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material is formed on the underlying material in operation 1301 using a multiple mask patterning process. In this embodiment, each mask of the multiple mask patterning process is formed by an optical lithography process. Also, in this embodiment, the filaments of the second material on the underlying material collectively have dimensions and spacings too small to be directly formed by the optical lithography process.
It should be appreciated that the first material and the second material have different etching selectivities to enable removal of the first material without substantial removal of the second material during a given etching process. In one embodiment, etching the layer of the second material in operation 1305 includes removing the second material from a top surface of each of the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material so as to expose the top surface of each of the plurality of linear-shaped core structures of the first material. In one embodiment, etching the layer of the second material in one or both of operations 1305 and 1311 can include biasing an etching front in a direction toward the underlying material.
In one embodiment, the method further includes an operation in which a cut mask is formed over the filaments of the second material so as to expose portions of the filaments of the second material for removal, so as to form ends of linear segments of the filaments of the second material. This embodiment also includes an operation for removing exposed portions of the filaments of the second material, whereby the linear segments of the filaments of the second material provide the mask for etching the underlying material.
In one embodiment, conformally depositing the layer of the second material over each of the linear-shaped core structures and exposed portions of the underlying material in operation 1303 includes conformally depositing multiple sub-layers of the second material. In this embodiment, each boundary between the multiple sub-layers of the second material provides an etch stop for a subsequent etching of the second material.
In one embodiment, the linear-shaped core structure of the first material is formed on the conductive material in operation 1403 using an optical lithography process. In this embodiment, the filaments of the second material on the conductive material collectively have dimensions and spacings too small to be directly formed by the optical lithography process.
It should be appreciated that the first material and the second material have different etching selectivities to enable removal of the first material without substantial removal of the second material during a given etching process. Also, in one embodiment, etching the layer of the second material in operation 1407 includes biasing an etching front in a direction toward the conductive material.
In one embodiment, the method also includes an operation in which a cut mask is formed over the filaments of the second material so as to expose portions of the filaments of the second material for removal, so as to form ends of linear segments of the filaments of the second material. Also, in this embodiment, an operation is performed to remove exposed portions of the filaments of the second material, whereby the linear segments of the filaments of the second material provide the mask for etching the conductive material.
It should be understood that the methods disclosed herein can be used to create sidewall filaments having a thickness of less than or equal to 30 nanometers (nm), in various embodiments. Because the sidewall filaments provide a mask for fabricating underlying structures, it should be understood that the thickness of the sidewall filaments as measured horizontal to the substrate determines the size, e.g., critical dimension, of the underlying structures. For a 32 nm process node, the minimum as-drawn structure size is about 30 nm, which can be incremented by about 10% to obtain structure sizes of about 34 nm, 38 nm, etc. Also, with a 90% scaling process, the 30 nm minimum as-drawn structure size can be decreased to obtain about a 28 nm structure size. Therefore, at the 32 nm process node with the 90% scaling process applied, sidewall filaments can be formed to fabricate structure sizes of 28 nm, 32 nm, 36 nm, etc. For a 22 nm process node, the minimum as-drawn structure size is about 20 nm, which can be incremented by about 10% to obtain structure sizes of about 22 nm, 24 nm, etc. Also, with a 90% scaling process, the 20 nm minimum as-drawn structure size can be decreased to obtain about a 18 nm structure size. Therefore, at the 22 nm process node with the 90% scaling process applied, sidewall filaments can be formed to fabricate structure sizes of 18 nm, 20 nm, 22 nm, etc. For a 16 nm process node, the minimum as-drawn structure size is about 14 nm, which can be incremented by about 10% to obtain structure sizes of about 16 nm, 18 nm, etc. Also, with a 90% scaling process, the 14 nm minimum as-drawn structure size can be decreased to obtain about a 12 nm structure size. Therefore, at the 16 nm process node with the 90% scaling process applied, sidewall filaments can be formed to fabricate structure sizes of 12 nm, 14 nm, 16 nm, etc. It should be appreciated that structure size fabrication capabilities of future process nodes can be scaled by a factor of about 0.7 to about 0.8.
It should be understood that layout features associated with the methods disclosed herein can be implemented in a layout that is stored in a tangible form, such as in a digital format on a computer readable medium. For example, the layouts incorporating the layout features associated with the methods disclosed herein can be stored in a layout data file of one or more cells, selectable from one or more libraries of cells. The layout data file can be formatted as a GDS II (Graphic Data System) database file, an OASIS (Open Artwork System Interchange Standard) database file, or any other type of data file format suitable for storing and communicating semiconductor device layouts. Also, multi-level layouts including the layout features associated with the methods disclosed herein can be included within a multi-level layout of a larger semiconductor device. The multi-level layout of the larger semiconductor device can also be stored in the form of a layout data file, such as those identified above.
Also, the invention described herein can be embodied as computer readable code on a computer readable medium. For example, the computer readable code can include the layout data file within which one or more layouts including layout features associated with the methods disclosed herein are stored. The computer readable code can also include program instructions for selecting one or more layout libraries and/or cells that include a layout including layout features associated with the methods disclosed herein. The layout libraries and/or cells can also be stored in a digital format on a computer readable medium.
The computer readable medium mentioned herein is any data storage device that can store data which can thereafter be read by a computer system. Examples of the computer readable medium include hard drives, network attached storage (NAS), read-only memory, random-access memory, CD-ROMs, CD-Rs, CD-RWs, magnetic tapes, and other optical and non-optical data storage devices. The computer readable medium can also be distributed over a network of coupled computer systems so that the computer readable code is stored and executed in a distributed fashion.
Any of the operations described herein that form part of the invention are useful machine operations. The invention also relates to a device or an apparatus for performing these operations. The apparatus may be specially constructed for the required purpose, such as a special purpose computer. When defined as a special purpose computer, the computer can also perform other processing, program execution or routines that are not part of the special purpose, while still being capable of operating for the special purpose. Alternatively, the operations may be processed by a general purpose computer selectively activated or configured by one or more computer programs stored in the computer memory, cache, or obtained over a network. When data is obtained over a network the data maybe processed by other computers on the network, e.g., a cloud of computing resources.
The embodiments of the present invention can also be defined as a machine that transforms data from one state to another state. The data may represent an article, that can be represented as an electronic signal and electronically manipulate data. The transformed data can, in some cases, be visually depicted on a display, representing the physical object that results from the transformation of data. The transformed data can be saved to storage generally, or in particular formats that enable the construction or depiction of a physical and tangible object. In some embodiments, the manipulation can be performed by a processor. In such an example, the processor thus transforms the data from one thing to another. Still further, the methods can be processed by one or more machines or processors that can be connected over a network. Each machine can transform data from one state or thing to another, and can also process data, save data to storage, transmit data over a network, display the result, or communicate the result to another machine.
It should be further understood that the layout features associated with the methods disclosed herein can be manufactured as part of a semiconductor device or chip. In the fabrication of semiconductor devices such as integrated circuits, memory cells, and the like, a series of manufacturing operations are performed to define features on a semiconductor wafer. The wafer includes integrated circuit devices in the form of multi-level structures defined on a silicon substrate. At a substrate level, transistor devices with diffusion regions are formed. In subsequent levels, interconnect metallization lines are patterned and electrically connected to the transistor devices to define a desired integrated circuit device. Also, patterned conductive layers are insulated from other conductive layers by dielectric materials.
While this invention has been described in terms of several embodiments, it will be appreciated that those skilled in the art upon reading the preceding specifications and studying the drawings will realize various alterations, additions, permutations and equivalents thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the present invention includes all such alterations, additions, permutations, and equivalents as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Claims
1. An integrated circuit, comprising:
- a first linear-shaped conductive structure formed to extend lengthwise in a first direction, the first linear-shaped conductive structure having a first width size as measured in a second direction perpendicular to the first direction;
- a second linear-shaped conductive structure formed to extend lengthwise in the first direction, the second linear-shaped conductive structure having a second width size as measured in the second direction perpendicular to the first direction, the second width size less than the first width size, the second linear-shaped conductive structure spaced apart from the first linear-shaped conductive structure, wherein a length of the second linear-shaped conductive structure as measured in the first direction is less than a length of the first linear-shaped conductive structure as measured in the first direction; and
- a third linear-shaped conductive structure formed to extend lengthwise in the first direction, the third linear-shaped conductive structure having a third width size as measured in the second direction perpendicular to the first direction, the third width size less than the second width size, the third linear-shaped conductive structure spaced apart from either the first linear-shaped conductive structure, or the second linear-shaped conductive structure, or both the first and second linear-shaped conductive structures.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 11, 2017
Publication Date: Oct 26, 2017
Inventors: Michael C. Smayling (Fremont, CA), Scott T. Becker (Scotts Valley, CA)
Application Number: 15/646,825