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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. A method of smoothing a layer comprising a phosphosilicate glass layer
having a step profile in a semiconductor device comprising the steps of:
implanting arsenic into said layer; and
reflowing said layer by heating said layer sufficiently to smooth said
layer.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein said layer includes a layer of
silicon dioxide as a barrier layer.
3. A method according to claim 1, wherein said step of heating said layer
includes heating said layer to a temperature not exceeding approximately
1000 degrees C.
4. A method according to claim 1, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said layer includes implanting arsenic above an incident energy of
approximately 90 KeV.
5. A method according to claim 1, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said layer includes implanting arsenic above a range of approximately
10.sup.16 per cm.sup.2.
6. A method according to claim 1, wherein said step of reflowing sa:d layer
includes reflowing said layer in a reflow ambient of nitrogen with
approximately above 3% oxygen.
7. A method according to claim 1, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said layer includes implanting arsenic above an incident energy of
approximately 90 KeV and above a dosage range of approximately 10.sup.16
per cm.sup.2, said step of heating said layer includes heating said layer
to a temperature not exceeding approximately 1000 degrees C., and said
step of reflowing said layer includes reflowing said layer in a reflow
ambient of nitrogen with approximately above 3% oxygen.
8. A method according to claim 1, wherein said semiconductor device is an
n-channel metal oxide semiconductor device.
9. A method according to claim 1, wherein said semiconductor device is a
p-channel metal oxide semiconductor device.
10. A method according to claim 1, wherein said semiconductor device is a
complementary metal oxide semiconductor device.
11. A method according to claim 1, wherein said semiconductor device is a
bipolar semiconductor device.
12. A method of making a semiconductor device comprising the steps of:
forming a region of another conductivity type in a substrate of one
conductivity type;
forming an insulator layer comprising a phosphosilicate glass layer on said
substrate;
implanting arsenic into said insulator layer;
forming a contact window through said insulator layer for allowing a metal
coverage contact to said region of another conductivity type; and
reflowing said insulator layer by heating said insulator layer sufficiently
to smooth said insulator layer.
13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the step of forming an
insulator layer includes the step of forming a layer of silicon dioxide as
a barrier layer and then forming the layer of phosphosilicate glass.
14. A method according to claim 12, wherein said step of heating said
insulator layer includes heating said insulator layer to a temperature not
exceeding approximately 1000 degrees C.
15. A method according to claim 12, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said insulator layer includes implanting arsenic above an incident
energy of approximately 90 KeV.
16. A method according to claim 12, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said insulator layer includes implanting arsenic above a dosage range
of approximately 10.sup.16 per cm.sup.2.
17. A method according to claim 12, wherein said step of reflowing said
insulator layer includes reflowing said insulator layer in a reflow
ambient of nitrogen with approximately above 3% oxygen.
18. A method according to claim 12, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said insulator layer includes implanting arsenic above an incident
energy of approximately 90 KeV and above a dosage range of approximately
10.sup.16 per cm.sup.2, said step of heating said insulator layer includes
heating said insulator layer to a temperature not exceeding approximately
1000 degrees C., and said step of reflowing said insulator layer includes
reflowing said insulator layer in a reflow ambient of nitrogen with
approximately above 3% oxygen.
19. A method according to claim 12, wherein said semiconductor device is an
n-channel metal oxide semiconductor device.
20. A method according to claim 12, wherein said semiconductor device is a
p-channel metal oxide semiconductor device.
21. A method according to claim 12, wherein said semiconductor device is a
complementary metal oxide semiconductor device.
22. A method according to claim 12, wherein said semiconductor device is a
bipolar semiconductor device.
23. A method of making a semiconductor device comprising the steps of:
forming a plurality of regions of another conductivity type in a substrate
of one conductivity type;
forming an insulator layer comprising a phosphosilicate glass layer on said
substrate;
forming at least one layer of gates and gate interconnections on said
insulating layer;
forming a multilevel interconnect system insulating layer on said layer of
gates and gate interconnections;
implanting arsenic into said multilevel interconnect system insulator
layer; and
reflowing said multilevel interconnect system insulator layer by heating
said multilevel interconnect system insulator layer sufficiently to smooth
said insulator layer.
24. A method according to claim 23, wherein the step of forming an
insulator layer includes the step of forming a layer of silicon dioxide as
a barrier layer and then forming the layer of phosphosilicate glass.
25. A method according to claim 23, wherein said step of heating said
insulator layer includes heating said insulator layer to a temperature not
exceeding approximately 1000 degrees C.
26. A method according to claim 23, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said insulator layer includes implanting arsenic above an incident
energy of approximately 90 KeV.
27. A method according to claim 23, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said insulator layer includes implanting arsenic above a dosage range
of approximately 10.sup.16 per cm.sup.2.
28. A method according to claim 23, wherein said step of reflowing said
insulator layer includes reflowing said insulator layer in a reflow
ambient of nitrogen with approximately above 3% oxygen.
29. A method according to claim 23, wherein said step of implanting arsenic
into said insulator layer includes implanting arsenic above an incident
energy of approximately 90 KeV and above a dosage range of approximately
10.sup.16 per cm.sup.2, said step of heating said insulator layer includes
heating said insulator layer to a temperature not exceeding approximately
1000 degrees C., and said step of reflowing said insulator layer includes
reflowing said insulator layer in a reflow ambient of nitrogen with
approximately above 3% oxygen.
30. A method according to claim 23, wherein said semiconductor device is an
n-channel metal oxide semiconductor device.
31. A method according to claim 23, wherein said semiconductor device is a
p-channel metal oxide semiconductor device.
32. A method according to claim 23, wherein said semiconductor device is a
complementary metal oxide semiconductor device. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a method for improving step metal coverage
of a semiconductor device, and more particularly to methods of making a
semiconductor device using enhanced reflow of phosphosilicate glass by ion
implantation of arsenic. The enhanced reflow smooths and rounds step
profiles in the phosphosilicate glass, such as a contact window to the
substrate through the phosphosilicate glass. The smoothed and rounded
profiles result in producing better step metal coverage.
In the fabrication of semiconductor devices and integrated circuits one of
the major concerns is the ability of metal lines to cross over abrupt
steps and to enter contacts without breaking or thinning. Breakage will
cause open circuit failures while thinning will cause a reliability
hazard. And if metal lines are fabricated by sputtering or evaporation
techniques over abrupt steps, steps due either to an underlying layer
having a step profile or to abrupt edges of a layer, such breakage and
thinning are almost inherent. In sputtering and evaporation techniques,
the abrupt steps cause shadowing of the metal layer being fabricated; the
shadowing in turn leads to metal thinning or cracking, or both, in the
regions of these steps.
To overcome this problem, one popular approach has been to use
phosphorous-doped, low temperature oxide of phosphosilicate glass (PSG) as
the dielectric between metal and the substrate, for example,
polycrystalline silicon. By flowing the PSG at sufficiently high
temperature, which is typically 1000-1100 degrees C., sharp profiles are
rounded out, thereby producing better step metal coverage. However, in
next generation very large scale integrated circuit (VLSI) processing,
such high temperatures will be intolerable due to dopant diffusion and
must be reduced. The flow temperature can be reduced using steam ambients,
but this leads collaterally to an undesirable oxidation of underlying
silicon and to higher island sheet resistance. And if contacts have been
etched prior to flow, then steam ambients should definitely be avoided.
Otherwise, undesired oxidation occurs.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,319,260 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,355,454 disclose another method
of reduced temperature by in situ doping of oxide, viz., using arsine to
dope the glass. However, arsine is highly toxic and has not been widely
used by the industry.
Borophosphosilicate glass has also been used to reduce temperature. Though
giving enhanced flow it presents other problems, such as surface leaching
of boron and recrystallization of boric acid crystals. These problems have
tended to discourage the wider use of this technique.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a
method for improving step metal coverage of a semiconductor device using
enhanced reflow of phosphosilicate glass by ion implantation of arsenic is
provided. Namely, the problem of degraded metal lines over step profiles
has been overcome with a new reflow technology. In the new reflow
technology arsenic (As) is implanted into PSG. By implanting arsenic into
PSG, excellent reflow is obtained in inert ambients, for example, at
temperatures as low as 750 degrees C. In the implant technology,
percentage of oxygen in nitrogen ambient as well as energy of the arsenic
ions have a profound effect on the reflow process. For the case of other
implanted species, for example, B, BF2, Fl, Ar, Se, and Sb, reflow
comparable to that with PSG has not been observed. Capacitance-voltage
(CV) and conduction experiments have further shown the dielectric
integrity to be unaffected by the implant. Rutherford Backscattering
Spectroscopy (RBS) depth profiling and resistivity measurements show an
arsenic distribution with no penetration to the substrate. Therefore, this
novel reflow technology is highly advantageous and directly applicable to
VLSI processes.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of an n-channel MOS transistor showing a
preferred embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of an n-channel MOS transistor after
enhanced reflow showing smoothed contact and poly steps and metal
coverage.
FIG. 3 is a representation of a prior art insulation layer having an abrupt
step profile.
FIGS. 4A-4C are representations of one embodiment of the present invention
depicting the smoothing effect resulting from reflow with ion implantation
of arsenic.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In FIG. 1 an n-channel MOS transistor element in cross section is depicted
to represent a preferred embodiment of the invention element could be part
of a random access memory, a microprocessor, a VLSI, or other similar
semiconductor device. The element is formed in a substrate 10 of
semiconductor material of one type of conductivity, preferably p.sup.-
silicon. Field oxide regions 13 are formed in the substrate 10. A pair of
diffused regions 11, 12 of another conductivity type, preferably n.sup.+
silicon, form the source 11 and drain 12 regions of the transistor. A
conductive member 16, preferably of polycrystalline silicon, which lies
over gate oxide 23, forms a gate element between the source 11 and drain
12. Oxide spacers 21 are formed along the edges of the gate 16 by a
process described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,356,040. A first insulating layer 14
of thin thermal oxide is then formed on the substrate 10. A second
insulating layer 15 of phosphosilicate glass (PSG) is deposited in turn on
the first insulator layer 14. The PSG layer 15 is subsequently ion
implanted with arsenic 17. By photolithography and etching, a contact
window 18 is next formed to the source 11 and drain 12 as shown in FIG. 2.
Then the transistor element is flowed in an ambient to round and smooth
the abrupt steps 20 of the insulator layer 15. Breakage and thinning
problems associated with metal lines 19 over steps are therefore greatly
minimized. An improved reflow has been achieved by ion implantation of PSG
with arsenic.
In past experiments, two structures are used to evaluate and compare
different reflows. In the first, bare silicon wafers are oxidized to a
thickness of 450 angstroms. Polysilicon of 3500 angstroms thickness is
deposited and abrupt steps are created by photolithography and etching.
PSG of 4200 angstroms thickness and 5-8% phosphorus is then deposited. The
PSG is subsequently ion-implanted. In the second structure, PSG of similar
doping concentration and thickness is deposited onto bare silicon
substrates. After ion implantation these wafers, the second structure, are
photolithographically patterned and then etched anisotropically. Both
structures are then flowed in various ambients, for example, nitrogen or
nitrogen with 0-20% oxygen, or steam. Polysilicon 1000-2200 angstroms
thick is then deposited at 625 degrees C. to facilitate photographing the
structures.
Experimentation with these structures indicates that reflow of
arsenic-implanted PSG is dependent upon the dosage of arsenic for a given
incident energy and reflow ambient. For an incident energy of 150 KeV, a
reflow ambient of nitrogen with 5% oxygen, and a temperature of 900
degrees C. for 30 minutes, significant improvement in the profiles is
achieved with a dose of 10.sup.16 ions per cm.sup.2 (E16/cm.sup.2). This
improvement can be seen by constrasting FIG. 3 with FIGS. 4A-4C.
Specifically, FIG. 3 shows the abrupt step of an edge after a prior art
reflow at 900 degrees C. for 30 minutes with 5% oxygen without ion
implantation of arsenic. However, as shown in FIG. 4A, the step of the
edge is significantly smoothed after reflow with ion implantation of
arsenic in accordance with the invention.
Further experimentation also indicates that the arsenic-implant reflow
technique is dependent on both time and temperature. As an example, for a
5E16/cm.sup.2 arsenic implant at 150 KeV and a temperature of 800 degrees
C. in N.sub.2 /5%O.sub.2, significant improvement in the profiles occurs
when the time exceeds 60 minutes, but the profiles does not change
drastically after 30 additional minutes. Higher temperatures give better
flow. Temperatures ranging from 750 degrees C. to 950 degrees C. appear to
enhance reflow. FIGS. 4B and 4C give two examples of temperature-time
variations. There 5E16/cm.sup.2 of arsenic is implanted at 150 KeV into 8%
PSG and flowed in N.sub.2 /5%O.sub.2 for 90 minutes at 850 degrees C. in
FIG. 4B and for 270 minutes at 750 degrees C. in FIG. 4C.
To find the effect of oxygen in the reflow ambient, oxygen flow is varied
from 0-450 standard cubic centimeter per minute (sccm) in a constant 8600
sccm stream of nitrogen. Higher oxygen flow rates appear to yield better
rounding. Above a threshold of about 200 sccm no significant change is
produced. In two cases, significant roundings occur by implanting
5E16/cm.sup.2 of arsenic into 8% PSG at 150 KeV and flowing in N.sub.2
/2.4%O.sub.2 at 800 degrees C. for 180 minutes.
For a given dose, reflow also depends upon the implant energy of arsenic
ions. In a study of reflow at an arsenic dose of 5E16/cm.sup.2 and an
implant energy ranging from 30 to 150 KeV, it has been found that best
reflow occurs at energy greater than 90 KeV.
To understand the enhanced reflow mechanism achieved with arsenic
implantation of an insulator in accordance with the present invention, and
in particular implantation of a PSG layer, ion implantation effects and
arsenic chemical effects upon a PSG system should be examined. In general,
ion implantation of heavy ions into PSG can lead to large stress in the
PSG. However, wafer bowing measurements using laser scan reveal no
significant stress changes after film deposition, ion implantation at
E17/cm.sup.2 of arsenic and 150 KeV, or reflow. Since similar reflow has
not been seen for heavier ions such as Se or Sb, ion-implant-related
stress effects alone does not explain enhanced reflow. Any successful
enhanced reflow model must account for the exceptional behavior of ion
implanted arsenic and its synergy with oxygen. One possible explanation
for enhanced reflow is that arsenic is able, in conjunction with oxygen,
to reduce the viscosity of the glass sufficiently in the temperature
ranges where enhanced reflow occurs, possibly by formation of As.sub.2
O.sub.3, to allow the mass transport needed to reduce surface energy of
the glass.
The preferred emobodiment of the present invention has been described in
terms of an n-channel MOS device. Other embodiments, however, include
PMOS, CMOS and bipolar devices.
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Description  |
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