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Wet etching of TiN in 1-D and 2-D confined nano-spaces of FinFET transistors.

Authors :
Vereecke, Guy
De Coster, Hanne
Van Alphen, Senne
Carolan, Patrick
Bender, Hugo
Willems, Kherim
Ragnarsson, Lars-Åke
Van Dorpe, Pol
Horiguchi, Naoto
Holsteyns, Frank
Source :
Microelectronic Engineering. Nov2018, Vol. 200, p56-61. 6p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Abstract In the manufacturing of multi-Vt FinFET transistors, the gate material deposited in the nano-spaces left by the removed dummy gate must be etched back in mask-defined wafer areas. Etch conformality is a necessary condition for the control of under-etch at the boundary between areas defined by masking. We studied the feasibility of TiN etching by APM (ammonia peroxide mixture, also known as SC1) in nano-confined volumes representative of FinFET transistors of the 7 nm node and below, namely nanotrenches with 1-D confinement and nanoholes with 2-D confinement. TiN etching was characterized for rate and conformality using different electron microscopy techniques. Etching in closed nanotrenches was conformal, starting and progressing all along the 2-D seam, with a rate that was 38% higher compared to a planar film. Etching in closed nanoholes proved also to be conformal and faster than planar films, but with a delay to open the 1-D seam that seemed to depend strongly on small variations in the hole diameter. However, holes between the fins at the bottom of the removed dummy gate, are not circular and do present 2-D seams that should lend themselves for an easier start of conformal etching as compared to the circular nanoholes used in this study. Finally, to explain the higher etch rate observed in nano-confined features, concentrations of ions in nanoholes were calculated taking the overlap of electrostatic double layers (EDL) into account. With negatively charged TiN walls, as measured by streaming potential on planar films, ammonium was the dominant ion in nanoholes. As no chemical reaction proposed in the literature for TiN etching matched with this finding, we proposed that the formation of ammine complexes, dissolving the formed Ti oxide, was the rate-determining step. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • Etching of TiN in closed nanotrenches was conformal and 38% faster compared to planar films. • Etching in closed nanoholes was also conformal and faster compared to planar films, but with some delay to open the seam. • Ti-ammine complex formation suggested as the rate determining reaction in sub-10-nm features to satisfy EDL overlap model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01679317
Volume :
200
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Microelectronic Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132319740
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mee.2018.09.004