Thermodynamics in Chip Processing Terry Ring Silicon Wafers Chip Feature Scaling Moore’s Law • please see http://developer.intel.com/update/archive/issue2/focus.htm What is a semiconductor? • Conductor – Metal • Insulator – Ceramic (oxides) • Semiconductor – – – – – Diamond Silicon Germanium Gallium Arsenide Host of others Intrinsic Silicon • Silicon has four valence electrons. When a group of Silicon atoms bond together to produce a pure lattice structure, the material is referred to as Intrinsic Silicon. Si Si Si Si Si Si Si Si Si Silicon Doping • This pure silicon configuration (intrinsic silicon) is a poor conductor because none of its electrons are available to serve as carriers of electric charge. • The fabrication of integrated circuits requires that the substrate (the wafer surface) be somewhat conductive. • This process is known as doping. Boron (B), Phosphorus (P), and Arsenic (As) are the most common dopant atoms used in the industry. The Periodic Table of Elements x: All isotopes are radioactive. 1 Atomic Number Atomic Weight Aymbol of Element 1.008 H Hydrogen (1)* IA Period 1 * Name of Element 1.008 H 1 3 6.941 4 Li Be Beryllium 11 22.99 12 Na Mg Magnesium 19 39.10 5 Representative Transition Inner-Transition Noble Gases Elements Elements Elements 20 40.08 10.81 13 24.31 Sodium 3 (18) Noble Gases 2 21 44.96 22 (6) VI B (5) VB (4) IV B (3) III B 47.90 23 50.94 24 52.00 (7) VII B 25 54.94 (8) 26 55.85 27 58.93 (11) IB (10) (9) VIII B 28 58.71 29 63.55 (12) II B 30 65.37 6 12.01 (16) VI A (15) VA (14) IV A (13) III A 9.012 Lithium 2 Number in ( ) heading each column represents the group designation recommended by the ACS Committee on Nomenclature. (2) II A Hydrogen 7 14.01 8 16.00 (17) VII A 9 19.00 4.003 He Helium 10 20.18 B C N O F Ne Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine Neon 26.98 14 28.09 15 30.97 16 32.06 17 35.45 18 39.95 Al Si P S Cl Ar Aluminum Silicon Phosphorous Sulfur Chlorine Argon 31 69.72 32 72.59 33 74.92 34 78.96 35 79.90 36 83.80 K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr Potassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine Krypton 4 37 85.47 38 1.008 39 88.91 40 91.22 41 92.91 42 95.94 43 98.91 Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium 74 75 55 132.9 56 137.3 57 138.9 72 178.5 73 180.9 183.9 44 x Rubidium 5 186.2 101.1 45 102.9 46 106.4 47 107.9 48 112.4 49 114.8 50 118.7 51 121.8 52 127.6 Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine Xenon 76 190.2 77 192.2 78 195.1 79 197.0 80 200.6 81 204.4 82 207.2 83 209.0 84 (210) W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po Cesium Barium Lanthanum Hafnium Tantalium Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium 226.0 89 (227) x Rax Ac Francium radium Actinium 104 (261) Unq 58 x 140.1 Cerium 90 232.0 Th x Thorium (262) Unpx 59 140.9 106 (263) Unhx 60 144.2 Nd Pr Ce Lanthanides Actinides 105 Praseodymium Neodymium 91 231.0 Pa x Protactinium 92 238.0 x U Uranium 107 (262) Uns 61 x (147) 108 (265) Uno 62 x 150.4 109 85 (210) x Astatine Radon (266) 152.0 64 157.3 65 158.9 66 162.5 67 164.9 68 167.3 69 168.9 70 173.0 71 175.0 Pmx Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium 93 237.0 94 (244) x Npx Pu Neptunium Plutonium 95 (243) 96 (247) 97 (247) x Amx Cmx Bk Americium Curium Berkelium 98 (251) Cf x Californium 99 (254) Es x Einsteinium 100 (257) Fm x Fermium 101 (258) x 102 (255) x Md No Mendelevium Nobelium (222) Rnx Unex 63 86 At x Ta 88 131.1 Rh Hf Frx 54 Rhodium La (223) 126.0 Ru Ba 87 53 Ruthenium Cs 6 7 ( ) Indicates mass number of isotope with longest known half-life. 103 (256) Lrx Lawrencium Dopant Chemistry • By looking at the Periodic Table, we can determine the number of electrons that Boron and Phosphorus have in their outer orbit. B P N-Type P Si Si Si Si P Si Si Si Si P-Type B Si Si Si Si B Si Si Si Si Anatomy of a Memory Chip One Die or Chip Building Blocks of the DRAM memory cell READ WRITE Basic DRAM memory cell - 1T Row or Wordline Column or Bitline DRAM memory Array MOSFET-Gate, Source, Drain Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor-Field-Effect-Transistors • A MOSFET is composed of three main components; a gate, a source, and a drain. The gate is a physical structure built on the wafer surface to control the opening and closing of a source-todrain channel. To create this structure, a metal and oxide layer are formed on a semiconductor surface (MOS). The source and drain regions are just highly doped, shallow pockets in the wafer surface next to the gate. The Transistor(continued) • Doing the dishes requires that we access a Source (or reservoir) of water. • Channel (or pipe) connects the reservoir to the sink. Don’t want a continuous flow of water to our drain (or sink). . . • Need a gate (or valve) to block the water flow. Source Closed Gate Source Reservoir Water Open Gate Reservoir Water External Energy (voltage) Drain Drain Channel Gate Sink Gate Sink Lithography • Light passes thru die mask • Light imaged on wafer • Stepper to new die location • Re-image Light Source Mask Reduction Lens Wafer with Photoresist MS&E vs ChE • How is a Materials Science and Engineering Education Different from Chemical Engineering Education? – Focus on Solids Processing • What Crystal Structure – Higher Purity Materials – Impurities Control Properties • Semiconductors • Grain Boundaries – Where atoms are in structure determines properties Where Thermodynamics Comes into Chip Processing • • • • Evaporation Rate during Spin Coating Evaporation Rate during Photoresist Drying Metal Physical Deposition Chemical Vapor Deposition – Feed of TEOS – Rxn of TEOS • Etching - SiF4 vapor pressure • CMP Solution Equilibria – Dissolution/Precipitation Lithography • Light passes thru die mask • Light imaged on wafer • Stepper to new die location • Re-image Light Source Mask Reduction Lens Wafer with Photoresist PhotoLythography PhotoResist UV light =193 nm 80 nm Line Photoresist -Sales $1.2 billion/yr. in 2001 • Resins – phenol-formaldehyde, I-line • Solvents • Photosensitive compounds – Polymethylmethacrylate or poly acrylic acid • = 638 nm RED LIGHT – diazonaphthoquinone • Hg lamp, = 365 nm, I-line – o-nitrobenzyl esters – acid generators • Deep UV, = 248 nm, KrF laser – Cycloolefin-maleic anhydride copolymer – Poly hydroxystyrene • =193 nm gives lines 100 nm • = 157 nm F laser • Additives Photoresist • • • • • • Spin Coat wafer Dry solvent out of film Expose to Light Develop Quench development Dissolve resist (+) or developed resist (-) Spin Coating • Cylindrical Coordinates – Navier-Stokes – Continuity Newtonian Fluidnon-evaporating 2 vr 2 2 r z B.C.' s vr 0 @ z 0 vr 0 @ a h( r, t ) z 2 q vr dz h (t )3 3 0 h h 1 2 2 3 qr rh t r r 3r r B.C. h(t 0) ho solution If hois a constant film is uniform 1 / 2 2 4 2 For thin films, h -1 t-1/2 h(t ) ho 1 ho t 3 Evaporation Model - Heuristic Model • CN non-volatile, CV volatile • e = evaporation rate of volatile component – ei = kMA(Psolvent-I - 0) • q = flow rate Evaporation Rate • What is Psolvent-i in a mixture? – Other solvents and non-volatile components • fil = fiv equilibrium condition – fiv =yiP – fil = γ i xi Pisat – ln γ i =GiE/(RT) Vapor Pressure of 2 solvent mix • P =Σ γ i xi Pisat = γ 1 x1 P1sat + γ 2 x2 P2sat • y1 =P1/P= γ 1 x1 P1sat /(γ 1 x1 P1sat + γ 2 x2 P2sat ) • Pisat obtained from Normal Boiling Point & Heat of vaporization (Claperon Equation) d ln Psat dT • γ HV( T) Rg T 2 See MathCad Example • Vapor Pressure of Solvent Mix.mcd • Binary Solvent Mixture • Ternary mixture of Solvent plus Nonvolatile Resin Next Step Dissolve Edge of Photoresist • So that no sticking of wafer to surfaces takes place – Wafers are stored in a rack on edge • So that no dust or debris attaches to wafers Wafer with Photoresist How would you set up this problem? • fil = fis – fis = γsi zi fsi – fil = γli xi fli – ln γl i =GiE/(RT) equilibrium condition same a previous example of solvent mix • γli xi fli = zi γsi fsi • γli xi = zi γsi Ψi • • • • Ψi = exp{(ΔHisl/R)[(1/Tm) - (1/T)]} ΔHisl =Heat of fusion, Tm melting temperature zi γsi=1 for ideal solid (misicible) zi= mole fraction of mix in solid Break • Second lecture is next • What did we learn • Calculate the partial pressure – Used to calculate the evaporation rate of a component of a solvent mixture • Calculate the solubility of a solid in a solvent mixture Lecture 2 • Metal Deposition on the wafer – Wires to connect the transistors and capacitors • To each other • To outside world – 2 Mb memory chip has – > 1 km of wire – 8 layers of wiring on top Deposition Methods • Growth of an oxidation layer • Spin on Layer • Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) – Heat = decomposition T of gasses – Plasma enhanced CVD (lower T process) • Physical Deposition – Vapor Deposition – Sputtering Physical Vapor Deposition • Evaporation from Crystal (metal) • Deposition on Wall Physical Deposition Reactor • Wafers in Carriage (Quartz) • Carrier Gasses enter • Pumped out via vacuum system • Furnace Furnace Vacuum Chamber at lower Temp – Metal evaporated – Sublimation • No liquid phase P s l V v Deposition Rate • Ratei = Km A {Pi(TF) - Pi(TC)} • What is the sublimation partial pressure of metal as a function of temperature? • fiv = fis equilibrium condition – fis = γsi zi fsi= γsi zi Pisat exp[VMi(P - Pisat)/(RT)] » – fiv =yiP Poynting Factor Metal Saturation Pressure • Sublimation Vapor Pressure – Claperon Equation d ln Psat dT HS( T) Z Rg T 2 • ΔHS is the heat of sublimation • ΔHS = ΔHF + ΔHV – solid to liquid then liquid to vapor MathCad File • Sublimation Vapor Pressure of Alloy.mcd