DocumentCode
3224495
Title
AMAT P-5000 CVD-clean optimization project
Author
Pinto, James N. ; Triplett, Michael
Author_Institution
Microelectron. Div., IBM Corp., Essex Junction, VT, USA
fYear
1995
fDate
13-15 Nov 1995
Firstpage
232
Lastpage
235
Abstract
The Applied Materials (AMAT) P-5000 Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) systems use a plasma-enhanced tetraethoxysilane (TEOS)/oxygen chemistry to deposit an undoped silicon glass (interleave dielectric) film on 200 mm wafers. After each TEOS deposition cycle, the reaction chambers require an in-situ clean to remove residual dielectric materials from the electrodes and chamber walls. Excessive chamber cleaning causes unnecessary process-kit wear. This reaction is caused by the chemical and mechanical attack of the reaction by-products on process-kit parts after the TEOS deposition residues have been cleared. IBM´s continued emphasize on cost reduction, environmental concerns and limited availability of chamber-cleaning gases prompted this joint project with Applied Materials, which focused on identifying areas where costs associated with gases used for post-deposition cleaning could be decreased and the time between process-kit replacements increased. This paper describes the tests conducted with an RF metrology system (RFMS) manufactured by Fourth State Technology (FST), Austin, Texas, to determine the optimum clean times for various oxide films and the minimum flows required for efficient post-deposition chamber cleaning. As a result of this experimentation, process changes were made that reduced clean gas consumption and chemical cost. Additional savings were realized by reducing wear on the reaction chamber hardware and achieving longer meantime between process-kit replacements.
Keywords
integrated circuit manufacture; plasma CVD; semiconductor device manufacture; surface cleaning; 200 mm; AMAT P-5000; CVD-clean optimization project; PECVD systems; RF metrology system; TEOS deposition cycle; chemical cost reduction; clean gas consumption reduction; optimum clean times; plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition; plasma-enhanced TEOS/O chemistry; post-deposition cleaning; reaction chamber in-situ clean; Chemical processes; Chemical vapor deposition; Cleaning; Costs; Dielectric materials; Gases; Glass; Plasma chemistry; Plasma materials processing; Silicon;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing Conference and Workshop, 1995. ASMC 95 Proceedings. IEEE/SEMI 1995
ISSN
1078-8743
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2713-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ASMC.1995.484377
Filename
484377
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