Electrochemical investigation of the surface-modifying roles of guanidine carbonate in chemical mechanical planarization of tantalum
Autor: | D.J. Crain, Dipankar Roy, C.M. Pettit, S.E. Rock, J.P. Zheng |
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Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
chemistry.chemical_classification
Materials science Inorganic chemistry Tantalum chemistry.chemical_element Sulfonic acid Condensed Matter Physics Electrochemistry Dielectric spectroscopy chemistry.chemical_compound chemistry Chemical-mechanical planarization Tantalum pentoxide General Materials Science Selectivity Dissolution |
Zdroj: | Materials Chemistry and Physics. 129:1159-1170 |
ISSN: | 0254-0584 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.matchemphys.2011.05.079 |
Popis: | The fabrication of interconnect structures for semiconductor devices requires low down-pressure chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) of Ta barrier layers. Guanidine carbonate (GC) serves as an effective surface-complexing agent for such CMP applications, where the rate of Ta removal can be chemically controlled through pH-tuned selectivity with respect to the removal of Cu lines. Electrochemical techniques are employed in this work to study the surface-modifying roles of GC that make this chemical an attractive complexing agent for Ta CMP. In addition, the effects of including H2O2 (an oxidizer) and dodecyl benzene sulfonic acid (DBSA, a dissolution inhibitor for Cu) in GC-based CMP solutions are investigated to examine the selective CMP mechanisms of Ta and Cu in these solutions. The results suggest that the removal of Ta is supported in part by structurally weak guanidinium–tantalic-acid surface complexes formed on Ta/Ta2O5. The bicarbonate/carbonate anions of GC also facilitate Ta removal through the generation of ion-incorporated tantalum pentoxide. DBSA strongly affects the CMP chemistry of Cu, but exhibits relatively weaker effects on the surface activity of Ta, and thus plays a vital role in dictating the selectivity of Ta:Cu polish rates. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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