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Controlling Oxygen Precipitation In III Wafers IV Wafers

RAPID THERMAL PROCESSING (RTP) AT TEMPERATURES GREATER THAN 900°C AND IN PARTICULAR ABOVE ABOUT 1150°C CAN HAVE IMPORTANT EFFECTS ON THE DISTRIBUTIONS OF INTRINSIC POINT DEFECTS IN SILICON WAFERS. R. FALSTER OF MEMC ELECTRONIC MATERIALS DISCUSSES THE USES OF RTP FOR THE ENGINEERING OF INSTALLED INTRINSIC POINT DEFECT PROFILES IN SILICON WAFERS. SUCH PROCESSES FORM THE BASIS OF THE TECHNOLOGY FOR THE “MAGIC DENUDED ZONE” (MDZ) WAFER, A WAFER PROGRAMMED FOR IDEAL OXYGEN PRECIPITATION BEHAVIOR INTO SILICON WAFERS.


Untitled Document






























Controlling
oxygen precipitation in III – IV wafers

 






RAPID
THERMAL PROCESSING (RTP) AT TEMPERATURES GREATER THAN 900°C
AND IN PARTICULAR ABOVE ABOUT 1150°C CAN HAVE IMPORTANT
EFFECTS ON THE DISTRIBUTIONS OF INTRINSIC POINT DEFECTS IN
SILICON WAFERS. R. FALSTER OF MEMC ELECTRONIC MATERIALS DISCUSSES
THE USES OF RTP FOR THE ENGINEERING OF INSTALLED INTRINSIC
POINT DEFECT PROFILES IN SILICON WAFERS. SUCH PROCESSES FORM
THE BASIS OF THE TECHNOLOGY FOR THE “MAGIC DENUDED ZONE”
(MDZ) WAFER, A WAFER PROGRAMMED FOR IDEAL OXYGEN PRECIPITATION
BEHAVIOR INTO SILICON WAFERS.


 







In
the past few years the application of rapid thermal processing
(RTP) of silicon wafers has expanded out of more traditional
areas such as oxidation and diffusion to applications in which
it is used to modify the materials properties of the wafer
itself. One example of this is the so-called “Tabula
Rasa” process in which RTP can be used to create oxygen
monomer-only wafers by dissolving grown-in oxygen clusters
in Czochralski silicon wafers in order to inhibit completely
oxygen precipitation in almost all practical applications
of silicon. One application where complete suppression of
oxygen precipitation is very useful is in a monitor wafer
for contamination control using minority carrier lifetime
techniques. In this case, recombination at oxygen precipitate
sites creates a competing signal to the contamination signal
of interest. But in this case the use of RTP is merely a question
of preference. “Tabula Rasa” can also readily be
achieved with conventional furnace treatments.

More
interestingly from an RTP point of view, another new technology
for the control of oxygen precipitation behavior has appeared
which for all practical purposes actually requires RTP to
achieve its aims. This technology produces “Magic Denuded
Zone” or MDZ [III-VI] wafers.

The
problem of oxygen precipitation control in silicon has been
an important area of research in silicon technology for over
20 years. Since it was first recognized that oxygen precipitates
could act a gettering sites for fast diffusing and harmful
transition metal contamination, the use of oxygen precipitates
has played an important role in contamination management schemes
throughout the IC industry.



















Such
systems are called Internal Gettering (IG) systems.
It has, however, turned out to be quite a difficult
problem from a practical perpective. The gettering
part is largely easy; the difficult part lies
in the precise control of oxygen precipitation
behavior to insure effective gettering without
harmful side effects - in every wafer. In particular,
a firm grasp of the nucleation processes has
proved illusive. The result of this has been
often less than ideal and reliable control of
oxygen precipitation performance in practice.

In
general, the distribution of oxygen precipitation
achieved in an ensemble of silicon wafers depends
strongly on a close coupling of the oxygen content,
the details of the crystal growth processes
and the details of the application to which
the wafers are submitted. Many, often complicated
and expensive, approaches have been developed
over the years to manage these coupled complications
and achieve the desired gettering effect without
side effects.

 


































These
include such wafer pre-treatments as the socalled “Hi-Low-High”
treatments in which oxygen is first out-diffused at
high temperatures (to create a low oxygen content surface
layer) followed by a generally long, low temperature
treatment to (re-) nucleate oxygen clusters. This is
followed by another high temperature treatment to grow
them into precipitates. Other approaches have included
attempts to very narrowly specify oxygen concentration
and crystal growth process or even the segments of the
crystal from which wafers should be taken for specific
application. All of this tailoring of silicon material
to specific applications has lead to a vast amount of
complication and rigidity in the silicon industry and
quite a lot of confusion over whether silicon is an
engineered material or a commodity.

The
MDZ wafer is a serious departure from previous attempts
at solving the problem of oxygen precipitation control.
The RTP family of processes that produce MDZ wafers
result in a radical change of the wafer’s material
properties. At its core is the enormous effect that
vacancies have on the control of the nucleation processes
of oxygen in silicon. The process which produces the
MDZ wafer installs a useful vacancy concentration profile
(or template) into a silicon wafer which subsequently
takes over the control of the wafer’s oxygen precipitation
behavior from all of the difficult factors important
in conventional silicon: crystal growth, IC application,
and even oxygen concentration itself. An MDZ wafer is
a wafer which is programmed through the RTP treatment
to behave in a well defined, ideal manner in any application,
sweeping aside an entire raft of technological difficulties.

An
illustration of the huge effect that vacancies have
on oxygen precipitation
behavior
is shown in Fig. 1 in which the dependence of the resulting
oxygen precipitate density on vacancy concentration
is shown.




Fig.
1 Oxygen precipitate densities produced following test
heat-treatments (800°C, 4 hours + 1000°C 16 hours)
as a function of wafer vacancy concentration. Vacancy
concentration was determined by platinum diffusion experiments
[13,14]
















Fig.
2 A schematic illustration of the difference between
conventional methods of installing denuded zones (DZ)
in silicon wafers via oxygen out-diffusion and renucleation
and a new method based on the installation of tailored
vacancy concentration profiles




The
core concept of the MDZ wafer is to utilise this very
strong dependence and engineer a profile of vacancies
into a silicon wafer. The very steep, switch-like dependence
of precipitate density on vacancy concentration means
that a profile of vacancy concentration rising from
the surface and going through the threshold value produces
a rather sharply layered structure with a highly precipitating
bulk underneath a non-precipitating surface layer. The
threshold for this layered design lies at a vacancy
concentration of about 1012 cm-3. Figure 2 schematically
illustrates the design of such a wafer and compares
it to a conventional oxygen out-diffusion approach to
the problem of forming a denuded zone.


Vacancy
concentration profiles

Vacancies
may be introduced into silicon wafers at high temperatures
by a number of different mechanisms. Two examples are
nitridation or through simple high temperature Frenkel
pair generation. Generating large concentrations of
vacancies in wafers at high temperatures is not a difficult
task at all. The problem lies in fighting the tendency
of the wafer to return to equilibrium during the cooling
of the wafer and keeping them in the wafer in sufficiently
large concentrations to be useful. This is where RTP
comes in.

The
simplest procedure for installing a useful profile of
vacancies in a silicon wafer relies solely on Frenkel
pair generation and the close proximity (relative to
vacancy diffusion lengths) of the two wafer surfaces.
Heating a thin wafer to a high temperature T results
in the rapid equilibration of the vacancy-interstitial
system.








First,
Frenkel pairs – vacancies and self-interstitials
in equal amounts - are produced. This - very fast –
reaction leads to a recombination generation equilibrium.
The product CiCv of the two concentrations acquires
the equilibrium product value Ci*Cv*, with Ci = Cv =
(Ci*Cv*)1/2 at this stage. Were the sample to be cooled
at this point under the condition of equal concentration,
the vacancies and interstitials would merely mutually
annihilate each other completely in the reverse process
of their generation resulting in no vacancy concentration
enhancement by the time the samples reach room temperature.

This
is averted by the next stage of the process in which
the two point defect concentrations separately equilibrate
to their respective equilibrium values via a process
which takes advantage of the thinness of silicon wafers.
Useful vacancy incorporation is made possible by the
fact that both Ci and Cv approach their (different)
equilibrium values, Ci*and Cv*, due to an exchange with
the wafer surfaces (considered as ideal sink/source
of point defects). This coupled process is controlled
mainly by diffusion of self-interstitials which are
the faster diffusers – the two concentrations being
comparable. The total time to achieve this complete
equilibrium in a standard wafer (ca. 700 m thick) was
found to be extremely short, less than several seconds
at 1250oC. In other words, wafers are thin with respect
to interstitial diffusivity on an RTP time scale. The
speed of the equilibration is, in fact, a measure of
interstitial diffusivity. This also implies that the
interstitial diffusivity is high, on the order of 2.5x10-4cm2/s.

After
this equilibration, the vacancies become the dominant
species since Cv*>Ci*. On subsequent cooling the
point defects quickly recombine, only now, some of the
vacancies survive. During the cooling of the equilibrated
vacancy and interstitial solutions, the majority vacancies
consume the minority interstitials until there are effectively
no more to left consume leaving behind an excess concentration
of surviving vacancies equal to the initial concentration
difference at the anneal temperature, .C= Cv*-Ci*.

The
proximity of the wafer surfaces during cooling adds
the final component to the process. During cooling,
in addition to recombination, vacancies will out diffuse
to the wafer surfaces where the local (equilibrium)
vacancy concentration is rapidly decreasing. However,
if the cooling rate is fast enough – in the range
of about 40 to 100K/s (readily accessible through using
RTP) - the middle of the wafer will be not
affected
by vacancy out-diffusion, and the vacancy species will
be present there in the concentration .C.


























The
regions near the surfaces will be strongly affected.
At lower temperatures the profile is effectively frozen-in
by the binding of vacancies to oxygen which becomes
complete by about 900oC [17]. At this point the vacancies
convert from their relatively mobile state (free mono-vacancies)
to their relatively immobile state, O2V. The profiling
of the vacancy concentration through out-diffusion achieved
in a given RTP heat treatment is largely the result
of the cooling conditions of the wafer above this temperature.

In
the present discussion, the most important thing is
that the near-surface regions of a quenched wafer are
depleted of vacancies, by vacancy out-diffusion during
the cooling stage of RTP. In the near-surface zones
the vacancy concentration is below Cv*, and oxygen precipitation
is suppressed in a practical sense as a result of prohibitively
long incubation times (the tabula rasa effect). The
rapid increase in temperature during the ramp-up to
the process temperature serves to dissolve all pre-existing
oxygen clusters. In the middle of a wafer the precipitation
is strong, due to the presence of vacancies in concentration
over Cv*. Such a precipitation profile is precisely
what is required for ideal IG. The width of DZ (precipitation-denuded
zone) is easily controlled by the cooling rate.

Faster
cooling rates mean a shorter vacancy diffusion length,
and thus a narrower DZ. If the cooling rate is too slow,
such as occurs in conventional furnace annealing, the
high temperature vacancy concentration profile will
be allowed to fully relax throughout the sample thickness
to its equilibrium value near the binding temperature,
which is well below the threshold for precipitation
enhancement. At this point the entire wafer thickness
becomes of the tabula rasa type.



Precipitation control

Installing
a vacancy concentration profile which rises from the
wafer surface into the bulk of the wafer crossing the
critical concentration Cv* at some desired depth is
the core of the concept behind the MDZ wafer. The installed
vacancies have full control of the oxygen precipitation
behavior of the wafer. An example of a depth distribution
of oxygen precipitates produced by vacancy concentration
control is shown in Fig 3.

















Fig.
3. (a) Depth profiles of platinum diffusion profiles
(~ vacancy concentration) measured at 730 and 800°C,
calculated vacancy concentrations, and measured oxygen
precipitate densities in an RTP treated sample processed
at 1250°C. The oxygen precipitate density axis is
scaled to correspond to the vacancy-precipitate density
calibration and (b) an etched cross section of a silicon
wafer containing such a profile following a precipitation
heat treatment (800°C 4 hours + 1000°C 16 hours)
showing the depth profile of oxygen precipitates resulting
from an RTP-installed vacancy concentration profile.
The bulk density of precipitates in this example is
1 x 1010 cm-3














Largely
because of the speed of the vacancy-interstitial
recombination reaction and the rapid diffusivities
of both vacancies and interstitials (with
that of the vacancies being conveniently
lower than that of the interstitials) the
process which produces an MDZ wafer is very
rapid indeed. It is accomplished in several
seconds compared to the typically many hours
required of the conventional oxygen-based
approach. The denuded zones produced are
also in general larger than conventional
DZ. Larger denuded zones insure no risk
of precipitation induced side effects and
complete gettering even in the reduced “thermal
budget” processes. Since gettering
proceeds by precipitation driven undercooling,
it happens during cooling. The length of
process time is essentially irrelevant.

Important
technologically is the fact that the structure
developed is independent of oxygen concentration,
crystal growth process and to a large extent
the details of the subsequent thermal processing.
This last result is due to the consumption
of the vacancies during the very rapid initial
nucleation processes. Any subsequent nucleation
is then again subject to the “normal”
prohibitively long incubation requirements
that exist in essentially all practical
situations.

In
the simplest case, the shape of the profile
which produces the MDZ wafer is controlled
by two parameters. The first is the soak
temperature, Tp, with controls the quenched-in
vacancy concentration at the center of the
wafer (= {Cv*(Tp) – Ci*(Tp)}) and hence
the bulk oxygen precipitate density.












Fig
4. Schematic illustration of cooling rate
effect

































The
second is the cooling rate controlling the depth of
the DZ and, at slower rates, eventually the vacancy
concentration (and with it, resulting precipitate density)
at the center of the wafer. Fig 4 illustrates the cooling
rate effect. The minimum Tp for an effective straightforward
RTP treatment corresponds to Cv*(Tp) – Ci*(Tp)
/1012 cm-3, the threshold value. This happens around
1150°C. The quenched-in vacancy concentration (and
with it bulk precipitate density) rises with increasing
Tp. The bulk precipitate density reaches about 1010
cm-3 by about 1250°C. In RTP treatments, the concentrations
of intrinsic point defects in silicon wafers can be
dynamically and very rapidly altered means other than
temperature and cooling rate. Ambient is also very important
in these technologies. Examples include interstitial
injection from the wafer surfaces during oxidation,
and vacancy enhancements due to nitridation effects.
One example is the complete elimination of the effect
when oxygen ambient concentrations exceed about 2000
ppma. Another example is the creation of an inverse
vacancy profile in pure nitrogen or ammonia ambients.
An example of this is shown in Fig 5. There are many
advantages to using a RTP-vacancy based system to control
oxygen precipitation behavior in silicon wafers: simplicity,
ability to copy-exact, ease-ofuse and reliability of
results. Figure 6 shows just
















Figure
5. An example of an ambient effect on quenched in vacancy
concentration and subsequent precipitation behavior.
The circles in a) are a vacancy concentration profile
in an argon ambient. b) is an etched cross section of
the resulting precipitate profile. The squares in a)
are the result of the same treatment performed in nitrogen.
c) illustrates the resulting precipitate depth profile














one
example of the degree of control such a
process results in. In this plot, random
examples of precipitation behavior (4 hours
800°C + 16 hours 1000°C) for various
sampled crystals over a long period of time
are shown. The performance of MDZ wafers
is compared to conventional uncontrolled
material as a function of oxygen concentration.
The width of the signal of the MDZ wafers
is roughly equal to the counting error.
The data of conventional wafers span 5 orders
of magnitude, essentially the entire range
of possible values. “The preceding
article was originally presented at the
Electrochemical Society Meeting in Philadelphia,
PA (Spring 2002); ECS Proceedings Volume
2002-11.”












Figure
6. Oxygen precipitation behavior (BMD) sampling
for MDZ® wafers (filled circles) and normal
(open circles) precipitation distributions.
BMD stands for Bulk Microdefect Density, in
this case equal to the oxygen precipitate
density




 
 





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