Km. Chang et al., SUPPRESSION OF FLUORINE IMPURITY IN BLANKET CHEMICAL-VAPOR-DEPOSITED TUNGSTEN FILM FOR VIA FILLS WITH A NOVEL 2-STEP DEPOSITION TECHNIQUE, JPN J A P 1, 36(4A), 1997, pp. 2061-2067
Blanket chemical vapor deposited tungsten (CVD-W) offers the potential
to fabricate reliable contacts for submicron multilevel metallization
. In via filling application, various aluminum fluorides were formed b
y the reduction of WF6 with aluminum underlayer. These compounds will
stay at CVD-W/Al interface and act as insulating layers which cause el
ectrical degradation. In addition, impurities like fluorine or oxygen
induce the formation of beta-W lattices as well as high film resistivi
ty. In this work, a two-step chemical vapor deposition of tungsten was
developed to suppress the fluorine impurities in tungsten films and a
t CVD-W/Al interface for blanket CVD-W application. The first step inv
olves a gas phase nucleation with high SiH4/WF6 flow ratio (i.e., 2.5)
to deposit a thin tungsten film as the glue layer. It was found that
the probability of the WF6 reduction with underlying aluminum was supp
ressed because the WF6 was completely consumed by SiH4 before arriving
onto aluminum surface. Meanwhile, this gas phase nucleated tungsten e
xhibits blanket deposition capability and an amorphous structure. The
second step includes typical CVD-W process (i.e., SiH4/WF6 flow ratio
<1) to grow thick tungsten film. Secondary Ion Mass Spectroscopy (SIMS
) measurements indicate that the fluorine impurities in tungsten aim a
nd at CVD-W/Al interface are drastically reduced. Also, the gas phase
nucleated tungsten can be reproducibly deposited without attacking the
aluminum underlayer. Moreover, a lower tungsten resistivity, lower vi
a resistance and longer electromigration lifetime are achieved in the
Al/W/Al Kelvin structures produced by two-step deposition technique th
an those of the typical CVD-W films deposited directly on aluminum.