F4280 Technology of Thin Film Deposition & Surface Treatments 5. Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Brno & Central European Institute of Technology - CEITEC lenkaz@physics.muni.cz spring semester 2024 E3RMO UNI1—ER5ITV OF" TECHNOLOGV UNI Chemical Vapor Deposition 5.1 Gaseous Sources 5.2 Chemical Vapor Deposition Scheme 5.3 Typical Chemical Reactions in CVD 5.4 Variants of CVD 5.5 CVD Precursors & Gas Supply 5.5.1 Precursor Requirements 5.5.2 Precursor Volatility 5.5.3 Gas Supply Set-up 5.5.4 Contamination 5.6 Chemical Reactors 5.7 Understanding the Overall Reaction 5.7.1 Gas-phase and surface reactions 5.8 APCVD versus LPCVD 5.9 MOCVD 5.10 Atomic Layer Deposition 5.11 Thermal Forming Processes F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 3/25 5.1 Gaseous! sources Let's use practical distinguishment of gas and vapor: gas does not condense when held above room T and below 1-atm partial pressure. Distinguishing the methods of delivery according to equilibrium vapor pressure pv: ► sources species having pv < 10-2 Pa at the wall T of the deposition chamber must by "physically" evaporated (using heat or energy beams) PVD processes (requiring low-p operation and "line-in-sight" geometry ► materials with pv > 10~2 Pa at the wall T are used in CVD (can operate at atmospheric pressure or lower - fluid flow Kn < 1) Most of elements, with exception of alkali metals and alkaline earths (group IA and 11 A) can be converted to gases or to chemical vapors by reacting them with terminating radicals, e. g. ► H ► halogens F, CI, Br, I ► carbonyl CO ► H-saturated organic radicals R such as methyl CH3 and ethyl CH2CH3 F4280 hemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 4/25 ... constituents of the vapour phase react chemically on a substrate surface to form a solid product (heterogenous reactions). Some gas-phase reactions are unavoidable due to high gas temperature. Undesirable homogeneous reactions in the gas phase nucleate particles that may form powdery deposits and lead to particle contamination. Deposition Variables: ► ► ► ► ► temperature pressure (from low pressures, i.e., 10-1000 Pa -LPCVD, up to atmospheric pressures - APCVD) input concentration gas flow rates reactor geometry Kinetics of the reactions may depend on such factors like substrate material, structure and orientation. transport and homogeneous reaction deposition supply I forced Convection free convection I gftB-pha.sf diffusion I ] >daorption J surface reaction 1 desorption film composition and structure F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 5/25 5.3 Typical Chemical Reactions in CVD TABLE 7.1 Typical Overall Reactions Used in CVD pyrolysis (thermal dpcompcHitinn) SiH4{g) -# Si -4 Site) + 2HCI(g) CH4(g) -»Cfduunoiid or graphite i + 2H?(g J Ni(CO)4 + 3HaCHg) -* Al2LVc) + 6HCI' gi WT^) t 3H2(*> -* W(c) + 6HP(g) GafCHaMg) + AeH^jf) -> cJhAsh- + aCH^gJ ZnCl^*} + H^g) -+ ZiiS(c) + 2HCLigi 2TiCI4(g) + 2NH3(g> + H^g.J TiN 10 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Temperature (C) Vapour pressure data for Ta(NMe2)5 Thermogravimetric analysis of different Hf precursors F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 9/25 5 CVD Precursors & Gas Supply 5.5.3 Gas Supply Set-up Schematic of a typical MOCVD reactor used for the deoosition of lll-V semiconductor films. ►exhaust Gas cabinet A commercial "bubbler" used to evaporate metal-organic compounds for MOCVD. F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 10/25 5 CVD Precursors & Gas Supply General gas supply set-up ensuring the safety (D. Smith, Figure 7.2) ux.hau.Ht duct exhaust duct outdoor pas cabinet rv -i marina] ink valw •-.uVr now atiat treatment F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 11/25 Flow control thermal mass-flow controller schematic ^ ťOiiLrp] board point tub* (n f shunt _ Pi orifice leak valve ic) Determination of flow from change of pressure in the closed chamber: Q = Ap V7 [Ol A ŕ Parm =sccm for [\/]=cm3 and [Ar]=min 5.5 CVD Precursors 5.5.4 Contamination Impurities can occur in the gas or liquid as supplied by the manufacturer. Carrier gases are available in very high purity but final purification at the reactor may still be desired ► for H2 - diffusing through hot Pd foil (blocks other gases) ► inert gases (e.g. Ar) - passing through "getters" (contain reactive surface that chemisorbs reactive impurities) ► water and 02 can be removed by bubbling through Ga-ln-AI alloy (liquid at room T) Impurities can also intrude during vapor transport ► cleaning of reactor - until outgassing stops. It is pressure dependent only if the partial pressure of the outgassing species begins to approach its pv. Either pumping to low pressure (low pressure systems) or purging with carrier gas (atmospheric pressure systems). Beware of contamination from backstreaming of pump oil (for low pressure systems). ► cross-contamination due to switching during the deposition of multilayers - gas remaining upstream from the deposition of the previous layer becomes contaminant for the next layer ->> purging (high downstream gas velocity for quick process), problem of "dead spots" F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 13/25 5.6 Chemical Reactors Chemical reactors must provide several basic functions: transport of the reactant and diluent gases to the reaction site, ► provide activation energy to the reactants (heat, radiation, plasma), ► maintain a specific system pressure and temperature, ► allow the chemical processes for thin film deposition to proceed optimally, ► remove the by-product gases and vapours. F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčkova 14/25 q o o o □ »usceptor ' laiuxmymmt-Lnr (6 J tube o o o o o furnace heater —m vNAW^»\\^VvvvvvvVW>vi (e) batch F \ t ľEBfc vO;v----- I i l<| LJ- i i 1 r t — i i i íl! i ■ j i i ■ ' ur / flow 1^ I ■_1 ■ rt i j r i ■. i i ii'.ir-.l " / t \ stagnation point 1 flow model óvr actual reactor 41 F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 15/25 Reactor geometries in the view of gas mixing Reactor geometry affects the gas flow characteristics which, in turn affect the properties of the deposited layer. Two basic flow type reactors: ► Displacement or plug flow reactor in which the entering gas displaces the gas already present with no intermixing of successive fluid elements. Plug flow is a simplified and idealized picture of the motion of a fluid, whereby all the fluid elements move with a uniform velocity along parallel streamlines. Mass balance for reactant A involved in a single reaction is very simple: FA - (FA + dFA) = rAdV. ► Perfectly mixed flow reactor is the opposite extreme from the plug flow reactor. To approach the ideal mixing pattern, the feed has to be intimately mixed with the contents of the reactor in a time interval that is very small compared to the mean residence time of the fluid flowing through the vessel. The essential feature is the assumption of complete uniformity of concentration and temperature throughout the reactor. F4280 )hemical Vapor Deposition ka Zajíčková 16/25 gthe eac Chemical equilibrium Gibbs free energies of formation for selected gaseous and solid (c) compounds at 105 Pa: *00 200 200 -600 -14O0 -1600 -IfWO 300 1000 Calculated equilibrium CVD phase diagram for deposition of Si borides from BCI3+SiH4 Uj 1300 1 1 1 i 1 1- 11 1 L Si + 318, I Ht/teci. + siHii-ti/i \ — \ \ +■ \ - 1 ll \ J \ ] 1 i \i as a* a? o.ů GAS COMPOSITION ig/B + Sil a* F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 17/25 5.7 Understanding the Overall Reaction 5.7.1 Gas-phase and surface reactions assumed to be important in the thermal deposition of Si from SiH4 gas (/c, reaction rate constant, M third body in a reactive collision, D, gas diffusivities, Sci sticking coefficients) SiH T k !— +3iH D Si + 2nll powder SiH/ a) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Chemical Vapor Deposition Len kaZajickova 18/25 5.8 APCVD versus LPCVD The deposition of thin films for semiconductor device manufacture by CVD at atmoshperic pressure (APCVD) was a widely accepted process in 80ties. In 1976 the equipment for low-pressure CVD (LPCVD) was introduced into the marketplace. At that time, the 3-inch wafer was the predominantly wafer size used in production with some residual presence of smaller wafers and the 4-inch wafer just being introduced into advanced lines. In the next few years, the LPCVD process became the preferred method for chemical vapour deposition of thin films. The transformation to a new technology that required massive capital expenditure for new equipment took place at a rapid rate throughout the industry. The reason for this rapid change were: ► a superior film quality, ► a greatly reduced processing cost, and ► greatly increased throughput per unit of capital investment. (Improved film quality increased yields and decreased unit costs in an industry that was becoming increasingly competitive.) Initial techniques for depositing films of Si02 employed atmospheric pressure reactors (APCVD) using silane (SiH4) and oxygen, injected as separate gases. The surface reactions on the heated wafer, typically at 400°C, grew films by the deposition rate 200-300 nm/min. Another approach to overcome APCVD SiH4 limitations (gas phase decomposition, poor step coverage): tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) with ozone at moderate temperatures Growth of good oxide films at 400 °C at rates of 100 nm/min or more. The advantages provided by the TEOS/ozone based films are excellent ► uniformity and step coverage, resulting from the high surface mobility of the reactants prior to the formation of Si02. F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 20/25 5.9 MOCVD Temperature (°C) 1.0 Typical example of MOCVD process - deposition of GaAs by MOCVD using Me3Ga and AsH3 The dependence of film growth rate on substrate temperature has three apparent regions: ► At low T the growth rate is controlled by the kinetics of chemical reactions occurring either in the gas-phase or on the substrate surface. This region is generally termed the region of kinetic growth control and the film growth rate increases exponentially with substrate temperature according to the Arrhenius equation. ► As T increases, the growth rate becomes nearly independent of temperature and is controlled by the mass transport of reagents through the boundary layer to the growth surface, and this is termed the region of mass transport or diffusion-controlled growth. E m c E £ ^ 0.1 re i— -c *— l O) x> O) N 0.01 1000 800 600 450 - I I I Desorption I and/or - prereaclions / Diffusion |\ Kinetic — / control i \ -■ I.E. control I 0.7 0.9 1.1 1.3 1000 r-1 (Kr1) 1.5 ► High T, desorption and/or prereactions. F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 21 /25 5.9 MOCVD In the strictest sense, a metal-organic (or organometallic) compound contains a direct metal-carbon bond (s or p) (e.g. metal alkyls, metal carbonyls). However, the definition of MOCVD has broadened to include precursors containing metal-oxygen bonds (e.g. metal-alkoxides, metal-b-diketonates) or metal-nitrogen bonds (e.g. metal alkylamides), and even metal hydrides (e.g. trimethylamine alane). A very high thermal stability (e.g. as in metal halides) can be a severe disadvantage in MOCVD, especially in microelectronics applications where low deposition temperatures (< 500 °C) are often required. F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 22/25 5.10 Atomic Layer Deposition General sketch of metal oxide ALD OH QH OH OH QH OH 1) Lnl_3 Pulse 2) N2 Purge 3) H20 Pulse 4) N2 Purge L L L L L V V /\ I O OH O O OH O HO OH OH HO OH Ln Ln Ln A i O OH O O OH O Example of other precursors with large ligands CH, Hf(mmp)4 ° CH, H,C- -CH, H3C. O r-^O. I o- H3C-H3C/ o. CH3 -CH3 ° CH, H,C- -CH, CH2 I 0 1 CH3 Ce(mmp), 4 CH3 H,CV CH, / H,C- "~'Ce-. / CH3 / — CH3 \ O CH3 CH, CH, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUsOMnV65jk This example shows the ALD chemistry for producing Hf02 from gaseous precursors HfCI4 (Cl=green) and H20 (0=red). ALD allows a uniform coating to be applied to complex objects - such as the inside of the fibre optic cable shown here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMda8TXLiFk Deposition of Ti02 using TiCI4 and H20. F4280 )hemical Vapor Deposition ka Zajíčková 23/25 Atomic Layer Deposition 0) re i— c o V- '(/> o CL 0) Q A well-designed ALD precursor will demonstrate an experimental 'ALD window' in which its deposition is truly self-limiting. In Fig. a, the window is a plateau of growth over a range of temperatures: For low T the process will demonstrate either low deposition rates from the reaction lacking the thermal energy necessary for chemisorption of the precursor on the substrate surface or too high a rate owing to condensation and physisorption of semi-reacted precursor material on the surface. In the steady plateau the ALD process is demonstrating self-limiting deposition for the temperature range. Over a certain T there is the danger of precursor decomposition, the ligand structure protecting the target atom falling apart, or chemical desorption of the precursor before the second precursor has had chance to react with the resulting surface. ta Condensation/ physisorption \ . Decomposition activation S energy / \J«— ALD window —>\/ Chemical \ desorption b Deposition temperature W Physisorption \L 1 / \j*— ALD window —*\/ , Decomposition Gas phase / reactions / / \ \ Decomposition Purge time Thermal Forming Processes In the gas phase, thermal oxidation and nitridation is a chemical thin-film forming process in which the substrate itself provides the source for the metal or semiconductor constituent of the oxide and nitride, respectively. This technique is obviously much more limited than CVD. Thermal oxidation is extremely important applications in Si device technology (very high purity oxide films with high quality Si/Si02 interface are required). ► Thermal oxidation of silicon surfaces produces glassy films of Si02 for protecting highly sensitive p-n junctions and for creating dielectric layers for MOS devices. ► T = 700- 1200 oC ► dry oxygen or water vapour (steam) as the oxidant; steam oxidation proceeds at a much faster rate than dry oxidation ► The oxidation rate is a function of the oxidant partial pressure and is controlled essentially by the rate of oxidant diffusion through the growing Si02 layer interface, resulting in a decrease of the growth rate with increased oxide thickness. ► The process is frequently conducted in the presence of hydrochloric acid vapours or vapours of chlorine-containing organic compounds. The HCI vapour formed acts as an effective impurity getter, improving the Si/Si02 interface properties and stability. ► Si oxidation under elevated pressure is of technological interest where the temperature must be minimized (VLSI devices): oxidation rate of silicon is « p =>* higher product throughput and/or decreased temperatures. Oxidant: H20, p up to 10 atm, T usually 750-950 °C. F4280 Chemical Vapor Deposition Lenka Zajíčková 25/25 5.11 Thermal Forming Processes Gas-phase oxidation of other materials is of limited technical importance, examples: ► Ta films converted by thermal oxidation to tantalum pentoxide for use as antireflection coating in photovoltaic devices and as capacitor elements in microcircuits. ► Other metal oxides grown thermally: capacitor dielectrics in thin-film devices, improve the bonding with glass in glass-to metal seals, improve corrosion resistance.