Channeling Doping Profiles Studies for Small Incident Angle Implantation into Silicon Wafers B.N. Guo1, N. Variam1, U. Jeong1, S. Mehta1, M. Posselt2, and A. Lebedev2 1 Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, 35 Dory Road Gloucester, MA 01930,USA 2 Forschungszentrum Rossendorf e.V., P.O. Box 510119, D-01314, Dresden, Germany Abstract. Traditional de-channeling dopant profiles in the silicon crystal wafers have been achieved by tilting the wafer away from the incident beam. As feature sizes of device shrink, the advantages for channeled doping profiles for implants with small or near zero degree incident angles are being recognized. For example, high-energy CMOS well spacing limitations caused by shadowing and encroachment of the ion beam by photoresist mask can be avoided for near zero degree incident implants. Accurate models of channeled profiles are essential to predict the device performance. This paper mainly discusses the damage effect on channeled dopant profiles. Especially, damage effects on channeled dopant profiles are correlated to ThermaWave (TW) measurements. It is demonstrated that there is a critical dose at which the damage effects have to be considered for channeled dopant profile evolvements. implemented in the Crystal-TRIM can be found elsewhere [5,6]. INTRODUCTION Traditional de-channeling dopant implants are achieved by tilting and rotating the wafer normal so that the incident ions are implanted into relative random crystal lattice network. As feature sizes of device shrink, the advantages of implants with small or near zero degree incident angles are being recognized. For implants at higher incidence angle, shadowing and encroachments of the ion beam by the photoresist mask or the gate stack cause pattern shifts, well spacing constraints for high-energy well implants, and loss of lateral abruptness and degraded drive current performance for the low energy source/drain extension implants. A precise control of implant incident angle is thus necessary to produce both uniform electrical characteristics across the wafer and enhanced transistor performance [1,2,3]. In an earlier paper, authors discussed briefly the dependence of channeling in the areas of the acceptance angle and incident angle, dopant species, energy, dose and extent of damage induced in the crystal [7]. It was demonstrated that ThermaWave (TW) and Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) results could be used to align the wafer relative to the incident beam to achieve perfectly channeled dopant profiles. Small beam incident deviation from the wafer normal will lead to observable differences in SIMS dopant profiles and such differences cannot be fully compensated with thermal dopant activation process, typical of advanced CMOS fabrication [7]. To understand the channeled dopant profiles, damage effects along with dose accumulation should be fully understood. In the present work, TW and SIMS data are presented to discuss the evolving dopant profiles along with accumulated implanted dose. Simulated dopant profiles based on CrystalTRIM will be provided elsewhere [8]. Near zero incident angle implants result in channeled dopant profiles rather than traditional dechanneled profiles. From a device engineering perspective, accurate models of channeled profiles are becoming more important. Process simulators such as TSUPREM relied on a comprehensive database to generate and predict de-channeled dopant profiles [4]. Atomistic computer simulation codes, such as CrystalTRIM, are of great importance to generate information such as as-implanted range and damage profiles for near zero channeled implants into crystalline silicon substrate. Extensive description of the physical models EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS All SIMS samples are 200mm wafers with only native oxide as the top-layer. Wafers are implanted on VIISta 810 medium-current ion implanter. In the CP680, Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry: 17th Int'l. Conference, edited by J. L. Duggan and I. L. Morgan © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0149-7/03/$20.00 658 As observed in Figure 1, the excellent fitting correlation (R2>0.99) can be obtained for wafers implanted with B at 70, 270, and 540keV. For As and P implants, two different set parameters were used to fit implants with low dose (R2>0.99) and high dose (R2>0.99). For As implants, it seems that the saturation of TW reached for implants above 5e13/cm2 implants. VIISta platform of ion implanters, beam parallelism and beam incident angles are both measured and controlled with Faraday systems, magnetic beam angle corrector system, and software. The wafer position accuracy is controlled in a precise fashion to ±0.1°. A series of wafers were implanted at 0° tilt and 0° rotation relative to <100> wafer normal with B at 70, 270, and 540keV, P at 270 and 540keV, As at 120 and 270keV, with doses range from 5e11 to 1e14 /cm2. All implants with dose less than 5e13/cm2 were completed within the same beam setup, and beam currents were raised for higher dose implants. Careful alignment was performed before implanting sample wafers. All wafers were measured with ThermaProbe TP320. Selected wafers were measured with SIMS for doping profiles. Since the damages are related to the energy loss through nuclear stopping power, the damage accumulation for the same energy projectiles is much more rapid for heavy ions such as As than that for relative light ions such as P and B. Damage effects on channeling will enter into play significantly at the critical dose above which the TW behavior deviates from that described by Eq. 2. This is further illustrated in the SIMS results described in Figure 2-Figure 4 (B/P/As SIMS profiles at 270keV for selected doses). In Figure 2 and Figure 3, all SIMS profiles for B and P at 270keV are scaled relative to 1e13/cm2. If there were no effect of damage accumulation, then the SIMS profiles should have similar shapes after scaling. For B 270keV at dose below 1e14/cm2, it is clearly shown that there is no significant profile evolvement with dose accumulation. Scaled SIMS profile for 1e12/cm2 is different from profiles with higher dose due to the SIMS detection limits and measurement statistics. RESULTS ThermaWave (TW) measurement is a widely used metrology to characterize dopant uniformity across wafers, especially at lower implanted dose for dechanneling implants. In TW measurements, in-depth defects or implant-induced damages were correlated with variations of laser reflectance through between laser generated thermal-wave (photo-induced heat) and plasma wave (electron-hole pairs) interaction with defects or damages. TW sensitivity is define as (TW2 − TW1 ) TW Sensitivity = ( Dose2 − Dose1 ) (TW2 + TW1 ) For P, 270keV, accumulated dose leads to less channeled profiles and damage-induced effects are observed for implanted dose above 1e13/cm2. As previous data shown with implants P 800keV, 0° tilt at various doses [7], the damage below dose of 1e13/cm2 for P implant between 270 to 800keV is not significant. Damage effects on SIMS profiles should be considered for P implants with dose above 1e13/cm2. (1) ( Dose2 + Dose1 ) Studies on TW sensitivities for no-channeling implants were reported previous [9]. However, there are no extensive studies on TW sensitivities at normal incident channeling implants. Figure 4 is a plot of SIMS profiles for As 270keV implants at 0° tilt. By scaling SIMS profile at dose of 1e12/cm2 (negligible damage effects), it is observed that damage effect on the SIMS profiles should be considered for As dose as low as 3e12/cm2. TW results for 0° implants as described above are plotted against implanted doses in Figure 1. Since lattice damage accumulates with implanted dose, the channeled dopant profiles evolve as a function of implant dose. Assumption had been made that TW sensitivity should be constant if there were no significant damage induced effects. The TW response curve can be fitted with a simple power function, TW = a * Dose b From SIMS profiles as shown in Figure 2-Figure 4 and TW response with accumulated dose in Figure 1, there is a correlation for damage induced dopant profile evolvements and implant sensitivity for 0° implants. Similar correlations are also observed in the other implants shown in Figure 1 and results will be presented elsewhere [8]. TW sensitivity for 0° implants is expected to be a constant for low dose implants. Accumulated dose will lead to evolving SIMS profiles and changing TW sensitivity (2) Mathematically, TW sensitivity is equal to power index, b, for such power function. 659 established by low dose implants. For high-energy B implants, it is not necessary to consider the damageinduced effects for implants below 1e14/cm2. Since all implants above 5e13/cm2 were performed at higher beam currents (~5 times higher than others), similar SIMS profiles imply that 0° tilt B implants are not sensitivity to beam current variations. For P and As implants, damage induced profile evolvements should be considered for implant doses above 1e13/cm2 and 3e12/cm2, respectively. 1E+18 <=1e14 Scaled to 1e13 1e12 Concentration (atoms/cc) 1E+17 1.0E+04 1E+16 1E+15 1E+14 1E+13 TWU 0 1.0E+03 As 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Depth (um) 1.2 1.4 1.6 Figure 2. Damage effects on evolving SIMS profiles for B, 270keV, 0° tilt with implant doses from 1e12 to 1e14/cm2. All SIMS profiles are scaled relative to 1e13/cm2 for comparison. 120keV 270keV 270keV P 540keV B 1.0E+02 1.0E+11 1E+18 70keV 270keV 540keV 1e13 1E+17 1.0E+12 1.0E+13 1.0E+14 <5e12 Concentration (atoms/cc) Dose Figure 1. TW plot for 0° tilt implants as a function of accumulated implant doses (from 5e11 to 1e14/cm2). Implant conditions include B at 70, 270, 540keV, P at 270, 540keV, and As at 120, 270keV. 5e13 1E+16 1e14 1E+15 DISCUSSIONS To achieve uniformly channeling dopant profiles across the wafer, the beam incident angles should be tightly controlled. Small angle deviation from normal <100> direction will lead to differential channeled profiles across the wafer, and such differences cannot be smoothed out by thermal dopant activation process. TW measurement can be used as a means to align beam direction with wafer incident angle [7]. 1E+14 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 Depth (um) 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 Figure 3. Damage effects on evolving SIMS profiles for P, 270keV, 0° tilt with accumulated implant doses from 1e12 to 1e14/cm2. All SIMS profiles are scaled relative to 1e13/cm2 for comparison. 660 REFERENCES 1E+19 1e14 1. U. Jeong, J.-Y. Jin, and Sandeep Mehta, “Devices dictate control of implant-beam incident angle,” Solid State Technology, Oct. 2001. 5e13 1E+18 Concentration (atoms/cc) 1e13 5e12 1E+17 2. T. Yamashita, M. Kitazawa, Y Kawasaki, H. Takashino, T. Kuroi, Y. Inoue, and M. Inuishi, “Advanced retrograde well technology for 90-nm-node embedded static random access memory using high-energy parallel beam”, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 41, Part 1, No. 4B, 2399, (2002). 1e12 Scaled to 3e12 1E+16 1e12 3. U. Jeong, S. Mehta, C. Campbell, R. Lindberg, Z. Zhao, B. Cusson, and J. Buller, “Effects of beam incident angle control on NMOS source/drain extension applications,” 14th International Conference on Ion Implanatation Technology, Tao, New Mexico, USA, September 22-27, 2002. (to be published) 1E+15 1E+14 1E+13 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 4. TSUPREM Process simulator, Avant! Corporation. 2.5 Depth (um) 5. M. Posselt, B. Schmidt, C.S. Murthy, T. Feudel, K. Suzuki, “Modeling of damage accumulation during ion implantation into single-crystalline silicon,” J. Electrochem. Soc., Vol. 144, No. 4, 1496, (1997). Figure 4. Damage effects on evolving SIMS profiles for As, 270keV, 0° tilt with accumulated implant doses from 1e12 to 1e14/cm2. SIMS profile with implanted dose of 1e12/cm2 was scaled to 3e12/cm2 to match SIMS channeling tails. 6. M. Posselt, B. Schmidt, T. Feudel , and N. Strecker, “Atomistic simulation of ion implantation and its application in Si technology,” Materials Science and Engineering B71, 128, (2000). Damage effects on the evolving channeled dopant profiles with accumulated dose are correlated with TW results. For B implants at 0° tilt, damage effects on SIMS profiles can be negligible or SIMS profiles can be scaled for implants with dose below 1e14/cm2. For P and As implants at 0° tilt, damage effects on SIMS profiles have to be considered for implanted dose above 1e13/cm2 and 3e12/cm2, respectively. 7. B.N. Guo, N. Variam, U. Jeong, S. Mehta, M. Posselt, and A. Lebedev, “Experimental and simulation studies of the channeling phenomena for high energy implantation,” 14th International Conference on Ion Implanatation Technology, Tao, New Mexico, USA, September 22-27, 2002. (to be published) 8. B.N. Guo, N. Variam, U. Jeong, S. Mehta, M. Posselt, and A. Lebedev, “Studies of channeled dopant profile evolvements with damage accumulation,” to be submitted to Applied Physics Letters. Crystal-TRIM simulation results will be reported with suitable empirical parameters and compared against SIMS measurements [8]. Such simulations can be used to generate more accurate look-up database for channeled dopant and damage profiles to facilitate process development after calibrated with SIMS dopant profiles. 9. S. Falk, R. Callahan, P. Lindquist, “Accurate dose matching measurements between different ion implanters,” Proceedings of 11th International Conference on Ion Implanatation Technology, Austin, Texas, USA, June 16-21, 1996. IEEE Cat. No. 96TH8182, 268, (1996). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Authors would like to thank our demonstration and strategic applications team and Application Lab of VSEA for their technical suggestion and supports. 661
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