LPCVD Silicon Nitride and Oxynitride Films


Book Description

The present book collects a broad overview of chemical and physical char acteristics of silicon oxynitrides. Special emphasis is put on the way in which these properties influence the electrical characteristics and behaviour of this important material. The results presented here were obtained in an ex tended European research cooperation in the framework of ESPRIT Project 369 'Physical-chemical characterization of silicon oxynitrides in relation to their electrical properties', which ran from 1984 to 1988. In this project two industrial laboratories (Philips Research Laborato ries in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, and Matra Harris Semiconductors from Nantes, France) cooperated with various academic and government research laboratories (Harwell Laboratory in Great Britain, the Interuniversity Micro electronics Center (IMEC) in Leuven, Belgium, and the Faculty of Physics at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands). The latter partner acted as prime contractor for the project. General interest in silicon oxynitrides for applications in integrated circuit technology stems from the fact that proper choice of deposition conditions enables one to produce materials with properties which can be either oxide like or nitride-like. Of, course, in I.C. technology one would like to combine the good properties ofthe two materials, i.e. superior electrical properties of silicon oxide and good diffusion barrier behaviour of silicon nitride, to men tion only a few, without paying for such an operation by obtaining all the less desirable properties in such a mixed material.




LPCVD Silicon Nitride and Oxynitride Films


Book Description

The present book collects a broad overview of chemical and physical char- acteristics of silicon oxynitrides. Special emphasis is put on the way in which these properties influence the electrical characteristics and behaviour of this important material. The results presented here were obtained in an ex- tended European research cooperation in the framework of ESPRIT Project 369 'Physical-chemical characterization of silicon oxynitrides in relation to their electrical properties', which ran from 1984 to 1988. In this project two industrial laboratories (Philips Research Laborato- ries in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, and Matra Harris Semiconductors from Nantes, France) cooperated with various academic and government research laboratories (Harwell Laboratory in Great Britain, the Interuniversity Micro- electronics Center (IMEC) in Leuven, Belgium, and the Faculty of Physics at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands). The latter partner acted as prime contractor for the project. General interest in silicon oxynitrides for applications in integrated circuit technology stems from the fact that proper choice of deposition conditions enables one to produce materials with properties which can be either oxide- like or nitride-like. Of, course, in I.C. technology one would like to combine the good properties ofthe two materials, i.e. superior electrical properties of silicon oxide and good diffusion barrier behaviour of silicon nitride, to men- tion only a few, without paying for such an operation by obtaining all the less desirable properties in such a mixed material.






















The Bonding Structure and Compositional Analysis of Plasma Enhanced and Low Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposited Silicon Dielectric Films


Book Description

Silicon dielectric films such as silicon nitride, oxide and oxynitride films deposited by Plasma Enhanced and Low Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD and LPCVD) processes were analyzed and compared using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR), X-ray Photoelectron, Auger, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopies and Nuclear Reaction Analysis for hydrogen. The plasma deposited films exhibit a more random structure with less long-range order and contain more hydrogen as compared to those of LPCVD films. However, marked similarities were observed in the bonding and its variation in films deposited by both processes. Analysis data indicates that the silicon oxynitride films (RI-1.75-1.78), deposited by both processes, may be the most stable oxynitride where mixed silicon oxynitride tetrahedral N2-Si-O2 bonding structures are most abundant.