Abstract
For advanced Cu interconnect technology, Co films have been widely investigated to serve as the liner and seed layer replacement because of a better wettability to Cu than Ta. In this article, the Co films are grown by plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition using Co(EtCp)2 as a precursor, and the influences of process parameters on the characteristics of the Co films are elaborately investigated. The results indicate that the process window is 125–225 °C with a growth rate of ~ 0.073 Å/cycle. That is to say, the connection of Et group to Cp ligand can enable a stable film growth at 125 °C, while the corresponding temperature must be higher than 200 °C in terms of Co(Cp)2 and Co(MeCp)2. The deposited films contain N and O elements besides dominant Co and C. Furthermore, the prolongation of the NH3 pulse time significantly enhances the conductivity of the Co film and a low resistivity of 117 μΩ cm can be achieved with a NH3 pulse time of 40 s. The root mean square roughness shows a smaller variation with the deposition temperature and maintains a low value of ~ 0.3 nm, indicative of a flat Co film.
Background
Considering the conventional Cu interconnect process in high-speed ultra-large scale integrated circuits, a barrier layer such as TaN is indispensable to prevent the diffusion of Cu atoms into the surrounding interlayer dielectrics (ILD) [1]. Besides the barrier layer, a liner layer like Ta is also necessary to enhance the adhesion between the barrier layer and Cu. In addition, it is difficult for the Cu line to be deposited on the liner layer by electroplating directly due to the weak nucleation of Cu atoms on the Ta surface. As a consequence, a Cu seed layer is needed to be coated on the liner layer prior to the electroplating of Cu. That is to say, a stack of TaN/Ta/Cu seed layer must be inserted between the ILD and Cu line. Furthermore, this stack is coated on the ILD patterned as trenches and vias. With the downscaling of the device feature size, the volume available for Cu interconnect line steadily decreases. In order to achieve a lower Cu interconnect resistance, seedless barrier/liner layer has been widely investigated [2,3,4,5,6]. For example, TaN still works as the barrier layer and Co replaces Ta as the liner layer. Due to a better wettability of Co to Cu than Ta, Cu can be electroplated on the Co surface directly. Traditionally, the barrier/liner layer is grown by physical vapor deposition process. However, deposition of a high-quality barrier/liner layer is challenging since PVD has a poor step coverage rate in high aspect ratio trenches and vias. Instead, ultrathin, continuous and good step coverage films can be obtained by atomic layer deposition (ALD) technique thanks to the self-limiting growth property [7].
In terms of ALD Co films, a large number of Co precursors, especially the ones based on cyclopentadienyl ligand (Cp), have been widely studied, such as bis-cyclopentadienyl cobalt (CoCp2) [8,9,10,11,12,13,14], bis(η-methylcyclopentadienyl) cobalt [Co(MeCp)2] [15], and cyclopentadienyl isopropyl acetamidinato cobalt [Co(CpAMD)] [16]. The employment of CoCp2 enables the growth of Co films with a low resistivity and high purity; however, the stable film growth is limited to the temperatures beyond 250 °C. With the addition of methyl group to the Cp ligand, a lower temperature growth can be achieved at 200 °C, which is attributed to the higher reactivity of NH3 radical to the MeCp ligand compared with Cp ligand. On the basis of Co film growth with CoCp2 and Co(MeCp)2 as precursors, the process window could be moved to lower temperatures, i.e., < 200 °C if ethyl group is connected to the Cp ligand.
In this work, Co thin films were grown by plasma-enhanced ALD (PE-ALD) using bis(ethylcyclopentadienyl) cobalt [Co(EtCp)2] and NH3 plasma as precursors. The influence of different process parameter on the characteristics of the Co films was elaborately investigated. As a result, a process window of 125–225 °C was achieved successfully. In addition, the Co films exhibit a lower resistivity (~ 130 μΩ cm).
Methods
Various Co thin films were grown by PE-ALD on a 200 nm SiO2 film, which was deposited on p-type silicon substrates by thermal oxidation. Co(EtCp)2 was used as the metal precursor, which was stored in a container at 70 °C and transferred into the deposition chamber with a N2 carrier gas. The NH3 plasma was generated by a remote plasma generator under a power of 2800 W, acting as the reducing agent. The flow rate of N2 was kept at 50 sccm, and the working pressure was ~ 1000 Pa during the film growth. To investigate the effect of deposition temperature on the film growth, the substrate temperature was varied from 100 to 270 °C with a step of 25 °C. Moreover, to optimize the process parameters, the pulse times of Co(EtCp)2 and NH3 plasma were also changed, respectively. In addition, in order to investigate the effect of post annealing on the Co films performance, the samples deposited at different temperatures were annealed in the forming gas (N2/4%-H2) at 400 °C for 30 min.
The thickness and density of the film were deduced by X-ray reflection, and the microstructure of the film was determined by grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (XRD) on a diffractometer (Bruker D8 Discover) with Cu Kα radiation. The surface morphology of the film was observed with atomic force microscopy (AFM) (Bruker Icon) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) (Zeiss SIGAMA HD). The elemental composition and chemical bonds of the film were analyzed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) (Kratos Axis Ultra DLD). The sheet resistance of the film was measured by four-point-probe, and the film resistivity was calculated based on the film thickness and the sheet resistance.
Results and Discussion
Optimization of the ALD Process Parameters
Figure 1a shows the growth rate of the Co film as a function of substrate temperature. It is found that the growth rate increases upon increasing the substrate temperature to 125 °C, and then a relatively stable growth rate of 0.073 ± 0.02 Å/cycle is obtained between 125 and 225 °C. However, when the substrate temperature goes up to 250 °C or higher, the growth rate is increased. Therefore, the temperature range of 125–225 °C can be considered as an appropriate process window. Compared with Co(Cp)2 and Co(MeCp)2, the addition of Et group to Cp ligand enables the process window moved to a lower deposition temperature, indicating a higher reactivity of EtCp ligands with NH3 plasma. Such low temperature growth at 125 °C is beneficial to reducing the thermal budget. Regarding the substrate temperatures lower than 125 °C, the relatively slower film growth should be ascribed to the lack of adequate activation energy for the chemical reaction [7]. Such a high growth rate at ≥ 250 °C is related to thermal decomposition of the metal precursor [17]. To investigate the influence of Co(EtCp)2 pulse time on the growth rate of the deposited film, the pulse time of Co(EtCp)2 increases gradually from 1 to 4 s with a step of 1 s while other process parameters are fixed. As shown in Fig. 1b, the growth rate increases from ~ 0.06 to ~ 0.073 Å/cycle with the increment of Co(EtCp)2 pulse time from 1 to 2 s, and then maintains a relatively stable value. This indicates that the surface adsorption of Co(EtCp)2 attains a saturation at a pulse time of 2 s. Figure 1b also illustrates the influence of NH3-plasma pulse time on the growth rate of the film. The growth rate increases with prolonging NH3-plasma pulse time; however, when the plasma pulse time exceeds 20 s, the growth rate reaches a saturation value of ~ 0.12 Å/cycle.
Characterization of the Deposited Co Films
Figure 2 shows the survey XPS spectra of the films deposited at 175 °C. The deposited films consist of Co, N, O, and C elements. It is worthwhile to mention that to completely remove the surface contamination, all the samples were etched in situ with Ar ion bombardment for 6 min prior to the collection of XPS spectra. Table 1 lists the elemental percentages of the film deposited at 175 °C with the etching time and the C and O contents remain constant after 6 min of etching, indicating a complete removal of surface contamination. Table 2 lists the elemental atom ratio of the films grown at 100 and 175 °C, respectively, which are extracted from the high-resolution XPS spectra. As the substrate temperature increases from 100 to 175 °C, the relative content of C decreases from 40 to 32% and the elemental percentage of N increases from 14 to 18%. Moreover, the relative percentage of O shows a slight increment from 5 to 7%. The higher C contents should be ascribed to the part removal of the EtCp ligands [15, 16]. Since there is no O element in the precursors, the O atoms in the deposited films are probably originated from the oxygen in the reaction chamber.
Figure 3a shows high-resolution C 1s spectra of the films deposited at different temperatures. The C 1s spectrum can be well divided into four components at 283.2, 284.7, 286.1 ± 0.1 eV, and 288.9 eV, which result from C-Co [12], C-C [12, 18], C-N [15, 19], and C-O [12] bonds, respectively. As the temperature increases from 100 to 175 °C, the relative content of C-C bond decreases from 61 to 56%, whereas those of C-Co, C-N, and C-O increase by 1%, 2%, and 2%, respectively. This reveals that more EtCp ligands were decomposed at a higher temperature, thus leading to the reduction of the relative percentage of C in the film. Figure 3b shows the high-resolution N 1s spectra of the films deposited at different temperatures. Each N 1s spectrum can be well separated into two components using the Gaussian-Lorentzian function. The peak located at 397.8 eV should be associated to N-Co bond [13], and the peaks centered at 399.2 eV should be corresponding to N-C [20, 21] bond. As the substrate temperature increases from 100 to 175 °C, the relative content of N-Co decreases from 72 to 69%. This is because the desorption of nitrogen from the film is enhanced at higher temperature, resulting in the formation of less N-Co bonds. Figure 3c shows high-resolution Co 2p3/2 XPS spectra of the Co films deposited at different temperatures. Regarding the existence of the C-Co and N-Co bonds, as revealed in Fig. 3a, b, it is reasonable that the Co 2p3/2 spectrum can be separated into three components, which are located at 778, 778.9, and 780.86 ± 0.34 eV, respectively. The peak at the smallest binding energy should be attributed to the Co-Co bond [12, 22]. Furthermore, since the Pauling electronegativity of C (2.55) is smaller than that of N (3.04), the positive charge density on Co bonded to N is larger than that on Co bonded to C. Therefore, the peaks at 778.9 and 780.86 ± 0.34 eV should arise from the Co-C and Co-N bonds, respectively. When the deposition temperature is increased from 100 to 175 °C, the relative content of Co-N bond decreases from 48 to 32%, which is consistent with the evolution of N-Co bond in Fig. 3b.
The crystal properties of the Co films are characterized by TEM, as shown in Fig. 4. The Co films deposited at 100 and 250 °C, respectively, are both crystallized. Figure 5 shows the AFM pictures of the Co films grown at different temperatures. As the deposition temperature increases from 100 to 250 °C, the root mean square (RMS) roughness shows a smaller variation and maintains a low value of ~ 0.3 nm, indicative of a flat Co film.
Figure 6a, b shows the dependence of the resistivity of the Co films on the substrate temperature and NH3 pulse time. The film resistivity remarkably reduces from 652 to 130 Ω cm and then keeps constant with increasing the deposition temperature from 100 to 275 °C. The results should be attributed to the increase in the relative content of metallic Co in the film. As the NH3 pulse time increases from 10 to 40 s, the resistivity of the Co films decreases from 158 to 117 μΩ cm (see Fig. 6b). Figure 7 shows the Co 2p3/2 XPS spectra of the Co films deposited with different NH3 plasma times. As the NH3 plasma time is prolonged from 10 to 40 s, the relative percentage of the Co-Co bonds increases from 31 to 34%, and the relative content of the Co-C bonds decreases from 40 to 31%. Furthermore, the carbon content decreases by 22% as the NH3 plasma pulse time increases from 10 to 40 s. This indicates the gradually increased removal of the EtCp ligands, thus contributing to the decrease of the Co film resistivity.
Table 3 shows the performance comparison of the Co films grown by different precursors. Compared with CoCp2 and Co(MeCp)2, Co(EtCp)2 enables the atomic layer deposition of Co films at a lower temperature. In addition, using the metal precursor of Co(EtCp)2 leads to a smaller growth rate. Theoretically, the ALD process is the growth of monolayer by monolayer. In fact, the steric hindrance effect and surface adsorption of precursors both affect the film growth. In terms of the steric hindrance effect, it means that the ligands of the chemisorbed metal precursor species can shield partial surface, and prevent other metal precursor species from being adsorbed fully on the substrate surface. Since Co(EtCp)2 has a larger ligand compared with CoCp2 and Co(MeCp)2, it is assumed that a significant steric hindrance effect will occur during the ALD process. This can lead to the growth of sub-monolayer, thus resulting in a smaller growth rate. On the other hand, since a Co liner layer should be deposited on a TaN barrier layer for the future practical applications, 1200 cycles of Co films were grown on the ALD TaN film at 125 °C. Figure 8 shows the cross-sectional TEM image of the Co film deposited on the TaN surface. It is observed that the Co film is continuous and uniform, revealing a superior growth behavior. Further, it is found that the thickness (about 10 nm) of the Co film deposited on the ALD TaN film is similar to that grown on the SiO2 surface.
Conclusions
The growth of Co thin film is devolved by PE-ALD using the precursors of Co(EtCp)2, and the influence of process parameters on the characteristics of the Co films were investigated. The addition of Et group to Cp ligand enables the process window moved to a lower deposition temperature of 125 °C. Moreover, the Co films are composed of Co and C element together with some N and O elements. With increasing the deposition temperature, the EtCp ligands are removed more sufficiently and the relative elemental percentage of C is decreased. As a consequence, the resistivity of the deposited Co films reduces from 652 to 130 μΩ cm and then remains a stable value when the substrate temperature is increased from 100 to 275 °C. For the deposition temperature of 125 °C, the resistivity is gradually decreased with the prolongation of NH3 pulse time and a low resistivity of 117 μΩ cm can be obtained when a NH3 pulse time of 40 s is used. The root mean square roughness shows a smaller variation with the deposition temperature and maintains a low value of ~ 0.3 nm, indicative of a flat Co film.
Abbreviations
- AFM:
-
Atomic force microscopy
- ALD:
-
Atomic layer deposition
- Co(CpAMD):
-
Cyclopentadienyl isopropyl acetamidinato cobalt
- Co(EtCp)2 :
-
Bis(ethylcyclopentadienyl) cobalt
- Co(MeCp)2 :
-
Bis(η-methylcyclopentadienyl) cobalt
- CoCp2 :
-
Bis-cyclopentadienyl cobalt
- Cp:
-
Cyclopentadienyl
- ILD:
-
Interlayer dielectric
- PE:
-
Plasma-enhanced
- RMS:
-
Root mean square
- SEM:
-
Scanning electron microscope
- XPS:
-
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
- XRD:
-
X-ray diffraction
References
The International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) 2.0 (Semiconductor Industry Association, 2015): Interconnect. http://www.itrs2.net.
Jang KT, Lee SY, Na SK et al (2018) Electromigration characteristics and morphological evolution of Cu interconnects on CVD Co and Ru liners for 10-nm class VLSI technology. IEEE Electr Device L 39:1050–1053
Su YH, Kuo TC, Lee WH et al (2017) Effect of tungsten incorporation in cobalt tungsten alloys as seedless diffusion barrier materials. Microelectron Eng 172:25–30
Wislicenus M, Liske R, Gerlich L et al (2015) Cobalt advanced barrier metallization: a resistivity composition analysis. Microelectron Eng 137:11–15
Chakraborty T, Eisenbraun ET (2012) Microstructure analysis of plasma enhanced atomic layer deposition-grown mixed-phase RuTaN barrier for seedless copper electrodeposition. J Vac Sci Technol A 30:020604
Qu XP, Tan JJ, Zhou M et al (2006) Improved barrier properties of ultrathin Ru film with TaN interlayer for copper metallization. Appl Phys Lett 88:151912
George SM (2010) Atomic layer deposition: an overview. Chem Rev 110:111–131
Vos MFJ, Straaten G, Kessels WMME et al (2018) Atomic layer deposition of cobalt using H2-, N2-, and NH3-based plasmas: on the role of the co-reactant. J Phys Chem C 122:22519–22529
Yoon J, Song JG, Kim H et al (2015) Plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition of co on metal surfaces. Surf Coat Technol 264:60–65
Yoon J, Lee HBR, Kim D et al (2011) Atomic layer deposition of co using N2/H2 plasma as a reactant. J Electrochem Soc 158:1179–1182
Shimizu H, Sakoda K, Momose T et al (2012) Hot-wire-assisted atomic layer deposition of a high quality cobalt film using cobaltocene: elementary reaction analysis on NHx radical formation. J Vac Sci Technol A 30:01A144
Lee HBR, Kim H (2006) High-quality cobalt thin films by plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition. Electrochem Solid-State Lett 9:323–325
Oh IK, Kim H, Lee HBR (2017) Growth mechanism of Co thin films formed by plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition using NH3 as plasma reactant. Curr Appl Phys 17:333–338
Lee HBR, Park YJ, Baik S et al (2012) Initial stage growth during plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition of cobalt. Chem Vap Depos 18:41–45
Park J, Lee HBR, Kim D et al (2013) Plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition of co using Co(MeCp)2 precursor. J Energy Chem 22:403–407
Kim JM, Lee HBR, Lansalot C et al (2010) Plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition of cobalt using cyclopentadienyl isopropyl acetamidinato-cobalt as a precursor. Jpn J Appl Phys 49:05FA10
Wang YP, Ding ZJ, Liu QX et al (2016) Plasma-assisted atomic layer deposition and post-annealing enhancement of low resistivity and oxygen-free nickel Nano-films using nickelocene and Ammonia precursors. J Mater Chem C 4:11509–11066
Aoi Y, Ono K, Kamijo E (1999) Preparation of amorphous CNx thin films by pulsed laser deposition using a radio frequency radical beam source. J Appl Phys 86:2138–2140
Beshkov G, Dimitrov DB, Georgier S et al (1999) XPS spectra of thin CNx films prepared by chemical vapor deposition. Diam Relat Mater 8:591–594
Perez-Luna VH, Kohn J, Graham DJ et al (2002) Poly(desaminotyrosyl-tyrosine carbonate ethyl ester) studied by XPS. Surf Sci Spectra 9:6–11
Goto Y, Taniguchi K, Omata T et al (2008) Formation of Ni3C nanocrystals by thermolysis of nickel acetylacetonate in oleylamine: characterization using hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Chem Mater 20:4156–4160
Ryu SW, Kim S, Yoon J et al (2016) Area-selective chemical vapor deposition of Co for Cu capping layer. Curr Appl Phys 16:88–92
Acknowledgements
There is no acknowledgement.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Key Technologies R&D Program of China (2015ZX02102-003), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (61874029), and the Project funded by China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2018M641925).
Availability of Data and Materials
All datasets are presented in the main paper and freely available to any scientist wishing to use them for non-commercial purposes, without breaching participant confidentiality.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
BZ and Z-JD carried out the main part of fabrication and analytical works. XW and W-JL participated in the sequence alignment and drafted the manuscript. DWZ and S-JD conceived the study and participated in its design. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing Interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Zhu, B., Ding, ZJ., Wu, X. et al. Plasma-Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition of Cobalt Films Using Co(EtCp)2 as a Metal Precursor. Nanoscale Res Lett 14, 76 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s11671-019-2913-2
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s11671-019-2913-2