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Title:
METHOD FOR SEMICONDUCTOR GATE WIDTH REDUCTION
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2004/034442
Kind Code:
A2
Abstract:
To reduce the width of a MOSFET gate, the gate (16) is formed with a hardmask (14) formed thereupon. An isotropic etch is then performed to trim the gate (16) in order to reduce the width of the gate. The resulting gate may be formed with a width that is narrower than a minimum width achievable solely through conventional projection lithography techniques.

Inventors:
BONSER DOUGLAS J
PLAT MARINA V
YANG CHIH YUH
BELL SCOTT A
DAKSHINA-MURTHY SRIKANTESWARA
FISHER PHILIP A
LYONS CHRISTOPHER F
Application Number:
PCT/US2003/023749
Publication Date:
April 22, 2004
Filing Date:
July 29, 2003
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES INC (US)
International Classes:
H01L21/28; (IPC1-7): H01L21/00
Domestic Patent References:
WO2002033739A12002-04-25
Foreign References:
US6013570A2000-01-11
US5741736A1998-04-21
US5650343A1997-07-22
US6362033B12002-03-26
US4795718A1989-01-03
US6140218A2000-10-31
US5089863A1992-02-18
US6091120A2000-07-18
Other References:
PATENT ABSTRACTS OF JAPAN vol. 016, no. 004 (E-1151), 8 January 1992 (1992-01-08) -& JP 03 227024 A (MATSUSHITA ELECTRON CORP), 8 October 1991 (1991-10-08)
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
Collopy, Daniel R. (Inc. One AMD Place, Mail Stop 6, Sunnyvale CA, US)
Wright, Hugh R. (102-108 Clerkenwell Road, London EC1M 5SA, GB)
Download PDF:
Claims:
CLAIMS What is claimed is:
1. A method for forming a MOSFET comprising: providing a substrate having stacked thereupon a gate insulating layer (8), a gate conductive layer (6) and an antireflective layer (4); performing a primary anisotropic etch of the antireflective layer (4) and the gate conductive layer (6) to form a gate (16) having a selfaligned hardmask (14) thereupon; performing a secondary isotropic etch of the gate to narrow the gate (16).
2. The method claimed in claim 1, further comprising removing the hardmask (14).
3. The method claimed in claim 2, further comprising forming respective source and drain diffusions in the substrate.
4. The method claimed in claim 3, further comprising forming an interlevel dielectric layer over the gate and the substrate.
5. The method claimed in claim 4, further comprising forming respective source and drain contacts in contact with the source and drain diffusions.
6. The method claimed in claim 4, wherein the gate (16) is a polysilicon gate, and wherein the method further comprises replacing the polysilicon gate with a metal gate.
7. The method claimed in claim 1, wherein said primary anisotropic etch comprises a first etch of the antireflective layer (4) using a photoresist mask (2) as an etch mask.
8. The method claimed in claim 7, wherein said photoresist etch mask (2) is subjected to an isotropic etch to trim said photoresist mask prior to etching said antireflective layer.
9. A structure formed during fabrication of a MOSFET, comprising: a substrate (10); a gate insulating layer (8) formed over the substrate (10); a gate (16) formed on the gate insulating layer (8); and a hardmask (14) formed on the gate (16), wherein edges of the hardmask (14) extend beyond edges of the gate (16).
Description:
METHOD FOR SEMICONDUCTOR GATE LINE DIMENSION REDUCTION BACKGROUND Field of the Invention Embodiments of the present invention relate to semiconductor fabrication, and in particular, to methods for reducing the width of MOSFET gate structures.

Related Art The demand for increased performance and greater functionality in semiconductors has driven the semiconductor industry to develop processes that pack more and more devices onto a substrate to create higher device densities. One approach to packing more devices onto a substrate is to shrink the size of the individual devices and their components. For example, a MOSFET may be made to operate faster by reducing the width of the gate line that drives it's gate, and hence the channel width of the device.

Improving the lithographic techniques that are used to define device patterns is one focus of this approach. Conventional photolithography techniques such as projection lithography define devices by transferring their patterns to a photoresist material that is coated on a semiconductor substrate. Using a series of optics, an image of a pattern representing an integrated circuit device is projected onto the photoresist.

Current projection lithography is able to reduce critical geometries of the projected images to approximately 100 nm. However, because the demand for higher packing densities and increased performance requires that MOSFET gate widths be reduced below 100 nm, to 50 nm or less, conventional projection lithography techniques for gate formation will soon be inadequate.

Accordingly, recent approaches to further reduction of device dimensions have focused on supplementing conventional projection lithography techniques through additional photoresist processing. One such technique involves trimming a photoresist mask by isotropic etching to reduce the size of the mask beyond the minimum size achievable through projection lithography. An example of this technique is illustrated in Figure 1. As shown in Figure 1, a photoresist mask 2 form defining the shape of a MOSFET gate is formed by projection lithography over a multi-layered structure that includes an antireflective (ARC) layer 4, a gate conductive layer 6 formed of polysilicon, and a gate insulating layer formed of Si02. The multi-layered structure is formed over a semiconductor substrate 10 that includes field isolations 12 that define the boundaries of MOSFET source and drain regions. For purposes of this example, it is assumed that the photoresist mask 2 has the minimum width achievable through projection lithography alone. It can be seen in Figure 1 that through subsequent anisotropic etching using the photoresist mask 2 as an initial etch mask, the width of structures formed by etching the conductive gate material 6 and gate insulator 8 will be limited to the width of the photoresist mask 2. However, in accordance with the gate trim technique, the photoresist mask 2 is subjected to an isotropic etch that removes photoresist material, leaving a trimmed photoresist mask 14. The trimmed photoresist mask 14 is then used to pattern the underlying layers, resulting in a gate that has a width that is less than the minimum width achievable through projection lithography.

The resist trim technique is limited by the fact that a minimum thickness of photoresist is required in order to successfully transfer the shape of the photoresist mask to underlying layers. Accordingly, the improvements in gate size provided by the resist trim technique are also limited.

Consequently, there is a need for further techniques for providing further reductions in gate widths.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE It is an object of the present invention to provide a method for reducing MOSFET gate dimensions.

In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, a gate having a self-aligned hardmask on its top surface is formed by a primary anisotropic etch that uses a photoresist mask as an initial etch mask. A secondary isotropic etch is then performed to trim the gate. The hardmask is then removed, leaving a gate that is narrower than the initial photoresist mask.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Preferred embodiments of the invention will hereafter be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and in which : Figure 1 shows a semiconductor structure formed in accordance with a conventional resist trim technique; Figures 2a, 2b, 2c and 2d show structures formed during processing in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention; and Figure 3 shows a process flow encompassing the preferred embodiment of the invention and alternatives thereto.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Structures formed during processing in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention are shown in Figures 2a-2d. Figure 2a shows a structure similar to that of Figure 1, including a photoresist mask 2, ARC layer 4, gate conductive layer 8, gate insulating layer 8, semiconductor substrate 10, and field isolations 12. In the preferred embodiment the ARC is formed of SiON or silicon rich nitride, the gate conductive layer is doped polysilicon, and the gate insulating layer is Si02.

Figure 2b shows the structure of Figure 2a after a primary anisotropic etch comprising one or more anisotropic etches has been performed to etch the ARC layer and gate conductive layer to form a gate 16 having a self-aligned hardmask 14 thereupon. The ARC layer is typically etched using a combination of Ar and CF4, while the polysilicon is typically etched using a combination of HBr, CL, HE, oxygen and CF4. The photoresist mask is stripped during or after the primary etch.

Figure 2c shows the structure of Figure 2b after a secondary etch of the gate has been performed to narrow the gate 16. The secondary etch is isotropic and is selective with respect to the. gate material so that the ARC 14 is relatively unaffected. This causes the trimming effect of the secondary etch to be approximately uniform along the height of the gate 16. The resulting structure has a trimmed gate that is narrower than the overlying hardmask, such that the edges of the hardmask extend beyond the edges of the gate.

Figure 2d shows the structure of Figure 2c after removal of the hardmask.

After the structure of Figure 2d is formed, additional conventional processing may be performed, such as formation of source and drain diffusions, deposition of an interlevel dielectric, formation of source and drain contacts, and replacement of the polysilicon gate with a metal gate.

While the process flow of Figures 2a-2d is presently considered to be the preferred embodiment of the invention, a wide variety of alternative embodiments in accordance with the invention may be formulated. For

example, the materials used for the ARC/hardmask, conductive gate layer, and gate insulating layer may be varied in accordance with the particular implementation. The ARC/hardmask may be formed of silicon oxide, silicon nitride or silicon oxynitride, while the gate insulating layer may be formed of alternative high k materials such as ZrO.

Further, additional processing may be performed to trim the photoresist mask using the conventional trim process described above prior to etching the ARC and gate conductive layer.

In addition, it will be apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art that the tasks described in the preferred embodiment are not necessarily exclusive of other tasks, but rather that further tasks may be incorporated in accordance with the particular structures to be formed. For example, processing tasks such as seed layer formation, seed layer enhancement, formation and removal of passivation layers or protective layers between processing tasks, formation and removal of photoresist masks and other masking layers such as antireflective layers, formation of isolation structures, as well as other tasks, may be performed along with the tasks specifically described above. Further, the process need not be performed on an entire substrate such as an entire wafer, but rather may be performed selectively on sections of the substrate.

Figure 3 shows a process flow for forming a MOSFET that encompasses the preferred embodiment and its aforementioned alternatives, as well as other alternative embodiments that are not explicitly discussed here but will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. As shown in Figure 3, substrate is initially provided (30). The substrate has stacked thereupon a gate insulating layer, a gate conductive layer and an antireflective layer. A primary anisotropic etch is then performed on the antireflective coating and the gate conductive layer to form a gate having a self-aligned hardmask thereupon (32). A secondary isotropic is then performed on the gate to narrow the gate (34).

While the invention has been described with reference to its preferred embodiments, those skilled in the art will understand and appreciate from the foregoing that variations in equipment, operating conditions and configuration may be made and still fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention which is to be limited only by the claims appended hereto.