THERMAL OXIDATION
is a chemical process, where silicon dioxide (SiO)
is grown in an ambient with elevated temperatures. A simple form of thermal oxidation
even takes place at room temperature, if silicon is exposed to an oxygen or air
ambient. There, a thin native oxide layer with 0.5-1nm will form on the surface
rapidly. After that, the growth slows down and effectively stops after a few
hours with a final thickness in the order of 1-2nm, because the oxygen atoms
have too small energy at room temperature to diffuse through the already formed
oxide layer.SiO
is used
to isolate one device from another, to act as gate oxide
in MOS structures, and to serve as a structured mask against implant
of dopant atoms. In the beginning of this chapter is described, why thermal
grown SiO
is the most suitable material for
such requirements. This chapter will focus on thermal oxidation, but it should
be mentioned that SiO
layers
can also be produced by deposition techniques, like chemical vapor deposition.
Deposition normally involves a much smaller thermal budget than thermal
oxidation and so it is the only option when wafers have already metal on them.
Usually deposited oxides are not used for thin layers under 10nm because the
control of the deposition process is not so good as the thermal oxidation
process. Another disadvantage is the interface between a deposited oxide and
the underlying silicon, which is electrically not so good as thermal oxide.
Furthermore, deposited oxide does not have the same high density as thermal
grown oxide. Thermal oxidation is a complex process where a diffusion of
oxidants, a chemical reaction, and a volume increase occur simultaneously to
convert the silicon substrate into SiO
. This
process is strongly influenced by the used oxidant species, the oxidation
ambient with temperature and pressure, and also the crystal orientation of the
substrate. With these parameters the quality and the growth of the oxide during
the manufacturing process can be controlled. The small dimensions and high
performance of modern MOS devices require ultrathin SiO
layers for gate dielectrics. Apart
from the exact thickness control, pure SiO
has
some difficulties to fulfill all requirements at such thin thicknesses.
Especially the dopant penetration and direct tunneling for ultrathin oxides can
not be handled. It was found that silicon oxynitrides are more suitable
materials for such applications. Oxynitrides can be produced by different
methods which depend on the desired nitrogen profile and, therefore, on the
application.