Specific Process Knowledge/Thin film deposition/Deposition of Silicon Oxide

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All contents by DTU Nanolab staff.

Silicon Oxide can be deposited here at DTU Nanolab by LPCVD, PECVD, sputtering, or e-beam evaporation. In our cleanroom it is also possible to grow silicon oxide using a silicon surface as a starting point. This can be done with wet chemistry in a beaker (see below), or as a thermal oxide in a hot furnace.

Deposition of Silicon Oxide using LPCVD

The LPCVD oxide you can deposit at DTU Nanolab is called TEOS oxide. It can be made in the LPCVD TEOS furnace. It is a batch process meaning you can run a batch of 13 wafers at a time. The deposition takes place at temperatures of 725 degrees Celsius. The TEOS oxide has good step coverage and hole filing/covering properties and the film thickness is very uniform over the wafer. We have two standard TEOS processes: One for depositing standard layers ~(0-1.5 µm) and one for deposition thick layers ~(1.5µm-4µm). The TEOS oxide has a dielectric constant very close to the one for thermal oxide (3.65 for TEOS).

Deposition of Silicon Oxide using PECVD

PECVD oxide can be deposited in one of the PECVD systems. You can run 1-3 wafers at a time depending on which one of the PECVD's you use. The deposition takes place at 300 °C. This can be of importance for some applications but it gives a less dense film and the oxide is expected to have some hydrogen incorporated. The step coverage and thickness uniformity of the film is not as good as for the LPCVD TEOS oxide. PECVD oxide has excellent floating properties when doped with boron and/or phosphorus. Then it can be used, e.g., as top cladding for waveguides or encapsulation of various structures/components. In one of our PECVD systems (PECVD3) we allow small amounts of metal on the wafers entering the system, which is not allowed in the LPCVD and in PECVD4.

Deposition of Silicon Oxide using sputter deposition

At DTU Nanolab we sputter silicon oxide in the Sputter-System (Lesker) or the Sputter-System Metal Oxide(PC1). An advantage of sputtering is that you can deposit on many kinds of material.

Formerly we also had the option to sputter silicon oxide using the IBE Ionfab300. You can read more about that here.

Deposition of Silicon Oxide using e-beam evaporation

It is possible to e-beam evaporate silicon dioxide at Nanolab using the E-beam evaporator (10-pockets). You can use silicon dioxide pellets as a starting point or silicon with an oxygen flow - in the latter case we expect the resultant films to be oxygen poor. As with sputtering you can deposit on almost any material. In e-beam evaporation the deposition is line-of-sight and will be suitable for lift-off. However for 8" wafers the system is not optimized for lift-off on the full diameter of the wafer.

Wet SiO2 growth

Link to risk assessment and procedure in Labmanager (password needed)

Wet SiO2 growth using hot HNO3.

Done in fume hood 1 or 2 in D-3. Growth rate is 1,5 - 2 nm on 10 min

Training and risk assessment always needed

Deposition of Silicon Oxide using ALD

Formerly it was possible to deposit thin films of silicon oxide up to 50 nm in the ALD2. This is unfortunately no longer possible. You can read about the results of depositions in the past here: Deposition of Silicon Oxide using ALD2.


Comparison of the methods for deposition of Silicon Oxide

LPCVD(TEOS) PECVD Sputter System Lesker Sputter-system Metal-Oxide(PC1) E-beam evaporation (E-beam evaporator (10-pockets)) Wet SiO2 growth in hot HNO3
General description Low Presure Chemical Vapor Deposition TEOS gives a good quality SiO2 and is a batch process. Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition has the advantage that a silicon oxide and be deposited with a quite high deposition rate at a rather low temperature Sputter deposition: can be done on top of a large range of materials Sputter deposition: can be done on top of a large range of materials. E-beam evaporation: line-of-sight deposition on top of a large range of materials. Wet SiO2 growth using hot HNO3. Done in fume hood 1 or 2 in D-3. Training and risk assessment always needed
Stochiometry
  • SiO2
  • SixOyHz

Can be doped with boron, phosphorus or germanium

  • Slightly O-poor as deposited non-reactively (O:Si=64:36), may be tunable if reactively sputtered with O2 (see acceptance test results here)
  • to be verified; may depend on O2 flow
  • SiO2
Film thickness range
  • ~300 nm - 4 µm
  • ~40 nm - 30 µm
  • Thin layers (up to 200-300 nm)
  • Thin layers (up to 200-300 nm)
  • Thin layers (up to 100 nm)*
  • 1,5-2 nm after 10 min.
Process Temperature
  • 725 °C
  • 300 °C
  • Room temp
  • Room temp to 600 °C
  • Room temp to 250 °C
  • 80°C
Step Coverage
  • Excellent. Very high surface mobility.
  • Deposition on both sides of the substrate.
  • Less good
  • When doped with phosphorus and/or Boron the oxide can float at about 1000 °C in a wet oxidation.
  • Deposition on one side of the substrate
  • Not Known
  • Deposition on one side of the substrate
  • Medium. Perhaps use of HIPIMS can improve step coverage (requires significant process development)
  • Deposition on one side of the substrate
  • No step coverage expected unless using tilt holder, in which case step coverage can be very good and can be tuned with the tilt angle.
  • Deposition on one side of the substrate
  • Not known
Film Quality
  • Less than thermal oxide. Annealing makes it more dense.
  • Few defects
  • Less dense film
  • Incorporation of hydrogen in the film
  • Not yet known, but expect lower density than bulk material.
Substrate size / Batch size
  • 1-13 100 mm wafers
  • Several small samples
  • 1-7 50 mm wafers
  • 1-3 100 mm wafers
  • 1 150 mm wafer
  • Pieces or
  • 1x4" wafer or
  • 1x6" wafer
  • Many smaller pieces or
  • up to 10x 4" or 6" wafer
  • Up to 4 x 6" wafer or
  • 3x 8" wafers (ask for special holder)
  • Many smaller pieces
  • Beaker depended
Allowed materials
  • Silicon wafers
    • with layers of silicon oxide or silicon (oxy)nitride
  • Quartz wafers
  • Silicon
    • with layers of silicon oxide or silicon (oxy)nitride
  • Quartz
  • IIIV materials (in PECVD2)
  • Small amount of metal (in PECVD3)
  • Silicon
  • Silicon oxide
  • Silicon nitride
  • Silicon (oxy)nitride
  • Photoresist
  • PMMA
  • Mylar
  • SU-8
  • Metals
  • Carbon
  • Acids react with a number of metals to produce hydrogen which, in contact with the air, may cause explosions

* If you wish to deposit more than 100 nm, please talk to responsible staff or write to thinfilm@nanolab.dtu.dk