Electroless deposited Co(W,P) thin films were evaluated as diffusion barriers for copper metallization. Capacitance versus time measurements of MOS structures as well as SIMS depth profiles indicate that 30-nm-thick films can function as effective barriers against copper diffusion after thermal trea
Electroless deposition of Co(W) thin films
β Scribed by Y Sverdlov; Y Shacham-Diamand
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 574 KB
- Volume
- 70
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0167-9317
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β¦ Synopsis
Thin films of cobalt that contain small amounts of tungsten [Co(W)] were deposited by the electroless process. Those films do not contain either phosphorus or boron which are included in most electroless cobalt films processes. The deposition bath for Co(W) thin films include Co ions, tungstate ions as a source for tungsten, di-methyl-amine-borane (DMAB) complex as a reducing agent, ammonium hydrate as a complexing agent, acetic acid for buffering and surfactants. Co(W) layers were deposited on two types of seed layers: (a) thin sputtered cobalt or copper films on 100 nm SiO / Si and (b) bare 2 silicon wafers activated by an aqueous Pd / PdCl solution. The deposited layer thickness range was 40-1000 nm with 2 deposition rate at 90 8C and pH 9 of |7 nm / s for both Pd activated Si and sputtered Co seed, and |5 nm / s for the sputtered Cu seed. Lowering the temperature to 70 8C lowered the deposition rate to |0.7 nm / s for the Pd activated Si. The deposited layers were bright coloured, uniform, and with low defect density under visual inspection. The thin films composition was found to be Cobalt with 3-4 at.% tungsten for all types of seed layers. The Co(W) thin films specific resistivity was in the range of 60-90 mV cm. Finally we present the thin film morphology as it was characterized using atomic force microscopy and scanning electron microscopy.
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## Abstract For Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
It is shown that optimization of the electroless deposition and the use of vacuum annealing yield dramatic decrease in the resistivity and its scatter in 100-and 50-nm silver-tungsten (Ag-W) films. Physical processes, which control the resistivity drop during low-temperature annealing and the residu