High aspect ratio gratings fabricated by electrodeposition
11798844 · 2023-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Christian Lew Arrington (Albuquerque, NM)
- Amber Lynn Dagel (Lafayette, CO, US)
- Patrick Sean Finnegan (Albuquerque, NM, US)
- Andrew E. Hollowell (Albuquerque, NM)
- Travis Ryan Young (Albuquerque, NM, US)
- Kalin Baca (Albuquerque, NM, US)
Cpc classification
H01L21/76847
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/76877
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L21/70
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method is provided for making gratings of gold or other metal in silicon substrates. The disclosed method may achieve high aspect ratios. According to the disclosed method, a silicon wafer is through-etched. A seed layer of metal is vapor-deposited on one side of the wafer, and a layer of metal is electrodeposited on the seed layer. The electrodeposited metal plugs the trenches and provides a conductive surface for subsequent electrodeposition. The trenches are then filled by electrodeposition from within the trenches, so that the walls of the metal grating grow on the metal plugs.
Claims
1. A method for fabricating a metal grating in a silicon substrate having a thickness and first and second faces, comprising: lithographically defining a grating pattern comprising parallel elongated etch regions of equal widths on the first face, wherein the etch region width is smaller than the substrate thickness by a factor of 50 or more; etching the silicon substrate so as to create a multiplicity of through-etched trenches that extend all the way through the substrate; at the first or second face of the silicon substrate, plugging the through-etched trenches with electrodeposited metal; and filling the through-etched trenches with electrodeposited metal by growth from the plugged face.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the etching of the silicon substrate comprises: etching the first face so as to create a multiplicity of parallel side-1 trenches extending from the first face partway into the substrate; and etching material away from the second face so as to expose bottom ends of the side-1 trenches, thereby to create a multiplicity of through-etched trenches that extend all the way through the substrate.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising, before the through-etched trenches are plugged with electrodeposited metal, evaporatively depositing a metal layer as a seed layer for the plugging step.
4. The method of claim 3, further comprising, before depositing the seed layer, coating the through-etched trenches on inner walls thereof with a dielectric material.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the dielectric material is aluminum dioxide, and wherein the coating is performed by atomic layer deposition.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the electrodeposited metal that fills the through-etched trenches is gold.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the through-etched trenches are at least 0.8 cm long, and wherein the grating pattern is at least 0.8 cm across.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the through-etched trenches are at least 550 μm deep.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the through-etched trenches have a pitch of 20 μm or less.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the through-etched trenches are separated by silicon walls with a thickness of 5 μm or less.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) Our process sequence, in an illustrative embodiment, is now described with reference to
(10) Fabrication starts with a six-inch wafer 10 of [110] silicon with a thickness of 675 μm.
(11) The wafer is patterned on the front side with a photoresist using a 1×lithography process to create an array of die over the face of the wafer. Each die is sized 0.8 cm×0.8 cm and is patterned with grating features that are advantageously less than 20 μm in size. As noted above, the specific example described here, as illustrated in
(12) Trenches 12 are then through-etched in the silicon. In one possible approach, the process begins with deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) to cut trenches partway through the silicon wafer. For example, we found in trials that trenches up to 250 μm deep could be cut in this manner. The wafer is then inverted to be processed on the backside. The entire backside of the wafer is removed by DRIE to a depth of 425 μm or more, so that the etch lands on the front-side etched features. The end result is shown in cross-sectional view in
(13) In an alternative approach, megasonic potassium hydroxide (KOH) etching can be used in place of DRIE. Megasonic KOH etching is described, for example, in D. Nusse et al., “Megasonic enhanced KOH etching for {110} silicon bulk micromachining”, Proc. SPIE 5602, Optomechatronic Sensors, Actuators, and Control (25 Oct. 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.570220, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference. Megasonic etching uses ultrasound at megahertz frequencies to mitigate the effects of hydrogen evolution during silicon etching. It is useful for, e.g., enhancing reproducibility when etching trenches as high aspect ratio and for reducing roughness at the bottoms of the trenches. In trials, we found that higher aspect ratios could be achieved with megasonic etching than with DRIE. Accordingly, it may even be possible to cut through a silicon wafer of 250-μm thickness, or even more, in a single etching step by megasonic etching.
(14) Alumina (aluminum oxide) 14 is then deposited from one side of the wafer, using angled atomic layer deposition (ALD) with rotation. In the schematic cross-sectional view of
(15) An electron-beam metal evaporator is then used to deposit a seed layer 16, constituted by a thin-film metal stack of titanium and gold, on one side of the wafer. By way of illustration, the alumina dielectric may be deposited by ALD from the front of the wafer (i.e., the side from which the etching took place), followed by deposition of the seed layer from the back side of the wafer.
(16) The seed layer is deposited by angled evaporation directed at an angle of 45° from the source. This is illustrated in the schematic cross-sectional view of
(17) On the same side of the wafer as the seed layer, the micrometer-sized gaps between the sidewalls are then plugged (i.e., closed off) by using a gold electroplating process. This creates a uniform conductive base layer 18 across the wafers, as shown in the schematic cross-sectional view of
(18) A plan view of a 50-mm wafer after the formation of the base layer is shown in
(19) As indicated in
(20) The trenches are then filled from the plugged bottom ends to the top ends by gold electroplating. The resulting gold fill 24 is shown schematically in the cross-sectional view of
(21) In one illustrative example, plating continues for 26 hours at a current of 79 mA.
(22) The gold electroplating step will typically overfill the mold.
(23) In an example CMP procedure, the die are mounted to a parallel polishing fixture using double-sided tape. In trials, we found that the tape bond would endure throughout the process, provided there was no gold overplating on the bottom of the die.
(24) A 1200 fine grit silicon carbide abrasive disc, with water, is then used to do an initial cut of the gold surface to bring it down to the level of the silicon. This process is performed, e.g., at 150 rpm with oscillation and rotation of the polishing head for 20 minutes. The down force applied is set, e.g., to 2.85 N/cm.sup.2. For a gold surface area of 0.64 cm.sup.2, this areal force is equivalent to a weight setting on the polishing tool of 187 g.
(25) In our trials, we used digital microscope imaging to verify when the gold had been made flush with the silicon. After verification, and in view of the resulting increase in effective surface area, we increased the weight setting to 420 g for further polishing. We polished for another hour until the die measured in the range of 200 μm thick. Polishing is done, e.g., with a 9-μm slurry.
(26) As pointed out above, electroforming molds of the prior art have been prone to deform at high aspect ratios because of insufficient rigidity of the sidewall material. One known mitigation strategy is to incorporate lateral relief structures in the design of the grating.
(27) For example, each trench in the grating may be periodically interrupted by a linear array of endwalls that extend from sidewall to sidewall and divide the trench into a series of narrow cells. The endwall arrays may be staggered such that, for example, each endwall in one trench is aligned halfway between two endwalls in the trench to its right and in the trench to its left. The endwalls in such an arrangement constitute the lateral relief structures.
(28) Our prototype silicon molds have generally be sturdy enough that lateral relief structures were not needed. However, for applications in which lateral relief structures are desirable, they can readily be incorporated in our molds without substantial change to the fabrication sequences described above. This may be especially advantageous when very high aspect ratios are desired.
EXAMPLE
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