DEVICE FOR PLASMA TREATMENT OF ELECTRONIC MATERIALS
20230049702 · 2023-02-16
Assignee
Inventors
- Thomas Scott Williams (Los Angeles, CA, US)
- Siu Fai Cheng (Culver City, CA, US)
- Robert F. Hicks (Los Angeles, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H01J37/32422
ELECTRICITY
H01J37/32091
ELECTRICITY
H01J37/32174
ELECTRICITY
H05H1/2406
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L21/02
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/48
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/67
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Plasma applications are disclosed that operate with argon and other molecular gases at atmospheric pressure, and at low temperatures, and with high concentrations of reactive species. The plasma apparatus and the enclosure that contains the plasma apparatus and the substrate are substantially free of particles, so that the substrate does not become contaminated with particles during processing. The plasma is developed through capacitive discharge without streamers or micro-arcs. The techniques can be employed to remove organic materials from a substrate, thereby cleaning the substrate; to activate the surfaces of materials, thereby enhancing bonding between the material and a second material; to etch thin films of materials from a substrate; and to deposit thin films and coatings onto a substrate; all of which processes are carried out without contaminating the surface of the substrate with substantial numbers of particles.
Claims
1. An apparatus for producing an ionized gas plasma, comprising: a housing having an inlet for gas flow comprising argon and one or more molecular gases, an outlet for argon plasma comprising reactive neutral species, and a flow path within the housing for directing the gas flow; a power electrode disposed within the housing having a powered electrode surface exposed to the gas flow; a ground electrode disposed adjacent to the power electrode such that a grounded electrode surface is closely spaced from the power electrode surface and the gas flow is directed therebetween; a power supply for delivering radio frequency power coupled to the power electrode and the ground electrode to ionize the gas flow and produce the argon plasma comprising the reactive neutral species; an enclosure having the housing contained within and including an enclosure gas flow wherein the enclosure gas flow has been filtered to remove particles from the flow; and a material substrate disposed within the enclosure near the outlet of the housing to receive the reactive neutral species in the gas flow from the ionized gas plasma.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the argon plasma is produced by a capacitive discharge without substantially any streamers or micro-arcs.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the reactive neutral species from the ionized gas plasma are used for cleaning organic contamination from the material substrate, activating the material substrate surface for adhesion, etching a thin film off of the material substrate, or depositing a thin film onto the material substrate, all substantially without the deposition of particles.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the gas inside the enclosure is at atmospheric pressure.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the gas flow through the housing is laminar.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the gas flow from the outlet of the housing for the argon plasma is between 25 and 200° C.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the outlet of the housing for argon plasma comprises a linear opening.
8. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the linear opening is at least as wide as the material substrate and the material substrate is passed at a constant speed relative to and contacting the reactive gas beam.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a means of translating the housing with the outlet for the ionized gas plasma relative to the surface of the material substrate such that the entire surface of the material substrate is uniformly treated with the reactive species from the ionized gas plasma.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the power supply operates at a radio frequency of 13.56 or 27.12 MHz and includes an auto-tuning network that impedance matches the radio frequency power supply to the argon plasma to minimize reflected power.
11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the one or more molecular gases are added to the argon gas flow at a concentration between 0.5 to 5.0 volume % and a fraction of the one or more molecular gases dissociates into atoms inside the argon plasma, and then flows out of the outlet, wherein the atoms are selected from the group consisting of O, N, H, F, C and S atoms.
12. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the enclosure gas flow is laminar.
13. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the enclosure includes no more than 100,000 particles larger than 0.1 micron per cubic meter of air.
14. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the enclosure comprises a cleanroom.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0032] Referring now to the drawings in which like reference numbers represent corresponding parts throughout:
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION INCLUDING THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Overview
[0044] As described above, plasma applications are disclosed that process electronic materials without significant contamination of the substrate surface with particles. The plasma apparatus and the electronic material substrate are placed inside an enclosure, including a cabinet or a cleanroom, with gas flow that is free of substantial numbers of particles. The plasma apparatus consists of a self-contained housing, which is supplied with radio frequency power and a flow of gas comprising argon and a molecular gas in the range of 0.1 to 5.0 volume %. Application of RF power to the electrodes inside the housing causes the gas to be ionized at atmospheric pressure and at low temperature. A high concentration of reactive species, including for example O, N, H, F, Cl, C and S atoms, is generated by free electron collisions with the gas molecules inside the plasma. Laminar flow is maintained as the gas flows into the housing, through the plasma, and out of the housing. One of the electrodes may be heated which can help to stabilize the plasma. The gas containing the reactive species is directed onto a substrate placed a short distance downstream, wherein said substrate is cleaned, activated, etched or coated with a thin film. Throughout processing the substrate in the enclosure with the plasma apparatus, few if any particles are deposited onto the substrate.
[0045] It should be noted that there are some important requirements of atmospheric plasma used with embodiments of the present invention. In order to minimize the production of particles, the atmospheric plasma must be struck and maintained as a capacitive discharge without generating any streamers or micro-arcs. In addition, the plasma device must employ a gas flow path that is clean and devoid of any silicone grease, which can lead to the production of particles. For example, a mass flow controller used in the operation of the plasma device can use Apiezon M vacuum grease or any similar silicone-free grease. Those skilled in the art will understand techniques and devices for producing suitable atmospheric plasma through a capacitive discharge process without any streamers or micro-arcs and without using any silicone grease based on the examples described herein.
[0046] The example apparatus and method produces a low-temperature, atmospheric pressure argon plasma by flowing a mixture of argon and molecular gases through a housing containing two closely spaced electrodes, applying radio frequency power to one of the electrodes (grounding the other) sufficient to strike and maintain the ionized gas plasma, and flowing reactive neutral species out of the housing, while keeping the free electrons and ions inside the housing between the electrodes. Further details for operating a suitable plasma delivery device for implementing an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, which are both incorporated by reference herein.
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
[0050] A flow path within the housing 102 directs the gas flow to become laminar as it moves from the inlet 104 toward a power electrode 110. The power electrode 110 disposed within the housing has a powered electrode surface 112 exposed to the laminar gas flow. A ground electrode 114 is disposed adjacent to the power electrode 110 such that a grounded electrode surface 116 is closely spaced from the powered electrode surface and the laminar gas flow is directed there between. In this example, the entire housing 102 is the ground electrode 114. However, those skilled in the art will understand that the ground electrode 114 can be implemented as a separate component in the region near the grounded electrode surface 116. It is only necessary that the power and ground electrodes 110 and 114 are electrically isolated from one another as will be readily understood by those skilled in the art.
[0051] A power supply 118 for delivering radio frequency power is coupled to both the power electrode and the ground electrode to ionize the laminar gas flow and produce the argon plasma comprising the reactive neutral species as it passes between the electrode surfaces 112, 116. In addition, a heater 128 may or may not be coupled to the device 100 for heating one or both of the power electrode 110 and the ground electrode 114 as the laminar gas flow is directed between the surfaces 112, 116. The heater 128 heats to a temperature between 40 and 200° C., but preferable between 40 and 80° C. Heating can be implemented through any suitable means however, in the example device 100, the heater 128 comprises heated liquid circulated through a hollow space within the power electrode 110. Further details for operating a power supply and heater in a suitable plasma delivery device for implementing an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, which are both incorporated by reference herein.
[0052] The powered electrode can be coated with a non-metallic, non-conducting material between 1 and 100 microns thick. The dielectric coating on the power electrode can be a hard, high temperature, non-porous coating, including glass (SiO.sub.2), alumina (Al.sub.2O.sub.3), aluminum nitride (AlN), or similar inorganic electrical insulator. Note that reference to the “powered electrode surface” is still applicable if such a coating exists on the power electrode; direct physical contact between the conducting electrodes and the gas flow is not required as will be understood by those skilled in the art.
[0053] The example device 100 may employ an optical sensor for receiving optical spectroscopy information of the argon plasma comprising the reactive neutral species at the outlet 108. In this example, the optical spectroscopy information is from a line of sight 122 along the linear opening of the outlet 108 allowing for measurement of the plasma afterglow. In addition, the device 100 employs a mirror 124 at one end of the linear opening for reflecting the optical spectroscopy information into the fiber optic feed 126 to the sensor 120. Further details for operating an optical sensor to capture optical spectroscopy information in a suitable plasma delivery device for implementing an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, which are both incorporated by reference herein.
[0054] In the device 100, the flow path is formed by a laminar flow insert 130 disposed within the housing 102. The laminar flow insert 130 directs the gas flow from the inlet 104 to two opposing walls 132A, 132B of the chamber (while spreading each half of the gas flow to be the width of the outlet 108) and then to two opposite sides 134A and 134B of the powered electrode surface 112. The flow insert can be manufactured of a high temperature, insulating material that is resistant to plasma etching including thermoplastics, including PEEK, perfluoroelastomers, Kalrez, Viton, fluoropolymers, Teflon, or alumina and other ceramics. The power electrode surface 112 comprises part of a cylindrical surface and the laminar gas flow is directed circumferentially along the part of the cylindrical surface toward the outlet 108. In this case the bifurcated gas flow converges at the outlet 108 as plasma after being ionized between the electrode surfaces 112 and 116. Further details for using a flow insert in a suitable plasma delivery device for implementing an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, which are both incorporated by reference herein.
[0055] The power supply 118 can also include an auto-tuning network that impedance matches the radio frequency power supply to the argon plasma. In addition, the auto-tuning network follows a logic algorithm that drives towards a forward power set point while minimizing reflected power, and does so as the argon plasma moves from strike conditions at a higher voltage to run conditions at a lower voltage. For example, 50-ohm impedance matching can be employed. Further details for operating an auto-tuning network in a suitable plasma delivery device for implementing an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, which are both incorporated by reference herein.
[0056] Finally, the plasma device 100 can also be utilized with a precursor device 136 external to the housing 102. The precursor device 136 introduces a linear beam 138 of volatile chemical precursor(s) into the reactive plasma flow near the outlet 108, e.g. so as to enable the deposition of a thin film onto a substrate placed a short distance downstream. The shape of the precursor outlet can match that of the plasma outlet. For example, for a 4″ linear plasma source outlet, the precursor outlet is also a 4″ slit, but oriented such that the gas exiting from the precursor outlet enters into the plasma gas stream exiting the source (e.g. can be perpendicular to, or at 45 degrees to it, etc.). Typical chemical precursors include tetraethyl-orthosilicate, tetramethyl-cyclotetrasiloxane, trimethylsilane, and other organosilanes or organometallics.
[0057] The example device 100 may be further modified or used in process according to the detailed examples in the following sections as will be understood by those skilled in the art. Some example, applications for the devices and methods described herein include, without limitation, cleaning a material surface, activating a material surface for wetting, activating a material surface for adhesion, depositing a thin film onto the substrate, depositing a thin glass film onto the substrate, etching a thin layer of material off of a substrate, and etching a metal oxide layer, including copper oxide, off of a substrate.
Methods of Plasma Processing of Electronic Materials without Particle Contamination.
[0058] The invention is further embodied by methods of processing electronic materials without significant contamination of the substrate with particles. The reactive gas exits the argon plasma apparatus as described in
[0059] Embodiments of the invention can be practiced with a mixture of argon and other molecular gases at concentrations up to 5.0 volume %. Depending on the desired application, the molecular gas may be oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, methane, carbon tetrafluoride (CF.sub.4), octafluorobutane (C.sub.4F.sub.8), nitrogen trifluoride (NF.sub.3), sulfur hexafluoride (SF.sub.6), ammonia, water, hydrocarbons with carbon-carbon chain lengths from 2 to 6, and other molecules that would be obvious to those skilled in the art. The temperature of the gas exiting the plasma source generally ranges from 40 to 80° C., although temperatures higher than 80° C. may be used, depending on the particular embodiment of the invention. The temperature of the substrate is important for the desired process, and this can be independently adjusted by the temperature of the fluid recirculating through the plasma housing, or by a separate heater placed underneath the substrate.
[0060] Examples are given below of methods of processing materials without depositing substantial numbers of particles on the substrate. These examples are not intended to limit the embodiments of the invention, but to illustrate methods in which they can be practiced. The apparatus and methods of the invention may be used for many other purposes, which will be understood by those skilled in the art.
Example 1
Apparatus and Method of Cleaning a Substrate
[0061] The atmospheric pressure argon plasma may be used to remove organic compounds from surfaces, thereby cleaning the substrate. The method of cleaning surfaces is accomplished by flowing argon gas containing reactive molecules through the plasma to convert the molecules into atoms and other reactive species. This gas flow, that is free of a substantial number of particles, is directed onto the surface to be cleaned. The contaminated surface is exposed to the reactive species generated in the plasma for a sufficient period of time to cause organic contamination to be removed without damage to it. A sufficient period of time can be an exposure to the reactive gas for 0.1 second to 1.0 hour, and generally in the range of 1.0 second to 1.0 minute. Since the atmospheric plasma may be scanned over the surface, the total treatment time may be longer than the aforementioned time periods for especially large substrates. Moreover, it may be advantageous for the contaminated surface to be scanned with the argon plasma device multiple times, but each time without the addition of substantial numbers of particles.
[0062] Gas molecules that are suitable for embodiments of the invention include, but are not limited to, oxygen, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen, nitrous oxide, ammonia and water. These molecules may be converted into atoms, ions or metastable molecules that are effective for surface cleaning. Oxygen containing gas molecules, including O.sub.2, CO.sub.2, and NO.sub.2, are particularly well suited for embodiments of the invention, because they may be converted into ground-state atoms, which among other beneficial properties, are effective at etching away organic contamination, but do not react with inorganic surfaces. Atmospheric pressure plasmas suitable for embodiments of the invention include those that generate a high concentration of ground-state atoms, radicals, or metastable molecules downstream of the plasma zone, but without the addition of particles to the gas stream, most likely caused by energetic ion bombardment of electrode surfaces.
[0063] An example embodiment of the invention was carried out on silicon wafers 200 millimeters (mm) in diameter. The self-contained plasma housing was mounted on a scanning robot and placed inside a class 100 cleanroom (refer to the drawing in
[0064] Shown in Table 1 is a summary of the results obtained for processing 200 mm silicon wafers with a standard vacuum plasma and with an example embodiment of the invention (as described in the preceding paragraph). After processing the silicon wafers, they were tested with a Krüss Mobile Surface Analyst (MSA). This device determines the surface energy and the water contact angle (WCA). A native oxide on silicon contaminated with organic compounds will have a surface energy well below 77.8 milli-Newton/meter (mN/m), and WCA above 30°. The first test was to remove the Si wafer from a plastic storage container and examine it with the MSA in the class 100 cleanroom. These results are presented in the first line in the Table. One sees that the surface energy was 64.2 mN/m and the water contact angle was 37.9°. After treating a wafer for 2 minutes (120 seconds) in the vacuum oxygen plasma, the surface energy was 77.0 mN/m and the WCA was 6.7. Treatment with the low-temperature, atmospheric pressure argon and oxygen plasma at scan speeds ranging from 25 to 200 mm/s yielded identical results within the experimental error of the measurement. The surface energy was 77.7±0.1 mN/m and the WCA was 6.4±0.8 degrees. Only at the highest scan speed of 300 mm/s was a slightly lower surface energy achieved. These results demonstrate that the organic contamination on the native oxide surface can be completely removed with the atmospheric argon and oxygen plasma at scan speeds of 200 mm/s. The total process time for cleaning the 200 mm silicon wafer was approximately 2.5 seconds, which is 48 times faster than the vacuum plasma treatment. This same process has been applied to 300 mm silicon wafers. The total process time for cleaning a 300 mm silicon wafer was approximately 5.5 seconds.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Comparison of vacuum plasma cleaning to atmospheric pressure argon and oxygen plasma cleaning of 200 mm silicon wafers. Water Scan Speed Process Surface Free Contact Treatment (mm/s) Time (s) Energy (mN/m) Angle (°) Cleanroom N/A 60 64.2 37.9 exposure only Vacuum O.sub.2 N/A 120 77.0 6.7 plasma Atmospheric 25 20 77.7 6.5 Ar—O.sub.2 plasma Atmospheric 50 10 77.8 5.5 Ar—O.sub.2 plasma Atmospheric 100 5 77.8 6.1 Ar—O.sub.2 plasma Atmospheric 200 2.5 77.6 7.3 Ar—O.sub.2 plasma Atmospheric 300 1.7 76.8 10.3 Ar—O.sub.2 plasma
[0065] Particle detection on the wafer surface was performed with a light scattering tool. This tool uses a laser beam that scans over the Si wafer. Any particles present on the surface will scatter the incident light. By measuring the reflected light, it is possible to map out the number, size and location of the particles on the substrate. In this way, the unexpected results of the invention can be revealed.
[0066] Presented in
[0067]
[0068] The vacuum plasma adds many thousands of particles to the wafer, and it necessitates a subsequent wet cleaning step to remove these particles before further processing can occur, including, but not limited to, fusion bonding. Complicated and costly modifications can be made to the vacuum plasma to reduce the number of particle adders, but these modifications will not completely eliminate them (see, for example, G. S. Selwyn, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 32, 3068 (1993)).
[0069]
[0070] It is evident that embodiments of the invention can yield an unexpected improvement over the prior art. Total particle count and the particle size distribution are summarized in Table 2 below. The embodied invention, labeled as “Surfx Ar/O.sub.2 plasma” adds only 4 total particles when compared to the silicon wafer exposed only to the cleanroom environment. The vacuum O.sub.2 plasma well known in the prior art adds 2,757 particles over that from the cleanroom. The ratio of these two values demonstrates that the embodied invention is 689 times cleaner than the prior art process.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Summary of particle counts measured after plasma processing silicon wafers. Particle Count 0.2-0.3 0.3-0.5 0.5-0.7 0.7-1.0 Total Product microns microns microns microns particles Cleanroom 8 3 1 7 19 only Vacuum O.sub.2 827 465 328 1,156 2,776 plasma Surfx Ar/O.sub.2 7 2 2 12 23 plasma Additional particle ratio vacuum/Surfx: 689
[0071] This example is only intended to illustrate one way in which the invention may be practiced. This particle-free plasma cleaning process has many useful applications, including, but not limited to, wafer level packaging. Packaging at the wafer level enables the stacking of multiple devices onto a single substrate. This can significantly increase the functionality and complexity of integrated circuits without greatly increasing their production costs. Microelectronic devices are becoming ever more complex with higher levels of integration, higher operating frequencies, more functionality, and increased performance. Three-dimensional chips, obtained through wafer level packaging, are a promising approach to achieving these goals.
[0072] One of the main methods for producing 3D chips is fusion bonding. In fusion bonding, two ultra-smooth (<10 Å roughness) wafers are fused together without using adhesives or an external force. This technique requires surface preparation by one of a few methods: O.sub.2-based plasma, hydration, or dipping in a hydrofluoric acid solution. After cleaning, placing two wafers one on top of the other, leads to hydrogen bonding between the cleaned and oxidized surfaces. Annealing at 600-1200° C. drives water out of the interfacial region and chemically fuses the wafers together through oxygen bridge bonding. This processes requires a scrupulously clean surface because the presence of any particles or physical debris will inhibit intimate contact between the substrates, and thereby prevent the formation of hydrogen bonds across the interface. The apparatus and method described in this example is an advantageous way to clean the surface prior to fusion bonding.
[0073] Another application that will benefit from the invention is glass frit bonding, which is widely used to cap and seal micro-electromechanical systems on the wafer level. Glass frit bonding, also referred to as glass soldering, or seal glass bonding, describes a wafer bonding technique with an intermediate glass layer. The glass layers must be cleaned and activated for bonding without becoming contaminated with particles. The atmospheric pressure, argon and oxygen plasma has several advantages over the vacuum oxygen plasma in this application, including faster processing speeds, and the avoidance of particle deposition onto the substrate.
[0074] Many methods of producing electronic materials require atomically clean and particle-free surfaces. The above descriptions of wafer level packaging and glass frit bonding are several examples. Other examples would be obvious to those skilled in the art.
Example 2
Apparatus and Method of Etching a Substrate
[0075] Another embodiment of the invention is etching of materials, including glass, metals, metal oxides and polymer films, wherein particles ae not deposited on the substrate during the etching process. For example, organic films may be etched by exposure to the atmospheric pressure, argon and oxygen plasma mounted inside the particle-free enclosure. Glasses, metals and metal oxides may be etched by exposure to the afterglow from the atmospheric pressure plasma apparatus fed with mixtures of argon and halogen-containing molecules, including, but not limited to, nitrogen trifluoride, carbon tetrafluoride, and sulfur hexafluoride. Further details for operating a suitable plasma delivery device for etching materials in an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, which are both incorporated by reference herein.
[0076] In an embodiment of the invention, metal oxide materials are etched away through a hydrogen reduction process. For example a flux of hydrogen atoms is generated in the plasma by feeding hydrogen gas mixed with argon. A metal or semiconductor substrate is placed downstream of the plasma discharge, so that only ground-state hydrogen atoms and neutral species impinge on the sample surface. These hydrogen atoms rapidly react with the metal oxide surface to generate a clean metal surface and water vapor as a byproduct. Embodiments of the invention allow for unwanted oxides to be removed from live electronic devices while avoiding ion bombardment and electrical arcing, which may damage the substrate. An alternative method of removing oxide layers from metals is to carry out this process in open air, where the plasma source generates a large flux of neutral hydrogen atoms allowing for rapid oxide removal, and eliminating any unwanted side reactions with the ambient air.
[0077] One embodiment of the invention is a method of removing copper oxide from copper using the atmospheric pressure plasma fed with argon and a forming gas mixture of hydrogen and nitrogen. This embodiment was demonstrated on copper lead frames that are used in the semiconductor industry. The copper substrates were placed on a hot plate and heated to 180° C. At this temperature, a copper oxide film spread over the surface, which exhibits a characteristic purple color. Process gas containing a mixture of 15 L/min argon and forming gas at 1 L/min (95% nitrogen and 5% hydrogen) was fed to the one-inch-linear plasma source at atmospheric pressure. This plasma source produces a linear beam of reactive gas 25 mm wide. Radio frequency power at 160 W was applied to the electrodes, causing the plasma to be ignited and sustained. The plasma source was then mounted 2 to 3 mm above the oxidized copper surface. During exposure to the outlet gas flow from the argon and hydrogen plasma, the purple copper oxide film was removed, leaving behind a shiny metallic copper surface. Further details for removing copper oxide with an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/042,905, which is incorporated by reference herein.
[0078] An additional embodiment of the invention is a method to reduce copper oxide using atmospheric pressure plasma fed with a mixed gas of argon and hydrogen without the presence of nitrogen from a forming gas mixture. The copper lead frames were first oxidized using a forced convection oven operating between 200 and 250° C. for a duration of 5, 10, 20 and 30 minutes. After 5 minutes, the copper metal exhibits a reddish-brown color indicating an oxide layer thickness of 25 nm. Table 3 summarizes the color and corresponding oxide thickness at each time interval in the oven.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Summary of thermally grown copper oxide thickness and corresponding color. Time in Oven (min) Surface Color Oxide Thickness (nm) 5 Red/Brown 25 10 Purple/Blue 30 20 Pale Blue 60 30 Yellow/Gold 100
[0079] Copper oxide etching was performed at ambient temperature and pressure using a 1-inch (25 mm) linear plasma head fed with a gas mixture containing 1% hydrogen in argon. The plasma was driven with at 150 W of radio frequency (RF) power at 27.12 MHz. The plasma head outlet was placed 1 to 2 mm away from the sample and scanned over it at speeds between 0.5 and 2.0 mm/s, depending on the oxide layer thickness. A 50 nm thick copper oxide layer was reduced to metallic copper with a single pass treatment at a scan speed of 2.0 mm/s. Complete removal of a 100 nm thick copper oxide layer was achieved by scanning the argon and hydrogen plasma over the surface at 0.5 mm/s.
[0080] The embodied invention can consist of an apparatus that measures the thickness of the copper oxide on a sample, using for example, the color of the copper substrate, and then determines the appropriate plasma head scan speed based upon the time needed to reduce the oxide layer back to copper metal. In addition, surface oxides of a non-uniform thickness which may be encountered in semiconductor and electronics manufacturing can be reduced to bare copper metal at low temperature and high throughput with no warping or damage to electronic packages, such as those containing lead frames, copper wires and bond pads, and dies with copper bond pads.
[0081] The copper oxide etch rate is a fiction of the substrate temperature during the plasma reduction process. Two methods can be used to increase the copper substrate temperature. The first is to suspend the copper sample in air, or a non-oxidizing gas, such as argon or nitrogen, using thermally insulating material to hold the sample at the edges. This method reduces thermal conduction away from the substrate material thereby allowing localized heating of the sample to build up rather than be dissipated away. In this case, the plasma gas is the source of heating the substrate. Another embodiment of the invention is to use an external heat source placed under the suspended sample to control the substrate temperature.
[0082]
[0083] Copper oxide etching is a reversible reaction. Heating the copper sample increases the etch rate by the atmospheric pressure argon and hydrogen plasma. However, if the process takes place in open air, then re-oxidation can occur on the hot copper surface. To prevent re-oxidation, the embodied invention can be performed in an inert gas environment, such as in argon or in nitrogen. One example is to insert the copper substrate, such as a lead frame strip, inside an enclosure, and purge the enclosure with hot argon or nitrogen gas while the substrate is being scanned with the argon and hydrogen plasma. After etching away the copper oxide, the substrate can be quickly cooled in flowing argon or nitrogen gas to ambient temperature. Once at ambient temperature, the copper oxidation rate is negligible, and the sample can be removed from the enclosure and transferred to the next processing step. Analysis of copper lead frame strips after removal from the purged environment did not show any evidence of re-oxidation over 8 hours storage at ambient conditions.
[0084] In the Description of Related Art, it was pointed out that copper oxide layers on copper lead frame strips are the source of delamination of the epoxy mold covering the die and wire bonds (refer to L. C. Yung, et al., IEEE Proceedings of the International Conference on Software Engineering, 2010, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, p. 654; and C. T. Chong, et al., IEEE Proceedings of the 45th Electronic Components and Technology Conference, Las Vegas, Nev., USA, p. 463). Removal of the copper oxide with the argon and hydrogen plasma should eliminate this problem. Experiments were conducted on populated copper lead frame strips with dimensions of 70 mm×250 mm. The strips had been subjected to oxidation during previous processing steps in the semiconductor packaging operation. The lead frame strips were scanned at ambient temperature and pressure using a 4-inch (100 mm) wide linear plasma head fed with argon and hydrogen. The distance from the plasma source exit to the strip was about 1 mm. The 100 mm wide beam extend across the entire width of the 70 mm wide lead frame. The head was scanned down the length of the 250 mm long strip at scan speeds of 5, 10 and 20 mm/s. This yielded process times of 50, 25 and 12.5 seconds, respectively. The plasma was operated at 400 W of RF power, a gas feed rate of 30.3 liters per minute (LPM), and with a mixture of 0.46% hydrogen in argon.
[0085] After plasma treatment, the lead frame strips were placed in the mold machine, and the mold injected over all the die packages on the strips and cured. The packages were then examined for delamination at the die pad—mold interface. No delamination was observed at any of the die pads. Next, the strips were allowed to sit at 30° C. and a relative humidity of 60% for 168 hours before testing for delamination (MSL 3 test). Again, no delamination was observed on any of the packages. If the lead frame strips were not treated with the plasma, or were treated with an argon and oxygen plasma instead, delamination at the die pad—mold interface was observed.
[0086] In another embodiment of the invention, the copper lead frame strips and dies were cleaned with the argon and hydrogen plasma before wire bonding. The removal of the copper oxide from all the bond pads allowed copper wires to be bonded to the die and lead frame pads with strong adhesion. Such a process has many advantages in semiconductor packaging, because it simplifies the materials and processes needed to obtain reliable packages.
Example 3
Apparatus and Method of Depositing a Thin Film
[0087] Another embodiment of the invention is a method of depositing thin films with the argon plasma at atmospheric pressure and low temperature, wherein there is essentially no deposition of particles on the substrate. The embodiment has been reduced to practice by depositing glass-like films on silicon wafers. Here, a volatile chemical precursor is fed downstream at a second gas inlet located just after the exit of the plasma source. The volatile chemical precursor then combines with the reactive species in the afterglow of the plasma. The reactive species attack the chemical precursors, causing them to decompose and deposit a thin film on a substrate placed less than 1.0 centimeter downstream.
[0088] In
[0089] The organosilane precursor chemical used in this example is tetramethyl-cyclotetrasiloxane (TMCTS) which is delivered just below the plasma source fed with argon and oxygen. The plasma was operating at 120 W RF power using 18 LPM argon and 0.2 LPM oxygen and the plasma deposition system was scanned over the surface at 25 mm/s. Tetramethyl-cyclotetrasiloxane was dispersed into the carrier gas and introduced to the apparatus through the attachment system located 1.0 mm away from the gas exit from the plasma housing. The precursor chemical was delivered to the attachment by flowing helium through a bubbler filled with the liquid precursor. The flow rate through the bubbler was set at 0.4 LPM and an additional dilution of 3.0 LPM of helium was added to this gas stream before entering the deposition attachment. Silicon wafers, 6 inches in diameter, were placed on a holder 7 mm downstream of the attachment. The pitch of the robotic painting program as it scanned the wafer was fixed at 1 mm. The total dwell time of the atmospheric plasma housing and attachment over the silicon wafers was varied by altering the number of deposition cycles.
[0090] Differences in coating thickness are apparent by observing the color of the thin glass film. Before deposition, the silicon wafer has a uniform silver color. After deposition, one observes a bright blue coating generated by the deposited glass film. A color variation due to a thickness variation is observed at the edges of the film. However, over 90% of the film area, no significant variation in color is seen. This indicated a high degree of uniformity is achieved with the embodiment of the invention depicted in
Example 4
Apparatus and Method of Cleaning and Activating a Metal Substrate
[0091] Another embodiment of the invention is an apparatus and method of cleaning and activating metal substrates with the low-temperature, atmospheric pressure, argon plasma apparatus, without the addition of substantial amounts of particles onto the metal substrates. One application of this embodiment is to improve the adhesion of coatings and glues to metal surfaces. Copper surface activation was accomplished using the atmospheric pressure, argon and oxygen plasma. The plasma scan speed over the substrate was varied from 5 to 100 millimeters per second, and the water contact angle of the copper was measured after each scan. A 43% reduction in water contact angle was observed at a speed of 50 mm/s. The water contact angle was reduced from 91° to 26° when the plasma scan speed was 5 mm/s. A low water contact angle is indicative of a hydrophilic surface. Such a surface should make strong bonds to coatings and glues.
[0092] The atmospheric pressure argon plasma removes organic contaminants from metal surfaces, and thereby increases the metal surface energy so that it will strongly bond to other materials. A copper lead frame was exposed to an argon plasma that was additionally fed with oxygen, nitrogen or hydrogen. After plasma treatment, the surface free energy (SFE), along with the polar and dispersive components of the SFE, was measured with a Krüss Mobile Surface Analyst. Exposure to the argon and oxygen plasma increased the polar component of the surface energy from <3 mN/m to 21 mN/m. Substantial increases in the polar component of the SFE was observed with the argon and nitrogen plasma and the argon and hydrogen plasma, although to a lesser extent than achieved with the argon and oxygen plasma. A large increase in the polar component of the surface energy is a good indication that the copper is activated for bonding to other materials. Further details for operating a suitable plasma delivery device for implementing an embodiment of the invention can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,406,485 and 10,032,609, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/042,905, which are incorporated by reference herein.
[0093] Apparatus and methods are disclosed for generating an argon plasma for processing electronic materials that does not result in the contamination of the substrate with significant numbers of particles. A plasma apparatus with auto-tuning and temperature control methods has been developed which produces stable argon plasmas that may be used to process materials at atmospheric pressure and low temperature. The device contains a means for controlling the temperature of a flowing gas and a means for partially ionizing said flowing gas such that uniform and stable plasmas are generated without adding particles into the gas stream. Embodiments of the invention include processes that employ the argon plasma apparatus to treat materials at low temperature and high throughput without contaminating the substrate with particles, and at a cost which has been previously unavailable. One method uses the argon plasma device to remove organic materials. The methods further cover the robotic application of the low-temperature, atmospheric pressure plasma to a substrate all of which is contained in a particle-free enclosure. Another embodiment of the invention uses the argon plasma with hydrogen gas feed to remove metal oxide films from metals. In yet another embodiment, the argon plasma is combined with a means of introducing chemical precursors to the system thereby causing the plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition of a thin film onto a substrate without the additional co-deposition of particles. A further embodiment of the invention can use the plasma to clean and activate a metal substrate.