Post treatment to reduce shunting devices for physical etching process
10297746 ยท 2019-05-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Yu-Jen Wang (San Jose, CA, US)
- Dongna Shen (San Jose, CA, US)
- Vignesh Sundar (Sunnyvale, CA, US)
- Sahil Patel (Fremont, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H01L21/311
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L21/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method for etching a magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) structure is described. A stack of MTJ layers is provided on a bottom electrode. A top electrode is provided on the MTJ stack. The top electrode is patterned. Thereafter, the MTJ stack not covered by the patterned top electrode is oxidized or nitridized. Then, the MTJ stack is patterned to form a MTJ device wherein any sidewall re-deposition formed on sidewalls of the MTJ device is non-conductive and wherein some of the dielectric layer remains on horizontal surfaces of the bottom electrode.
Claims
1. A method for etching a magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) structure comprising: providing a stack of MTJ layers on a bottom electrode wherein metal is included in at least some of said MTJ layers; providing a top electrode on said MTJ stack; patterning said top electrode; thereafter oxidizing or nitridizing entire said MTJ stack not covered by patterned said top electrode thereby converting to oxide or nitride all of said MTJ stack material not covered by said patterned top electrode; and thereafter etching said MTJ stack to form a MTJ device wherein any sidewall re-deposition formed on sidewalls of said MTJ device as a result of said etching step comes from oxidized or nitridized said MTJ stack material and is non-conductive.
2. The method according to claim 1 wherein said MTJ stack is patterned using a physical etching process.
3. The method according to claim 1 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing is by exposing said MTJ stack to oxygen or nitrogen, respectively.
4. The method according to claim 1 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing is by oxide or nitride plasma or ion-beam methods comprising pure O.sub.2 or pure N.sub.2 or O.sub.2 or N.sub.2 mixed with one or more noble gases.
5. The method according to claim 1 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing is by applying water or a solvent containing oxygen or nitrogen.
6. The method according to claim 1 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing step is not sufficient to oxidize or nitridize all of said MTJ stack not covered by patterned said top electrode and wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing step is repeated until all metal in said MTJ stack not covered by patterned said top electrode is converted to oxide or nitride.
7. The method according to claim 1 further comprising oxidizing or nitridizing said bottom electrode not covered by patterned said top electrode thereby converting to oxide or nitride all of said bottom electrode material not covered by said patterned top electrode.
8. A method for etching a magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) structure comprising: providing a stack of MTJ layers on a bottom electrode wherein metal is included in at least some of said MTJ layers; providing a top electrode on said MTJ stack; patterning said top electrode; thereafter oxidizing or nitridizing entire said MTJ stack and said bottom electrode not covered by patterned said top electrode thereby converting to oxide or nitride all of said MTJ stack material and said bottom electrode material not covered by said patterned top electrode; thereafter etching said MTJ stack to form a MTJ device wherein any sidewall re-deposition formed on sidewalls of said MTJ device as a result of said etching step comes from oxidized or nitridized said MTJ stack material and is non-conductive; and thereafter patterning said bottom electrode wherein any sidewall re-deposition on sidewalls of said MTJ device comes from oxidized or nitridized said bottom electrode material and is non-conductive.
9. The method according to claim 8 wherein said MTJ stack is patterned using a physical etching process.
10. The method according to claim 8 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing is by exposing said MTJ stack to oxygen or nitrogen, respectively.
11. The method according to claim 8 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing is by oxide or nitride plasma or ion-beam methods comprising pure O.sub.2 or pure N.sub.2 or O.sub.2 or N.sub.2 mixed with one or more noble gases.
12. The method according to claim 8 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing is by applying water or a solvent containing oxygen or nitrogen.
13. The method according to claim 8 wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing step is not sufficient to oxidize or nitridize all of said MTJ stack not covered by patterned said top electrode and wherein said oxidizing or nitridizing step is repeated until all metal in said MTJ stack and said bottom electrode not covered by patterned said top electrode is converted to oxide or nitride.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the accompanying drawings forming a material part of this description, there is shown:
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(4) For most pure physical etching processes (such as IBE), the sidewall always suffers a severe re-deposition issue since the by-products of the etched material are non-volatile. To prevent the re-deposition material around the MTJ sidewall from becoming a shunting path for the MTJ, we apply a surface treatment by oxygen to convert the potential re-deposition material from conductive to non-conductive. This step will ensure that any re-deposition is non-conductive and will not cause shunting of the MTJ devices.
(5) Referring now particularly to
(6) A photoresist mask 25 is formed over the top electrode. As shown in
(7) Now, an additional post treatment process is added in the middle of the etching process. After defining the top electrode 16 and before the main physical etching to define the MTJ area, preferably an oxidation treatment 27 is performed to oxidize the entire exposed MTJ area wherein the exposed MTJ area not covered by the patterned top electrode becomes oxidized 20 and therefore, non-conductive, as shown in
(8) Oxidizing the re-deposited material after etching is undesirable because the oxygen might damage the MTJ device. It is hard to control the penetration depth of the oxide. Oxidizing prior to etching does not cause this problem because all of the oxygen will be gone after etching.
(9) After the treatment process, a physical etching will be applied to define the MTJ area, as shown in
(10) Depending on process integration, the bottom electrode could be patterned prior to depositing the MTJ layers. Or the bottom electrode could be patterned after patterning the MTJ device. We can eliminate the re-deposition shunting problem from the bottom electrode if we increase the oxidation power and/or time to oxidize the bottom electrode portion not covered by the top electrode hard mask before we perform the MTJ etching, as shown in
(11) The post treatment can be applied in a variety of different ways. These can include: 1) Natural oxidation or nitridation by introducing oxygen or nitrogen gas, 2) Oxidation or nitridation with plasma assist or ion-beam assist, or 3) Treatment by a liquid such as water or a solvent. It might be necessary to apply the treatment multiple times to ensure all the metallic material in the MTJ stack is converted to oxide or nitride so that it becomes non-conductive.
(12) In option 1, oxygen or nitrogen is introduced into a chamber containing the wafer prior to MTJ etching. If the MTJ stack is not very thick, the natural oxidation or nitridation might be enough to convert all of the MTJ stack not covered by the top electrode hard mask to a non-conductive material.
(13) In option 2, plasma oxidation or nitridation might use pure O.sub.2, pure N.sub.2, or a mixture of O.sub.2 and N.sub.2. The plasma oxidation, nitridation, or mixed O.sub.2/N.sub.2 can optionally be performed with some noble gas such as Ar, Xe, and the like. O.sub.2 or N.sub.2 implantation could be performed to transform the material. Alternatively, O.sub.2 or N.sub.2 ion beam irradiation could perform oxidation or nitridation of the exposed layer.
(14) In option 3, water or a solvent containing OH or NH, for example, could convert the exposed layers to oxides or nitrides.
(15) Since the MTJ layers are oxidized or nitridized before performing the main physical etching, there should be no remaining oxygen or nitrogen gas in the area after MTJ etching is completed. This will mitigate oxygen or nitrogen damage to the MTJ sidewalls.
(16) Although the preferred embodiment of the present disclosure has been illustrated, and that form has been described in detail, it will be readily understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the disclosure or from the scope of the appended claims.