Seal rings in electrochemical processors
10087543 ยท 2018-10-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Nolan L. Zimmerman (Kalispell, MT, US)
- George Mattinger (Cupertino, CA, US)
- Gregory J. Wilson (Kalispell, MT, US)
- Eric A. Englhardt (Palo Alto, CA, US)
- Balamurugan Ramasamy (Bangalore, IN)
Cpc classification
F16J15/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/3204
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C25D17/001
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F16J15/3236
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16J9/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/3204
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/3236
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C25D17/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A seal ring for an electrochemical processor does not slip or deflect laterally when pressed against a wafer surface. The seal ring may be on a rotor of the processor, with the seal ring having an outer wall joined to a tip arc through an end. The outer wall may be a straight wall. A relatively rigid support ring may be attached to the seal ring, to provide a more precise sealing dimension. Knife edge seal rings that slip or deflect laterally on the wafer surface may also be used. In these designs, the slipping is substantially uniform and consistent, resulting in improved performance.
Claims
1. A seal for use in an electrochemical processor, comprising: a seal ring having an inner diameter and an outer diameter, and a flat horizontal top surface; an arc section at the inner diameter of the seal ring extending from the flat horizontal top surface of the seal ring to a straight vertical section of the seal ring; the straight vertical section adjoining a tip arc having a first radius of curvature; an outer wall adjoining a bottom surface of the seal ring, and an end radius having a second radius of curvature, the end radius between the outer wall and the tip arc, with the outer wall parallel to the straight vertical section, and with the first radius of curvature 2 to 30 times greater than the second radius of curvature; a support ring supporting the seal ring, the support ring having a flat inner edge inserted into an outward facing horizontal slot in the seal ring adjacent to the inner diameter of the seal ring, with the horizontal slot parallel to the top surface of the seal ring.
2. The seal of claim 1 wherein the outer wall is straight and vertical and an inner wall of the seal ring between the arc section and the tip arc is flat, parallel and co-axial with the outer wall.
3. The seal of claim 1 having a height of 1 to 5 mm.
4. The seal of claim 1 wherein the inside diameter is 294.6 to 295.7 mm.
5. The seal of claim 1 with the tip arc having a concave curvature.
6. The seal of claim 1 with the end radius having a radius of curvature of less than 0.13 mm.
7. The seal of claim 1 wherein the straight vertical section is flat and concentric with the outer wall.
8. The seal of claim 1 wherein the support ring comprises metal and the seal ring comprises a fluoroelastomer.
9. A seal for sealing against a semiconductor material wafer during electroplating in an electrochemical processor, comprising: a seal ring having an inner diameter, an outer diameter, and a top surface, wherein the entire top surface of the seal ring is horizontal and flat; an arc section at the inner diameter of the seal ring extending from the flat horizontal top surface of the seal ring to a straight vertical section of the seal ring; the straight vertical section adjoining a tip arc having a first radius of curvature; an outer wall adjoining a bottom surface of the seal ring, and an end radius having a second radius of curvature, the end radius between the outer wall and the tip arc, with the outer wall parallel to the straight vertical section, and with the first radius of curvature greater than the second radius of curvature; and a support ring supporting the seal ring, the support ring having a flat inner edge inserted into an outward facing horizontal slot in the seal ring parallel to the top surface of the seal ring.
10. The seal of claim 9 wherein the support ring is entirely flat.
11. The seal of claim 1 wherein the support ring is entirely flat.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the drawings, the same reference number indicates the same element in each of the views.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) As shown in
(11) A membrane 60 may optionally included, with anolyte in a lower chamber below the membrane and with catholyte in an upper chamber above the membrane 60. Electric current passes from the electrodes through the electrolyte to a conductive surface on the wafer, as is well known in the art. A motor 28 in the head may be used to rotate the wafer during electroplating. As shown in
(12) Various seal designs have been used in electrochemical processors.
(13) A typical o-ring may naturally have no slip if it is clamped between two sealing surfaces. However, a clamped o-ring seal design in an electroplating processor would require a very tall structure which would interfere with electric field and mass-transfer at the edge of the wafer, and also tend to trap bubbles. As a result, in electroplating processors, seals are typically an elastomer at the tip/rim 84 of a beam-like or cantilever structure 82, and have an inner diameter ID and an outer diameter OD, such as shown in
(14) The inventors' analysis and mathematical modeling of seal behavior reveals that the seal tip can slip or deflect radially inward or outward when engaging the wafer as shown in
(15) However, known seals or varying designs may or may not slip when used with different electrolytes and wafer surfaces. For example, a seal might not slip on copper seed wafers, yet slip on photoresist coated wafers, giving inconsistent results on various processes. Since nominal wafer engagement forces for a 12 inch wafer are about 30-50 lbs, there could be a significant variation in seal compliance and edge-exclusion if the seal slipped on some wafers and not on others. Perhaps, even more inconsistent results might result if the seal slips to varying degree on the same wafer (i.e. if the seal slips on only one side of the wafer).
(16) The inventors have discovered that improved seal performance may be achieved by designing a seal that consistently and uniformly slides on various wafer surfaces. The inventors have also discovered that improved seal performance may be achieved by designing a seal that successfully resists sliding entirely, with the seal tip compressing or deforming without sliding during engagement onto the wafer.
(17)
(18) Referring still to
(19) The end radius 118 may range from 0.001 to 0.005 or 0.001 to 0.003 inches. The tip arc 116 may have a radius ranging from 0.010 to 0.30 or 0.015 to 0.025 inches. Dimension HH, in
(20) The seal ring 102 shown in
(21) The dimensions of different sections of the seal may be selected to achieve a low or zero-slip design. In use, one section or area of the seal structure (i.e. the ring 104 and the elastomer beyond the structure around the arc section 110) deflects slightly up and moves the tip radially inward, while another section (i.e. the tip arc 116 and the wall 120) deflect radially outward. The seal may be designed so that the radially inward motion on one part of the seal structure is matched by the radially outward motion of another part of the structure. The result is then that the net sliding motion at the end 118 is minimal, e.g., less than 0.5 mm, 0.25 mm, 0.2 mm, 0.1 mm, 0.05 mm, or even zero.
(22) The contact force applied to the seal ring 102 may vary from about 40 to 120 pounds, for an 11.62 ID seal ring. The contact force causes the end 118 and the tip arc 116 to deform, with little or no sliding. This no-slip design, coupled with using a relatively rigid metal support ring 104, gives a more precise sealing dimension, which improves yield as the patterns are moved closer to the edge of the wafer. The no-slip seal ring 102 has compliance and a small amount of deflection at given force without the seal end 118 tending to move in the lateral direction as the seal engages the wafer. This avoids the possibility of the end 118 rolling under itself and affecting the seal performance.
(23)
(24) In use, the knife edge of the seal ring 130 engages the wafer at the inner-radius. The seal ring 130 will deflect more for a specified applied contact force. However, the deflection of slip is uniform. Referring to
(25)
(26) The seal ring 150 has relatively high local compliance like the knife-edge seal ring 130. The seal ring 150 can also help shield the plating rate directly at the seal-wafer interface. This may help reduce seal failure due to plate-up of the seal material for some chemistries. Both seal rings 130 and 150 seal with less surface area than conventional designs. The seal ring 130 seals at the very I.D. of the seal. The seal ring 150 pulls the seal lip inboard to the seal (closer to the edge of the wafer). The lower surface which creates the point of the seal lip is now at the front of the seal. This creates an over hang that shields the seal lip from the high current densities. The overhang 162 may reduce the local plating rate at the seal/wafer contact and may reduce the tendency for seal plate up.
(27) The dimensions and angles discussed above are provided as examples and are not critical to the performance of the seal rings. Dimensions outside of the given ranges may be used in alternative designs. The term wafer here means any substrate on which micro-scale devices may be formed. Micro-scale devices include microelectronic, micromechanical, microelectro-mechanical, micro-optical and micro-fluidic devices, whether formed on semiconductor or other substrate materials.
(28) Thus, novel designs and methods have been shown and described. Various changes and substitutions may of course be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The invention, therefore, should not be limited except to the following claims and their equivalents.