Polishing system with pad carrier and conditioning station
09987724 ยท 2018-06-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B24B37/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/013
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B27/0023
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B53/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/205
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B37/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B53/017
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B24B53/017
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B24B53/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A polishing system includes a support to hold a substrate having a substrate surface to be polished, a conditioning system for conditioning a polishing pad, the conditioning system comprising one or more conditioning heads, a movable support structure, and a carrier to hold a polishing pad. The carrier is suspended from the movable support structure, and the support structure is configured to move the carrier between the support to hold the substrate and the conditioning system.
Claims
1. A polishing system, comprising: a support to hold a substrate having a substrate surface to be polished; a carrier to hold a polishing pad; and a conditioning system for conditioning the polishing pad, the conditioning system comprising a conditioning head stored within a chamber in the support in a portion of the support covered by the substrate when the substrate is held on the support and configured to be raised out of the support to contact the polishing pad when the substrate is not held on the support.
2. The polishing system of claim 1, comprising a pad rinsing system to supply a cleaning fluid to the polishing pad.
3. The polishing system of claim 2, wherein the pad rinsing system is stored within a chamber in the support and is configured to be raised out of the support to direct the cleaning fluid onto the polishing pad when the substrate is not held on the support.
4. A polishing system, comprising: a support to hold a substrate having a substrate surface to be polished; a carrier to hold a polishing pad, the carrier suspended from a movable support structure, wherein the support structure is configured to move the carrier with the polishing pad between the support to hold the substrate and a conditioning system; and a pad rinsing system to supply a cleaning fluid to the polishing pad, the pad rinsing system stored within a chamber in the support in a portion of the support covered by the substrate when the substrate is held on the support and configured to be raised out of the support to apply cleaning fluid to the polishing pad when the substrate is not held on the support.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Overview
(8) When a surface of a substrate is polished using a chemical mechanical polishing process, sometimes substrate material(s) at different locations of the surface is removed at different rates. For example, substrate material(s) in a surface region near the edge of the substrate can be removed at a higher rate than that in a surface region near a center of the substrate. In another example, the polished surface may contain undesirable underpolished peaks or over-polished valleys in small, localized zones, e.g., zones having a linear dimension of 10 mm or less. Such peaks or valleys may be caused by imperfections in polishing process or polishing apparatus.
(9) For simplicity of the discussion, a polishing process that substantially planarizes the surface of the substrate, i.e., substantially removes step height differences caused by the underlying pattern, and removes a bulk part of the material that is intended to be removed, is referred to as bulk polishing.
(10) The chemical mechanical polishing processes of this disclosure includes one or more additional steps that modify thickness profiles of substrates before, during, and/or after the bulk polishing of the substrates. In these processes, instead of or in addition to a backside pressure, the surface being polished receives a pressure from a front side without having the pressure pass through the substrate. The front-side pressure is applied through the polishing pad and does not substantially disperse through the polishing pad. By finely controlling the area and the amount of the pressure applied to the polishing pad, the pressure reached at the surface being polished is finely controlled. The modification to the thickness profile of the substrate can be highly localized and adjustable and can be performed to different zones, e.g., radial zones, of the substrate surface. The localized pressure can be applied using one or more pressure control pads and/or one or more flexible rings. In some implementations, a backside pressure and a front side pressure can be used in combination.
(11) The thickness modification can be performed mechanically, chemically, or chemical mechanically. In some implementations, the one or more additional steps include chemical mechanical polishing steps that are similar to those used in the bulk polishing, except that the pressure distribution on the surface being polished is finely controlled such that the chemical mechanical polishing only occurs at desired, localized zones of the surface.
(12) The one or more steps can also include conditioning the polishing pad used in thickness modification. The conditioning can be conveniently performed at the same station at which the thickness modification process is performed. Sometimes the conditioning is only done at selected locations of the polishing pad which have been used for modifying thicknesses of a substrate at corresponding locations.
Example Polishing Systems
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The Bulk Polishing Apparatus
(14) The polishing apparatus 104 includes one or more carrier heads 140 (only one shown). Each carrier head 140 is operable to hold a substrate 10, such as a wafer, against the polishing pad 110. Each carrier head 140 can have independent control of the polishing parameters, for example pressure, associated with each respective substrate. Each carrier head 140 includes a retaining ring 142 to hold the substrate 10 in position on the polishing pad 110 and below a flexible membrane 144.
(15) Each carrier head 140 can optionally include a plurality of independently controllable pressurizable chambers defined by the membrane, e.g., three chambers 146a-146c, which can apply independently controllable pressurizes to associated zones on the flexible membrane 144 and thus on the substrate 10.
(16) Each carrier head 140 is suspended from a support structure 150, e.g., a carousel or a track, and is connected by a drive shaft 152 to a carrier head rotation motor 154 so that the carrier head can rotate about an axis 155. Optionally each carrier head 140 can oscillate laterally, e.g., on sliders on the carousel 150; by rotational oscillation of the carousel itself, or by motion of a carriage that supports the carrier head 140 along the track.
(17) The platen 120 included in the polishing apparatus 104 is a rotatable disk-shaped platen on which a polishing pad 110 is situated. The platen is operable to rotate about an axis 125. For example, a motor 121 can turn a drive shaft 124 to rotate the platen 120. The polishing pad 110 can be a two-layer polishing pad with an outer polishing layer 112 and a softer backing layer 114.
(18) The polishing apparatus 102 can include a port 130 to dispense polishing liquid 132, such as a slurry, onto the polishing pad 110 to the pad. The polishing apparatus can also include a polishing pad conditioner to abrade the polishing pad 110 to maintain the polishing pad 110 in a consistent abrasive state.
(19) In operation, the platen is rotated about its central axis 125, and each carrier head is rotated about its central axis 155 and translated laterally across the top surface of the polishing pad.
(20) While only one carrier head 140 is shown, more carrier heads can be provided to hold additional substrates so that the surface area of polishing pad 110 may be used efficiently. Thus, the number of carrier head assemblies adapted to hold substrates for a simultaneous polishing process can be based, at least in part, on the surface area of the polishing pad 110.
(21) In some implementations, the polishing apparatus includes an in-situ monitoring system 160. The in-situ monitoring system can be an optical monitoring system, e.g., a spectrographic monitoring system, which can be used to measure a spectrum of reflected light from a substrate undergoing polishing. An optical access through the polishing pad is provided by including an aperture (i.e., a hole that runs through the pad) or a solid window 118. The in-situ monitoring system can alternatively or in addition include an eddy current monitoring system.
(22) In some implementation, the optical monitoring system 160 is an in-sequence optical monitoring system having a probe (not shown) positioned between two polishing apparatuses or between a polishing apparatus and a transfer station. The monitoring system 160 can continuously or periodically monitor one or more features of the zones of the substrate during polishing. For example, one feature is a thickness of each zone of the substrate.
(23) In either the in-situ or in-sequence embodiments, the optical monitoring system 160 can include a light source 162, a light detector 164, and circuitry 166 for sending and receiving signals between a remote controller 190, e.g., a computer, and the light source 162 and light detector 164. One or more optical fibers 170 can be used to transmit the light from the light source 162 to the optical access in the polishing pad, and to transmit light reflected from the substrate 10 to the detector 164.
The Modification Station
(24) The modification station 102 includes a support structure 106 that provides a surface 108 to receive a substrate 10. The substrate 10 may also be secured to the support structure 106, e.g., by vacuum chucking or clamps.
(25) A fine control polishing head 300 can be controlled by a controller 302 to selectively modify thicknesses at different locations of a surface 308 of the substrate 10. The surface 308 of the substrate 10 can be brought in contact with a polishing surface 304 of a polishing pad 306, and slurry can be supplied between the two surfaces 304, 308. During polishing, the pressure applied by discrete regions of the polishing pad 306 is controlled by pressure applicator(s) 305. Thus, the fine control polishing head 300 can apply pressure at selected locations of the polishing pad 306 to modify the thicknesses of the substrate 10 at localized regions. For example, the regions on the substrate can have a lateral size (parallel to the surface) of about 1-10 mm, e.g., 5 mm. The thickness modification can remove materials in these regions by an amount in the order of nanometers, e.g., 2-100 nn, 10-100 nm or 50-100 nm.
(26) The controller 302 can store a pre-determined thickness profile for the substrate 10 and can control the modification of the substrate thickness based on the stored profile. For example, using the stored profile and an actual thickness profile or predicted thickness profile of the substrate 10, the fine control polishing head 300 can be instructed to modify the thickness of the substrate to reach the stored profile. The actual thickness profile of a substrate to be modified can be obtained using dry metrology or wet measurement before the modification process starts. In some implementations, the controller 302 stores data, e.g., in the form of a lookup table, that contains information about the amount and type of thickness modification to be performed for each type of substrate.
(27) The modification station 102 can also include a monitoring system 304 that provides in-situ measurement or in-line measurement of the thickness modification. In some implementations, the monitoring system 304 is similar to the monitoring system 160 of the bulk polishing apparatus 104. For example, the monitoring system 304 can be an optical monitoring system. An optical fiber of the monitoring system 304 can project through an aperture in the polishing pad 306, be positioned between two pad sections, or be positioned to scan a portion of the substrate that is not in contact with the polishing pad. The optical fiber can project light onto the substrate and receive a reflection of light from the substrate.
(28) The monitoring system can communicate with the controller 302 to provide feedback to and control the modification process. In situations where the modification is performed before or during the bulk polishing process of the substrate 10, the modification may not need to be precise. The thickness modification not only changes the thickness of the substrate 10, but also changes the polishing dynamics of the bulk polishing process implemented after the modification. The bulk polishing process can reach a uniform in-wafer polishing.
(29) The modification station 102 can additionally include a polishing pad conditioning system 309 for conditioning the polishing pad 306. In some implementations, the modification station 102 includes multiple fine control polishing heads 300 for modifying multiple substrates on the same support mechanism 106 or different support mechanisms simultaneously. Sometimes while some substrates are being polished, other polishing pads are being conditioned.
Modifying the Substrate Thickness Profile
(30) Referring to
(31) The modification station 200 can include a motor 206 for moving the head 202 and the polishing pad 204 vertically up and down as shown by the arrows 208.
(32) The modification station 200 can also include motors for generating relative motion between the substrate and the polishing pad during polishing. For example, the modification station can include a motor for rotating or oscillating the head 202 and the polishing pad 204. Alternatively or in addition, the motor can rotate or oscillate the pedestal 210 to provide the relative motion. The rotation or oscillation of the polishing pad relative to the substrate 212 polishes the surface 214 of the substrate. During polishing, the downward force applied by the fine control polishing head 202 produces a front-side pressure to the polishing interface between the surfaces 214, 216.
(33) The fine control polishing head 202 is configured to hold the polishing pad 204. The polishing pad can be sufficiently wide to span the entire width of the substrate. A back surface 218 of the polishing pad 204 (i.e., the side opposite to the polishing surface 216) can be secured to the fine control polishing head 202 by adhesive, or held on the head 202 by one or more clamps. In some implementations, only the rim of the polishing pad 204 is secured to the fine control polishing head 202. In this case, the remainder of the back surface 218 (except for regions contacted by the control pads discussed below) can be exposed to a fluid, e.g., air, in an interior chamber between the polishing pad 204 and the head 202. The interior chamber in the head 202 can be vented to atmosphere.
(34) The fine control polishing head 202 includes or more pressure applicators 220 for exerting localized force on the surface 218 of the polishing pad 204. Each pressure applicator includes an actuator and a body that is controllably mechanically actuated to move into contact and apply pressure to the surface 218 of the polishing pad 204. Thus, the polishing pad 204 is located between the pressure applicators 220 and the substrate 212. The actuator can be a linear actuator, and can be configured to move the body in a direction perpendicular to the back surface 218 of the polishing pad 204 when attached to the head 202.
(35) The body of the pressure applicator 220 that moves into contract with the surface 218 of the polishing pad 204 can be referred to as a pressure control pad, although the pressure control pad need not be a soft or thin body. In the example shown in
(36) By choosing the size and shape of the contact area or the cross-section of the pressure control pad 220, the size and shape of the area on the substrate surface 214 to be polished can be fine-tuned. In some implementations, the size of the contact area or the cross-section of the pressure control pad 220 is chosen based on the desired resolution of the smoothness on the surface 214. For example, if the desired smoothness of the surface 214 is up to the 10 mm, then any localized peaks or valleys that has a size of 10 mm or more needs to be finely polished away. The pressure control pad 220 can be chosen to have the size in the same magnitude as the localized peak. Thus, localized pressure can be applied to such peaks to smooth them.
(37) Some examples of suitable shapes for the cross-section of a pressure control pad 220 are shown in
(38)
(39) For a fine control polishing head 202 of
(40) The pressure control pads can be moved to locations at which localized pressure is desirable for localized polishing of the substrate. In some implementations, the pressure control pads have a fixed lateral position in the fine control polishing head 202, so it is the fine control polishing head that needs to be moved to position the pressure control pads in the desired region. In some implementations, the pressure control pads have are movable within the fine control polishing head 202, e.g., by linear actuators within the head 202. For example, each pressure control pad can be moved independently of the other pressure control pads.
(41) In some implementations, two pressure control pads form a pair and are positioned in coordination. For example, the two pressure control pads 220a, 220b can be arranged along a diameter of the substrate 212 or a diameter of the polishing pad 204 and move along the diameter to be relatively closer or farther to each other. In some implementations, the control pads 220a, 220b can remain equidistant from a center point of the substrate 212 or polishing pad 204 as they move along the diameter. In some implementations, the fine control polishing head 202 rotates, and the pair of pads are equidistant from the axis of rotation.
(42) During the polishing operation, the pressure control pads can be held stationary relative to the fine control polishing head 202, but move with the fine control polishing head 202.
(43) An example of a pair of coordinated pressure control pads 312, 314 is shown in
(44) During polishing, as described previously, the fine control polishing head 202 and the polishing pad 204 may rotate relative to the substrate 204. As a result, the pressure control pads 220 also rotate relative to the substrate 204. The localized polishing by the localized pressure applied from the polishing pads 220 can occur along an entire radial circle. In some implementations, instead of rotating the polishing head 202 and the polishing pad 204, the motor 206 vibrates the polishing pad to remove materials from the substrate surface 214 at the locations corresponding to the pressure control pads 220. At a later time, the pressure control pads 220 may be moved to a different location to remove materials from that different location. The locations of the pressure control pads can be predetermined based on the desired and actual thickness profiles of the substrate.
(45) In some implementations, the fine control polishing head 202 of
(46) In some implementations, the fine control polishing head 202 of
(47) In some situation, instead of being stationary relative to the polishing pad 204, the pressure control pad(s) or pair(s) of pressure control pads can move, e.g., sweep along a path, relative to the polishing pad during polishing.
(48) In some implementations, depending on the amount of localized polishing needed to achieve the desired thickness and smoothness profile, at different locations of the substrate, different amount of pressure and/or different length of polishing time can be applied by independent pressure control pads or independent pairs of pressure control pads. For example, sometimes bulk polishing of a substrate causes the substrate to have a so-called asymmetry problem, in which the thickness variation is larger near an edge of a bulk polished substrate than in a central region of the substrate. The thickness modifications at the center region and the edge region of the substrate can be performed differently to achieve a uniform thickness within the substrate surface 214.
(49) In some implementations, different from those shown in
(50) Referring to
(51) The flexible ring 600 also includes a central hub 610 including a moving mechanism 614 and a ring 612 connected to the moving mechanism. The central hub 610 is connected to the bottom 622 of the flexible body 606 by ribs 616 extending from the ring 612. The moving mechanism 614, which can be a motor, a linear actuator, or an air cylinder, can move up and down along a direction 618 that is vertical to the surface of the upper outer ring and parallel to a long axis of the body 606. The ribs 616 can be flexible such that, as the central hub 610 moves upward towards the upper outer ring 602, the ribs 616 pull the body 606 inwards such that the diameter of the bottom 622 is reduced, e.g., at position A. As the central hub 610 moves downwards away from the upper outer ring 602, the ribs push the body 606 outwards such that the diameter of the bottom 622 is increased, e.g., at position B.
(52) As a result, the flexible ring 600 can replace the pressure control pads 220 of
(53) In some implementations, the bottom 622 of the body 606 additionally includes discrete features 630 for direct contact with the polishing pad surface 218. The features 630 can have desired shapes and sizes, e.g., similar to those of the pressure control pads 220. In some implementations, different features at different locations of the bottom 622 can have the same or different shapes and/or sizes. The features may be permanently attached to or integrally formed with the body 606, or can be detachable so that a user may choose the locations at which the pressure is to be applied on the substrate 212.
(54) In some implementations, the modification station 200 of
(55) Referring to
Polishing Pad Conditioning System
(56) Referring again to
(57) In the example shown in
(58) Alternatively, the conditioning system 240 is integrated with the pedestal 210 that supports the substrate 212 at the modification station 200. The conditioning head(s) 242 and/or the rinse assembly 244 can be stored within an open chamber of the pedestal 210 before and during a modification process is applied to the substrate 212. This chamber can be located in a portion of the pedestal 210 that is covered by the substrate 212 when the substrate 212 is supported by the pedestal 210. After the substrate 212 completes its thickness modification and the substrate 212 is removed from the station 200, the conditioning head(s) 242 and the rinse assembly 244 can be raised to be exposed to and/or in contact with the polishing pad surface 216.
(59) Alternatively, the conditioning head(s) 242 can be placed laterally in a direction perpendicular to the directions 208 at a radius larger than the polishing pad 204 and the substrate 212. During the modification process, the conditioning head(s) 242 does not contact the substrate 212 or the polishing pad 204. After the modification process is completed, the conditioning head(s) 242 can be moved laterally to be under the polishing surface 216 to condition the polishing surface 216.
(60) Sometimes because the polishing pad surface 216 is used only in selected locations in a modification process, the conditioning head(s) 242 can be adjusted laterally to those selected locations of the polishing pad surface 216. Conditioning is then performed at these selected locations, instead of the entire pad surface 216. As described previously, the polishing pad surface 216 may have a small size to cover a localized area of the substrate that needs thickness modification. In such a situation, the entire polishing pad surface 216 can be conditioned. A description of a conditioner head for use in a conditioning system, such as conditioner head(s) 242 of the system 240, can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,036,583, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
(61) In some implementations, the system includes multiple stations. In the example shown in
(62) In some implementations, the modification station 200 includes multiple modification stations that have the same feature as the modification station described above with respect to
(63) The carousel 260 can coordinate the processes performed by the stations 200a, 200b to produce polishing pads with a high throughput. For example, when the sub-modification station 200a is modifying the thickness profile of the substrate 212, the sub-modification station 200b conditions the polishing pad 204.
(64) As used in the instant specification, the term substrate can include, for example, a product substrate (e.g., which includes multiple memory or processor dies), a test substrate, a bare substrate, and a gating substrate. The substrate can be at various stages of integrated circuit fabrication, e.g., the substrate can be a bare wafer, or it can include one or more deposited and/or patterned layers. The term substrate can include circular disks and rectangular sheets.
(65) The above described polishing apparatus and methods can be applied in a variety of polishing systems. Either the polishing pad, or the carrier heads, or both can move to provide relative motion between the polishing surface and the substrate. For example, the platen may orbit rather than rotate. The polishing pad can be a circular (or some other shape) pad secured to the platen. Some aspects of the endpoint detection system may be applicable to linear polishing systems, e.g., where the polishing pad is a continuous or a reel-to-reel belt that moves linearly. The polishing layer can be a standard (for example, polyurethane with or without fillers) polishing material, a soft material, or a fixed-abrasive material. Terms of relative positioning are used; it should be understood that the polishing surface and substrate can be held in a vertical orientation or some other orientation.
(66) Although the description above has focused on control of a chemical mechanical polishing system, the modification station can be applicable to other types of substrate processing systems, e.g., etching or deposition systems.
(67) Control of the various systems and processes described in this specification, or portions of them, can be implemented in a computer program product that includes instructions that are stored on one or more non-transitory machine-readable storage media, and that are executable on one or more processing devices. The systems described in this specification, or portions of them, can be implemented as an apparatus, method, or electronic system that may include one or more processing devices and memory to store executable instructions to perform the operations described in this specification.
(68) While this specification contains many specific implementation details, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of any invention or on the scope of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features that may be specific to particular embodiments of particular inventions. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or variation of a subcombination.
(69) Similarly, while operations are depicted in the drawings in a particular order, this should not be understood as requiring that such operations be performed in the particular order shown or in sequential order, or that all illustrated operations be performed, to achieve desirable results. In certain circumstances, multitasking and parallel processing may be advantageous. Moreover, the separation of various system modules and components in the embodiments described above should not be understood as requiring such separation in all embodiments, and it should be understood that the described program components and systems can generally be integrated together in a single software product or packaged into multiple software products.
(70) Particular embodiments of the subject matter have been described. Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. For example, the actions recited in the claims can be performed in a different order and still achieve desirable results. As one example, the processes depicted in the accompanying figures do not necessarily require the particular order shown, or sequential order, to achieve desirable results. In some cases, multitasking and parallel processing may be advantageous.