Production of free-standing crystalline material layers
09970126 ยท 2018-05-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C30B29/40
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C30B7/105
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02E10/544
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C30B25/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C30B25/183
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C30B25/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C30B7/10
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01L31/0304
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Herein is provided a growth structure for forming a free-standing layer of crystalline material having at least one crystallographic symmetry. The growth structure includes a host substrate and a separation layer disposed on the host substrate for growth of a layer of the crystalline material thereon. The separation layer has a separation layer thickness, and is mechanically weaker than the host substrate and the crystalline material. An array of apertures is in the separation layer, each aperture extending through the separation layer thickness.
Claims
1. A growth structure for forming a free-standing layer of crystalline material having six-fold rotational crystallographic symmetry, the growth structure comprising: a host substrate; a separation layer disposed on the host substrate for growth of a layer of the crystalline material on the separation layer, the separation layer having a separation layer thickness, and the separation layer having a composition that exhibits mechanical weakness in the plane of the separation layer, thereby being mechanically weaker than the host substrate and the crystalline material layer; an array of apertures disposed in the separation layer, each aperture in the array extending through the separation layer thickness; a crystalline growth plane in each of the apertures in the array of apertures, the crystalline growth plane having six-fold rotational crystallographic symmetry; and the array of apertures disposed in the separation layer having six-fold rotational symmetry.
2. The growth structure of claim 1 further comprising a growth template layer disposed on the host substrate under the separation layer and providing a surface for nucleation of a crystalline growth plane in the apertures of the separation layer, wherein the growth template layer comprises a compositional component of the crystalline material.
3. The growth structure of claim 1 further comprising a layer of the crystalline material disposed an the separation layer.
4. The growth structure of claim 3 wherein the crystalline material is monocrystalline.
5. The growth structure of claim 3 wherein the crystalline material layer comprises a crystalline III-V semiconducting material.
6. The growth structure of claim 2 wherein the growth template layer comprises GaN, and further comprising a crystalline material layer of GaN disposed on the separation layer and extending down through the apertures in the separation layer to the growth template layer.
7. The growth structure of claim 3 wherein the crystalline material layer comprises a nitride.
8. The growth structure of claim 1 wherein the separation layer comprises a layer of a graphitic material.
9. The growth structure of claim 8 wherein the separation layer comprises a layer of a material selected from the group consisting of boron nitride and graphitic carbon.
10. The growth structure of claim 8 wherein the separation layer comprises a layer of a material selected from the group consisting of multi-layer graphene, graphene, and fullerene structures.
11. The growth structure of claim 8 wherein the separation layer comprises a layer of boron nitride having a thickness that is less than about 75 nm.
12. The growth structure of claim 1 wherein the crystalline growth plane exposed in each of the apertures in the array of apertures comprises a crystalline gallium nitride growth plane.
13. The growth structure of claim 1 wherein the array of apertures disposed in the separation layer comprises an array of generally circular apertures.
14. The growth structure of claim 1 wherein the array of apertures disposed in the separation layer has an aperture periodicity that is less than about 100 microns.
15. The growth structure of claim 1 further comprising a growth template layer disposed on the host substrate under the separation layer and providing a surface for nucleation of the crystalline growth plane in the apertures of the separation layer, wherein the growth template layer comprises a composition that is epitaxially compatible with crystalline gallium nitride.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(3) Referring to
(4) Referring to
(5) Referring to
(6) In one example configuration, the separation layer is provided as a composition that includes or consists of a graphitic material, such as boron nitride (BN), graphitic carbon, multi-layer graphene, graphene, flaked graphite, or other suitable graphitic material. A layer of fullerene structures, such as a layer of carbon nanotubes, can also be employed. Alternative to graphitic materials, there can be employed as the separation layer any material that enables fracture of the layer to separate the upper crystalline layer. Layers of polymers, such as a thermally-reduced polymer, hydrogen-implanted materials, or engineered materials having a mechanical weakness in the plane of the material layer can be employed.
(7) The separation layer can be formed by any suitable process, e.g., RF sputtering, CVD, atomic layer deposition (ALD), pulsed layer deposition (PLD), thermal evaporation, or other suitable formation process, including physical liquid, and vapor deposition processes in general. For example, a separation layer of BN can be deposited by RF reactive sputtering from a pyrolytic BN target in an atmosphere of N.sub.2 and Ar. No particular formation process is required. The separation layer can be first formed on a second structure or film and then transferred from that second structure or film to the growth structure, rather than being formed in situ on the growth structure itself.
(8) Referring back to
(9) The thickness of the separation layer is also preferably selected based on the composition of the upper material layer to be formed, the material layer deposition conditions, and the host substrate and growth template materials. It can be preferred to optimize the separation layer thickness so that the separation layer does not fracture until some thickness of stable material layer growth is completed. But it is to be recognized that during very thick material layer growth, fracture of the separation layer can commence prior to the completion of the material layer growth, and such fracture is not detrimental to the material layer growth. Empirical analysis for thickness optimization can therefore be preferred. For the example of GaN material layer formation, a sputtered BN separation layer having a thickness between about 30 nm and about 120 nm, preferably less than 75 nm, e.g., between about 40 nm and 75 nm, and more preferably no more than about 60 nm, can be preferred to grow a GaN layer of any selected thickness, e.g., more than 500 microns, with no upper limit on GaN layer thickness. The required BN layer thickness depends on the quality of the BN material.
(10) Referring also to
(11) The spacing between the openings, e.g., the aperture periodicity, d.sub.p, across the arrangement of apertures in the separation layer, is preferably designed to have a periodicity that is based on the crystallographic orientation of the upper material layer to be grown on the separation layer. For example, for GaN, Si, or other crystalline material to be grown that exhibits a crystallographic symmetry e.g., 3-fold or 6-fold symmetrythe separation layer openings are preferably arranged in an array with a corresponding symmetry that matches one of the crystallographic symmetries in the growth plane of the crystalline material, e.g., 6-fold or 3-fold symmetry.
(12) All crystalline materials can be characterized by an inherent symmetry, which herein refers to a condition by which under various geometric operations the crystal remains unchanged. All crystalline materials have translational symmetry in three directions, but some have other symmetry elements as well. For example, rotating a crystal 180 about an axis of the crystal structure may result in an atomic configuration that is identical to the original configuration. The crystal is then said to have a twofold rotational symmetry about this axis. In addition to rotational symmetries, a crystalline material can have symmetries that result from mirror crystal planes, can have translational symmetries, and can have compound symmetries, resulting from a combination of translation and rotation or mirror symmetries
(13) The array of apertures in the separation layer is preferably configured with a symmetry that matches the crystallographic symmetry of the crystalline material in the growth plane of the material. This condition ensures that flat crystalline facets of the upper material layer that grow through the separation layer openings overgrow the separation layer and meet at flat faces that are parallel to each other, to coalesce uniformly, thereby to form a continuous material layer over the discontinuous separation layer. The symmetric aperture array thereby provides more consistent and uniform coalescence of the overgrowing crystalline material. Depending on the aperture configuration, dislocations can be filtered out of the crystalline material growth, and the strain and layer separation can be controlled to consistently occur at a prespecified selected time in the process, producing a higher process yield.
(14)
(15) Because the separation layer is provided with a prespecified aperture geometry and size, and a prespecified aperture periodicity, it is preferred that the separation layer be intentionally patterned, e.g., lithographically patterned, as part of the growth structure formation process, with, e.g., a selected mask that defines the prespecified openings in the separation layer. Lithography is not required, but it is preferred that an aperture formation process in which prespecified apertures are formed in a prespecified arrangement be employed. Referring to
(16) Any suitable mask pattern and aperture opening pattern can be employed. The apertures can be distinctly separated or can be laterally connected. For example, grating patterns, hole patterns of any geometry, or other pattern can be employed. It is found that grating patterns can cause anisotropic strain in the structure under some conditions, and therefore may not be preferable for all applications. Holes or other such apertures may therefore be preferred for some applications. For the example array of mask holes in
(17) The growth structure is then exposed to selected process conditions to produce a crystalline semiconducting material layer on top of the separation layer. Referring to
(18) The crystalline semiconductor material layer can be formed of any desired thickness, ranging from nanometers to microns, and can be substantially thick, having a thickness of 1000s of microns or more, e.g., 10 mm. For many applications, it can be preferred to produce a relatively thick crystalline material layer, given that it is desired to render that layer free-standing. The characteristics of the selected material layer composition are also to be considered. For example, the material layer preferably is thick enough to exhibit a dislocation density that is sufficiently low for a given application. Additionally, the crystalline material layer is preferably thick enough to provide some thickness of sacrificial material, if the layer is to be polished, and to provide sufficient material if the layer is to be sliced to yield multiple substrates. Conversely, the material layer can be provided as a relatively thin layer that can be bonded to a so-called handle-wafer for further processing after removal of the host substrate.
(19) During growth of the crystalline material layer 25, and cool down of the entire growth structure after material layer growth, the separation layer 14 controls the release of stress buildup in the growth structure due to mismatch in the thermal expansion coefficients of each of the materials in the growth structure. The separation layer, being substantially mechanically weaker than the other materials in the growth structure, is a mechanical plane of controlled breakage between the material layer 25 and template layer 12 and host substrate 10.
(20) Referring to
(21) The preferred time of separation layer fracture can be for many applications after the completion of the crystalline material layer growth, e.g., during cool down, or at a later point in the process. But during the growth of a relatively thick crystalline material layer, the strain in the structure can become sufficiently high that the separation layer begins to fracture during growth; such in situ fracture can be employed for many applications. The fracture of the separation layer can be caused to occur at a selected time. For example, after connection of the crystalline material layer to an upper handle wafer or other handle structure, the growth structure can be pulled apart, causing the separation layer to fracture. No particular fracture time is required; the parameters of the separation layer can be tailored to achieve a selected fracture point.
(22) This growth structure and the growth process for producing a free-standing material layer or substrate provides substantial advantages over conventional substrate separation techniques, including advantages in yield, scalability, and fabrication cost. The growth structure and associated growth technique is suitable for any material formation process, including ammonothermal, solution-growth, molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy (MOCVD), or other material deposition process. Any host substrate can be employed; a growth template layer is not required, and is only needed when a particular material growth requires such. Bulk, free-standing material structures of any selected material layer, particularly semiconductor crystalline materials, such as GaN, SiC, AlInGaN, GaAs, InP, and other semiconductor materials can be formed with the growth structure and growth process.
(23) It is recognized that those skilled in the art may make various modifications and additions to the embodiments described above without departing from the spirit and scope of the present contribution to the art. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the protection sought to be afforded hereby should be deemed to extend to the subject matter claims and all equivalents thereof fairly within the scope of the invention.