Ferroelectric Capacitor, Ferroelectric Field Effect Transistor, And Method Used In Forming An Electronic Component Comprising Conductive Material And Ferroelectric Material
20170162587 ยท 2017-06-08
Inventors
- Ashonita A. Chavan (Boise, ID, US)
- Durai Vishak Nirmal Ramaswamy (Boise, ID, US)
- Manuj Nahar (Boise, ID, US)
Cpc classification
H10D30/701
ELECTRICITY
H10D64/691
ELECTRICITY
H10D64/667
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/28097
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L21/28
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/02
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/49
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material comprises forming a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material over a substrate. A composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides is formed over the substrate. The composite stack has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm. The composite stack is used to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric. Conductive material is formed over the composite stack and the insulator material. Ferroelectric capacitors and ferroelectric field effect transistors independent of method of manufacture are also disclosed.
Claims
1. A method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material, the method comprising: forming a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material over a substrate; forming a composite stack comprising different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides over the substrate, the composite stack having an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm; using the composite stack to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric; and forming conductive material over the composite stack and the insulator material.
2. A method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material, the method comprising: forming a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material over a substrate; forming a composite stack comprising different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides over the substrate, the composite stack having an overall conductivity of 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm to 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm; using the composite stack to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric; and forming conductive material over the composite stack and the insulator material.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the metal oxide-comprising insulator material is rendered ferroelectric before forming any of the conductive material.
4. The method of claim 1 comprising forming the insulator material before forming the composite stack.
5. The method of claim 1 comprising forming the composite stack before forming the insulator material.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the composite stack is formed to consist essentially of the different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the composite stack is formed to additionally comprise SiO.sub.2.
8. A method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material, the method comprising: forming a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material over a substrate; forming a composite stack comprising different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides over the substrate, the composite stack having an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm; using the composite stack to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric; forming conductive material over the composite stack and the insulator material; and the composite stack being formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
9. The method of claim 1 comprising forming the composite stack and the insulator material directly against one another.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein the composite stack is formed to consist essentially of the different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides.
11. The method of claim 1 comprising forming the conductive material directly against the composite stack.
12. The method of claim 11 wherein the composite stack is formed to consist essentially of the different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides.
13. The method of claim 1 comprising forming the conductive material directly against the insulator material.
14. The method of claim 1 comprising using the composite stack to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric during a depositing of the composite stack over the insulator material.
15. The method of claim 1 comprising using the composite stack to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric after a depositing of the composite stack over the insulator material.
16. The method of claim 1 comprising patterning the insulator material, the composite stack, and the conductive material into a ferroelectric field effect transistor gate construction.
17. The method of claim 1 wherein the insulator material is formed over conductor material, and further comprising patterning the conductive material, the composite stack, the insulator material, and the conductor material into a ferroelectric capacitor construction.
18. The method of claim 1 wherein each of the different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides has conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm.
19. The method of claim 1 wherein at least one of the different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides does not have conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm.
20. The method of claim 1 comprising forming the composite stack to comprise only two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides.
21. The method of claim 20 comprising forming the composite stack to comprise two alternating layers of each of the two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides.
22. The method of claim 1 wherein the different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides are selected from among TiO.sub.x, AlO.sub.x, Al.sub.2O.sub.3, ScO.sub.x, Sc.sub.2O.sub.3, ZrO.sub.x, YO.sub.x, Y.sub.2O.sub.3, MgO.sub.x, MgO, HfO.sub.x, SrO.sub.x, SrO, Ta.sub.xO.sub.y, NbO.sub.x, GdO.sub.x, MoO.sub.x, RuO.sub.x, LaO.sub.x, V.sub.xO.sub.y, IrO.sub.x, CrO.sub.x, ZnO.sub.x, PrO.sub.x, CeO.sub.x, SmO.sub.x, and LuO.sub.x.
23. The method of claim 1 wherein the insulator material is formed over a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulative material that is non-ferroelectric in a finished circuitry construction comprising the electronic component.
24. The method of claim 23 comprising forming the insulator material directly against the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulative material.
25. The method of claim 23 comprising using the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulative material to invoke a desired crystalline structure in the insulator material as initially-formed and while it is non-ferroelectric.
26. The method of claim 23 comprising using the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulative material to invoke a desired crystalline structure in the ferroelectric-rendered metal oxide-comprising insulator material.
27. The method of claim 1 wherein the conductive material comprises one or more of IrO.sub.x, SrRuO.sub.3, RuO.sub.x, LSCO; TiSi.sub.x, TaSi.sub.x, RuSi.sub.x, WN.sub.xSi.sub.y, Ru, TiAlN, TaN, WN.sub.x, TiSi.sub.xN.sub.y, TaSi.sub.xN.sub.y, RuSi.sub.xN.sub.y, and RuSi.sub.xTi.sub.yN.sub.z.
28. A method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material, the method comprising: forming a composite stack comprising different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides over a substrate, the composite stack having an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm; forming a metal oxide-comprising insulator material over the composite stack and to be ferroelectric upon its initial formation by using the composite stack to render ferroelectric what would otherwise be a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material formed under identical conditions without presence of the composite stack; and forming conductive material over the composite stack and the insulator material.
29-30. (canceled)
31. The method of claim 8 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
32. The method of claim 18 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
33. The method of claim 19 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
34. The method of claim 20 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
35. The method of claim 21 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
36. The method of claim 22 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
37. The method of claim 28 wherein the composite stack has overall conductivity no greater than 110.sup.3 Siemens/cm.
38. The method of claim 8 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
39. The method of claim 18 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
40. The method of claim 19 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
41. The method of claim 20 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
42. The method of claim 21 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
43. The method of claim 22 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
44. The method of claim 28 wherein the composite stack is formed to be of lower conductivity than the conductive material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
[0018] Embodiments of the invention encompass a method used in forming an electronic component that comprises conductive material and ferroelectric material. Embodiments of the invention also encompass a ferroelectric capacitor independent of method of manufacture. Embodiments of the invention also encompass a ferroelectric field effect transistor independent of method of manufacture.
[0019] Referring to
[0020] Substrate 12 may comprise any one or more of conductive/conductor (i.e., electrically herein), semiconductive, or insulative/insulator (i.e., electrically herein) materials. In the context of this document, a conductor/conductive material has compositional intrinsic electrical conductivity of at least 310.sup.4 Siemens/cm (i.e., at 20 C. everywhere herein) as opposed to electrical conductivity that could occur by movement of positive or negative charges through a thin material that is otherwise intrinsically insulative. An insulator/insulative material has compositional intrinsic electrical conductivity of no greater than 110.sup.9 Siemens/cm (i.e., it is electrically resistive as opposed to being conductive or semiconductive). Any of the materials, regions, and structures described herein may be homogenous or non-homogenous, and regardless may be continuous or discontinuous over any material which such overlie. Further, unless otherwise stated, each material may be formed using any suitable or yet-to-be developed technique, with atomic layer deposition, chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition, epitaxial growth, diffusion doping, and ion implanting being examples.
[0021] A non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 has been formed over substrate 12. Any suitable existing or yet-to-be-developed non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material may be used. In one embodiment, the non-ferroelectric insulator material comprises one or more of transition metal oxide, zirconium, zirconium oxide, hafnium, hafnium oxide, lead zirconium titanate, tantalum oxide, strontium oxide, strontium titanium oxide, titanium oxide, and barium strontium titanate, and which may have dopant therein which comprises one or more of silicon, aluminum, lanthanum, yttrium, erbium, calcium, magnesium, strontium, lutetium, dysprosium, gadolinium, praseodymium, chromium, niobium, tantalum, hafnium, zirconium, vanadium manganese, cobalt, nickel, carbon and any other rare earth element. One particular example includes a hafnium and zirconium based oxide having suitable dopant therein. Other examples include a hafnium and silicon based oxide having suitable dopant therein; a yttrium and zirconium based oxide having suitable dopant therein; and a hafnium, silicon, and zirconium based oxide. Insulator material 14 may be deposited in any phase (e.g., amorphous or crystalline) and which phase may remain or change during subsequent processing. By way of examples, any of the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator materials described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,709,359 to Boeske et al. and/or U.S. Pat. No. 8,304,823 to Boeske may be used, and such references are herein incorporated by reference.
[0022] An example thickness for insulator material 14 is from about 10 Angstroms to about 200 Angstroms, and in one embodiment from about 30 Angstroms to about 90 Angstroms. In this document, thickness by itself (no preceding directional adjective) is defined as the mean straight-line distance through a given material or region perpendicularly from a closest surface of an immediately adjacent material of different composition or of an immediately adjacent region. Additionally, the various materials and regions described herein may be of substantially constant thickness or of variable thickness. If of variable thickness, thickness refers to average thickness unless otherwise indicated, and such material or region will have some minimum thickness and some maximum thickness due to the thickness being variable. As used herein, different composition only requires those portions of two stated materials or regions that may be directly against one another to be chemically and/or physically different, for example if such materials or regions are not homogenous. If the two stated materials or regions are not directly against one another, different composition only requires that those portions of the two stated materials or regions that are closest to one another be chemically and/or physically different if such materials or regions are not homogenous. In this document, a material, region, or structure is directly against another when there is at least some physically touching contact of the stated materials, regions, or structures relative one another. In contrast, over, on, adjacent, along, and against not preceded by directly encompass directly against as well as construction where intervening material(s), region(s), or structure(s) result(s) in no physical touching contact of the stated materials, regions, or structures relative one another.
[0023] Referring to
[0024] In one ideal embodiment and as shown, composite stack 16 and metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 are formed directly against one another. In one embodiment, each of the at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides has conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm. In one embodiment, at least one of the at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides does not have conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm (i.e., composition and volume of the other non-ferroelectric metal oxide material(s) being sufficient such that the overall composite stack has conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm). In one embodiment, the at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides are selected from among TiO.sub.x, AlO.sub.x, Al.sub.2O.sub.3, ScO.sub.x, Sc.sub.2O.sub.3, ZrO.sub.x, YO.sub.x, Y.sub.2O.sub.3, MgO.sub.x, MgO, HfO.sub.x, SrO.sub.x, SrO, Ta.sub.xO.sub.y, NbO.sub.x, GdO.sub.x, MoO.sub.x, RuO.sub.x, LaO.sub.x, V.sub.xO.sub.y, IrO.sub.x, CrO.sub.x, ZnO.sub.x, PrO.sub.x, CeO.sub.x, SmO.sub.x, and LuO.sub.x, with x as used in empirical formulas herein for oxides being any suitable number such that at least some of the material comprises molecular oxide, although which may not necessarily be overall stoichiometric throughout the material or even a majority of such material be stoichiometric. Desired conductivity/resistivity can be achieved depending upon quantity of metal atoms and oxygen atoms in the composition(s).
[0025]
[0026] Referring to
[0027] In accordance with the method embodiments, composite stack 16 is used to render non-ferroelectric metal oxide comprising insulator material 14 to be ferroelectric. Composite stack 16 remains non-ferroelectric in the finished circuitry construction. Material 14 is insulative both before and after transformation from being non-ferroelectric to being ferroelectric. A composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides enables rendering of non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 to be ferroelectric. In one embodiment, metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 is rendered ferroelectric before forming any of conductive material 26. Alternately, metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 is rendered ferroelectric after forming some or all of conductive material 26.
[0028] In one embodiment, composite stack 16 is used to render non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 to be ferroelectric during a depositing of composite stack 16 over insulator material 14. As but one example in a chemical vapor deposition method in depositing composite stack 16 to be alternating layers of TiO.sub.x and ZrO.sub.x, pentamethyl cyclopentadienyl titanium trimethoxide, tris(dimethylamino) cyclopentadienyl zirconium, and ozone may be used as precursors for titanium, zirconium, and oxygen, respectively. Example respective flow rates are 100 to 2,000 sccm, 100 to 2,000 sccm, and 1,000 to 20,000 sccm. Example temperature and pressure ranges are 200 C. to 350 C. and 0.1 Torr to 5 Torr. Plasma (whether direct or remote) may or may not be used. Such example deposition conditions will be sufficient to render non-ferroelectric material 14 to be ferroelectric during deposition of composite stack 16. Alternate conditions (some including different precursors) may be determined and selected by the artisan.
[0029] In one embodiment, composite stack 16 is used to render non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 to be ferroelectric after a depositing of composite stack 16 over insulator material 14. Example such conditions include annealing in a furnace using an inert atmosphere with an ambient or substrate temperature of at least 350 C., pressure from 0.1 Torr to 7,600 Torr, for at least 5 seconds. Composite stack 16 may be used to render non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 to be ferroelectric partially during and partially after deposition of composite stack 16.
[0030] Alternate embodiment methods used in forming an electronic component to those described and shown above with respect to
[0031] Subsequent processing as described below may be conducted with respect to substrate fragment 10/10a. For example,
[0032] The above described processing formed insulator material 14 before forming composite stack 16. Alternately, composite stack 16 may be formed before forming insulator material 14. In one such embodiment, a composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides is formed over a substrate. The composite stack has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm. A metal oxide-comprising insulator material is formed over the composite stack and in one embodiment to be ferroelectric upon its initial formation by using the composite stack to render ferroelectric what would otherwise be a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material formed under identical conditions (e.g., all conditions of same processor make-model, precursors, flow rates, temperatures, pressures, time, etc.) without (i.e., but for) presence of the composite stack. As but one example of forming such a ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material, chemical vapor deposition may be conducted using any suitable precursors, and temperature and pressure ranges of 200 C. to 350 C. and 0.1 Torr to 5 Torr, and with or without plasma. Conductive material is formed over the composite stack and the insulator material. Any other attribute(s) or aspect(s) as shown and/or described above may be used.
[0033]
[0034] An alternate example construction that may be fabricated with method embodiments of the invention is shown in
[0035]
[0036] The above described embodiments form a single composite stack region 16.
[0037] As shown in
[0038] An embodiment of the invention includes a ferroelectric capacitor independent of method of manufacture, yet for example ferroelectric capacitors 40, 40d, and 40e as shown in
[0039] An embodiment of the invention comprises a ferroelectric field effect transistor independent of method of manufacture. Such a transistor comprises a pair of source/drain regions (e.g., regions 34) having a semiconductive channel there-between (e.g., channel 32). Such a ferroelectric field effect transistor also comprises a gate construction (e.g., construction 30/30b/30f) comprising ferroelectric gate insulator material (e.g., material 14, and independent of whether comprising oxide material) and a conductive gate electrode (e.g., material 26). The ferroelectric field effect transistor also comprises non-ferroelectric material between at least one of a) the ferroelectric gate insulator material and the conductive gate electrode, and b) the ferroelectric gate insulator material and the channel. The non-ferroelectric material comprises a composite stack (e.g., composite stack 16) of at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides. The non-ferroelectric material has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm and is of lower conductivity than the gate electrode.
[0040] A predecessor process of forming a construction that did not include composite stack 16 required the composition of conductive material 26 to be TiN for a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material 14 as-deposited to be subsequently rendered ferroelectric, and accordingly during and/or after forming the TiN. TiN may not be desirable in all finished circuitry constructions, and provision of composite stack 16 enables use of compositions for conductive material 26 other than TiN (e.g., conductive metal oxides such as IrO.sub.x, SrRuO.sub.3, RuO.sub.x, and LSCO; silicides such as TiSi.sub.x, TaSi.sub.x, and RuSi.sub.x; WN.sub.xSi.sub.y; Ru; and other conductive metal nitrides such as TiAlN, TaN, WN.sub.x, TiSi.sub.xN.sub.y, TaSi.sub.xN.sub.y, RuSi.sub.xN.sub.y, and RuSi.sub.xTi.sub.yN.sub.z). Using conductive materials other than TiN may reduce required overall thermal processing of the substrate. Further, using conductive electrode materials other than TiN may improve performance of the ferroelectric material in the overall electronic component. However, in one embodiment conductive material 26 comprises TiN and in another embodiment is devoid of TiN. Providing only a single composition of a non-ferroelectric metal oxide material between conductive material 26 and insulator material 14, which is outside of the scope of this invention, is lacking as requiring a dedicated post-deposition anneal and/or producing a lower degree of conversion to a desired crystalline phase whether initially amorphous or initially of an undesired crystalline phase.
[0041] Use of a composite stack as described herein may improve duty cycle performance. For example, consider a ferroelectric capacitor comprising TiN top and bottom electrodes having a 65 Angstroms ferroelectric capacitor insulator there-between manufactured in accordance with a predecessor technique (i.e., a single homogenous insulator composition between the electrodes in the absence of a composite stack as described herein). Consider a construction manufactured in accordance with the invention comprising the same 65 Angstroms ferroelectric capacitor insulator and additionally having a composite stack comprising four alternating layers of a material A and a material B (total thickness of about 15 Angstroms) between the top TiN capacitor electrode and the 65 Angstroms ferroelectric capacitor insulator, where materials A and B are only two different ones of TiO.sub.x, AlO.sub.x, ScO.sub.x, ZrO.sub.x, YO.sub.x, MgO.sub.x, HfO.sub.x, SrO.sub.x, Ta.sub.xO.sub.y, NbO.sub.x, GdO.sub.x, MoO.sub.x, RuO.sub.x, LaO.sub.x, V.sub.xO.sub.y, IrO.sub.x, CrO.sub.x, ZnO.sub.x, PrO.sub.x, CeO.sub.x, SmO.sub.x, and LuO.sub.x. Such a construction manufactured in accordance with the invention displayed improved duty cycle performance.
CONCLUSION
[0042] In some embodiments, a method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material comprises forming a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material over a substrate. A composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides is formed over the substrate. The composite stack has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm. The composite stack is used to render the non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material to be ferroelectric. Conductive material is formed over the composite stack and the insulator material.
[0043] In some embodiments, a method used in forming an electronic component comprising conductive material and ferroelectric material comprises forming a composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides over a substrate. The composite stack has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm. Metal oxide-comprising insulator material is formed over the composite stack and to be ferroelectric upon its initial formation by using the composite stack to render ferroelectric what would otherwise be a non-ferroelectric metal oxide-comprising insulator material formed under identical conditions without presence of the composite stack. Conductive material is formed over the composite stack and the insulator material.
[0044] In some embodiments, a ferroelectric capacitor comprises two conductive capacitor electrodes having ferroelectric material there-between. Non-ferroelectric material is between at least one of the conductive capacitor electrodes and the ferroelectric material. The non-ferroelectric material comprises a composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides. The non-ferroelectric material has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm and is of lower conductivity than the conductive capacitor electrode which the non-ferroelectric material is more proximate.
[0045] In some embodiments, a ferroelectric field effect transistor comprises a pair of source/drain regions having a semiconductive channel there-between. Also, a gate construction thereof comprises ferroelectric gate insulator material and a conductive gate electrode. The gate constructions also includes non-ferroelectric material between at least one of a) the ferroelectric gate insulator material and the conductive gate electrode, and b) the ferroelectric gate insulator material and the channel. The non-ferroelectric material comprises a composite stack comprising at least two different composition non-ferroelectric metal oxides. The non-ferroelectric material has an overall conductivity of at least 110.sup.2 Siemens/cm and is of lower conductivity than the gate electrode.
[0046] In compliance with the statute, the subject matter disclosed herein has been described in language more or less specific as to structural and methodical features. It is to be understood, however, that the claims are not limited to the specific features shown and described, since the means herein disclosed comprise example embodiments. The claims are thus to be afforded full scope as literally worded, and to be appropriately interpreted in accordance with the doctrine of equivalents.