High performance scaled flash-type EEPROMs fabricated by in situ multiple rapid thermal processing

1993 ◽  
Vol 29 (25) ◽  
pp. 2178 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Hayashi ◽  
Y. Kawazu ◽  
H. Fukuda ◽  
T. Iwabuchi
1991 ◽  
Vol 224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehrdad M. Moslehi ◽  
John Kuehne ◽  
Richard Yeakley ◽  
Lino Velo ◽  
Habib Najm ◽  
...  

AbstractAdvanced rapid thermal processing (RTP) equipment and sensors have been developed for in-situ fabrication of semiconductor devices. High-performance multi-zone lamp modules have been applied to various processes including rapid thermal oxidation (RTO), chemicalvapor deposition (CVD) of tungsten and amorphous/polycrystalline silicon, silicide formation, as well as high-temperature rapid thermal annealing (RTA). Concurrent use of multizone lamps and multi-point temperature sensors allows real-time wafer temperature control and process uniformity optimization. Specific experimental results will be presented on the multi-zone lamp modules, in-situ process control sensors, and single-wafer fabrication processes.


1996 ◽  
Vol 429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Binh Nguyenphu ◽  
Minseok Oh ◽  
Anthony T. Fiory

AbstractCurrent trends of silicon integrated circuit manufacturing demand better temperature control in various thermal processing steps. Rapid thermal processing (RTP) has become a key technique because its single wafer process can accommodate the reduced thermal budget requirements arising from shrinking the dimensions of devices and the trend to larger wafers. However, temperature control by conventional infrared pyrometry, which is highly dependent on wafer back side conditions, is insufficiently accurate for upcoming technologies. Lucent Technologies Inc., formerly known as AT&T Microelectronics and AT&T Bell Laboratories, has developed a powerful real-time pyrometry technique using the A/C ripple signal from heating lamps for in-situ temperature measurement. Temperature and electrical data from device wafers have been passively collected by ripple pyrometers in three RTP systems and analyzed. In this paper we report the statistical analysis of ripple temperature and electrical data from device wafers for a typical implant anneal process temperature range of 900 to 1000 °C.


1989 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fred Ruddell ◽  
Colin Parkes ◽  
B Mervyn Armstrong ◽  
Harold S Gamble

ABSTRACTThis paper describes a LPCVD reactor which was developed for multiple sequential in-situ processing. The system is capable of rapid thermal processing in the presence of plasma stimulation and has been used for native oxide removal, plasma oxidation and silicon deposition. Polysilicon layers produced by the system are incorporated into N-P-N polysilicon emitter bipolar transistors. These devices fabricated using a sequential in-situ plasma clean-polysilicon deposition schedule exhibited uniform gains limited to that of long single crystal emitters. Devices with either plasma grown or native oxide layers below the polysilicon exhibited much higher gains. The suitability of the system for sequential and limited reaction processing has been established.


2015 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 013902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Imteyaz Ahmad ◽  
Douglas G. Van Campen ◽  
Jeremy D. Fields ◽  
Jiafan Yu ◽  
Vanessa L. Pool ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Nulman

ABSTRACTThe in-situ processing of silicon dielectrics by rapid thermal processing (RTP) is described. RTP includes here three basic sequentially performed processes: wafer cleaning, oxidation and annealing. The insitu cleaning allows for reduction of chemical and native oxides and silicon surface chemical polish, resulting in interface density of states as low as 5×l09 cm-2eV-1. Kinetics of oxide growth indicates an activation energy of 1.4 eV for the initial linear oxidation rate.


Author(s):  
Jaegeun Lee ◽  
Moataz Abdulhafez ◽  
Mostafa Bedewy

Abstract For the scalable production of commercial products based on vertically aligned carbon nanotubes (VACNTs), referred to as CNT forests, key manufacturing challenges must be overcome. In this work, we describe some of the main challenges currently facing CNT forest manufacturing, along with how we address these challenges with our custom-built rapid thermal processing chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor. First, the complexity of multistep processes and reaction pathways involved in CNT growth by CVD limits the control on CNT population growth dynamics. Importantly, gas-phase decomposition of hydrocarbons, formation of catalyst particles, and catalytic growth of CNTs are typically coupled. Here, we demonstrated a decoupled recipe with independent control of each step. Second, significant run-to-run variations plague CNT growth by CVD. To improve growth consistency, we designed various measures to remove oxygen-containing molecules from the reactor, including air baking between runs, dynamic pumping down cycles, and low-pressure baking before growth. Third, real-time measurements during growth are needed for process monitoring. We implement in situ height kinetics via videography. The combination of approaches presented here has the potential to transform lab-scale CNT synthesis to robust manufacturing processes.


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