scholarly journals Electrostatic Self-Assembled Composite Abrasives for Chemical Mechanical Polishing of A-Plane Sapphire

Author(s):  
Yanfeng Zhang ◽  
Haiyang Yu ◽  
Xiaoxue Tang ◽  
Xue Kong ◽  
Xing'ai Li ◽  
...  

Abstract Sapphire substrates with different orientations have wide applications due to their excellent physical, chemical and optical properties. However, the chemical mechanical polishing of sapphire is challenging due to its chemical inertness, extreme hardness and brittleness. Herein, chemical mechanical polishing of A- and C-plane sapphire was systematically studied using α-Al2O3 and silica abrasives and polishing mechanism was analyzed by X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) and nanoindentation meter. The high MRR selectivity for C-plane sapphire in α-Al2O3 slurry is the synergy of selective hydration of C-plane and stronger crystal structure of A-plane. The low MRR selectivity for C-plane sapphire in silica slurry can be attributed to the formation of Al2SiO5 on both planes which reduced the impact of strong mechanical effect of α-Al2O3 abrasives. To improve the MRR of A-plane sapphire, a new nanocomposite particle with alumina as the core and silica as the soft shell was prepared by an electrostatic self-assembly method. The new composite abrasives combined the mechanical effect of α-Al2O3 abrasives and chemical effect of silica abrasives and demonstrated substantially higher MRR for A-plane sapphire than pure alumina abrasives, pure silica abrasives and physical mixture of alumina+silica abrasives.

2014 ◽  
Vol 665 ◽  
pp. 132-135
Author(s):  
Li Na Si ◽  
Guo Xin Xie

Chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) is currently the unique technology of ultra-fine surface machining for global planarization in the process of ultra-large-scale integration (ULSI) of multi-layer copper interconnects. Molecular modeling has been demonstrated to be an effective tool to simulate the CMP process, which usually takes place on the nanoscale. Here, recent important progresses on the molecular dynamics simulation investigation into the material removal mechanisms and the roles of particles in the CMP processes are shown. The mechanical effects on the material removal during the CMP process are discussed. Finally, a short summary and future outlook towards this direction will be given.


2001 ◽  
Vol 40 (Part 2, No. 8B) ◽  
pp. L857-L860 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jea-Gun Park ◽  
Takeo Katoh ◽  
Hyung-Chul Yoo ◽  
Jin-Hyung Park

2007 ◽  
Vol 124-126 ◽  
pp. 29-32
Author(s):  
Nam Hoon Kim ◽  
Hae Young Yoo ◽  
Eui Goo Chang

The ambient and denuded trench top corner at the step of gate oxidation play an important role to generate defect. Furthermore, dislocation-free flash process is proposed, and its mechanism as well. The impact on dislocation of the other processes is also discussed. And we knew that using of dry oxidation for gate oxide has the characteristic to reduce the dislocation. Consequently, the dislocation free wafer is obtained by changing gate oxide from wet to dry in manufacturing embedded flash.


2008 ◽  
Vol 600-603 ◽  
pp. 827-830
Author(s):  
Kung Yen Lee ◽  
Wen Zhou Chen ◽  
Michael A. Capano

In this article, the correlation of surface morphological defects and barrier-height inhomogeneities with the electrical characteristics of defective 4H-SiC Schottky barrier diodes (SBDs) before and after chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) is investigated. The forward characteristics, an ideality factor and a single barrier height of a SBD, remain the same after CMP, so that CMP does not affect SBD characteristics. Most barrier-height inhomogeneities are eliminated or improved after CMP. Therefore, leakage current induced by barrier-height inhomogeneities are improved by CMP as well. In addition, about 40% of SBDs with carrots inside the active areas exhibits double barriers before CMP. This excludes that carrots are a cause of barrier-height inhomogeneities. In reverse-bias mode, CMP reduces reverse leakage current at low bias and increases breakdown voltage due to the reduction of thermionic field emission and elimination of local enhanced electric fields.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 4358
Author(s):  
Hanchul Cho ◽  
Taekyung Lee ◽  
Doyeon Kim ◽  
Hyoungjae Kim

The uniformity of the wafer in a chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) process is vital to the ultra-fine and high integration of semiconductor structures. In particular, the uniformity of the polishing pad corresponding to the tool directly affects the polishing uniformity and wafer shape. In this study, the profile shape of a CMP pad was predicted through a kinematic simulation based on the trajectory density of the diamond abrasives of the diamond conditioner disc. The kinematic prediction was found to be in good agreement with the experimentally measured pad profile shape. Based on this, the shape error of the pad could be maintained within 10 μm even after performing the pad conditioning process for more than 2 h, through the overhang of the conditioner.


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