US20020004260A1 - Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor - Google Patents
Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor Download PDFInfo
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- US20020004260A1 US20020004260A1 US09/941,980 US94198001A US2002004260A1 US 20020004260 A1 US20020004260 A1 US 20020004260A1 US 94198001 A US94198001 A US 94198001A US 2002004260 A1 US2002004260 A1 US 2002004260A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D30/00—Field-effect transistors [FET]
- H10D30/60—Insulated-gate field-effect transistors [IGFET]
- H10D30/67—Thin-film transistors [TFT]
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D30/00—Field-effect transistors [FET]
- H10D30/01—Manufacture or treatment
- H10D30/021—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET]
- H10D30/031—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET] of thin-film transistors [TFT]
- H10D30/0312—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET] of thin-film transistors [TFT] characterised by the gate electrodes
- H10D30/0314—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET] of thin-film transistors [TFT] characterised by the gate electrodes of lateral top-gate TFTs comprising only a single gate
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D30/00—Field-effect transistors [FET]
- H10D30/01—Manufacture or treatment
- H10D30/021—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET]
- H10D30/031—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET] of thin-film transistors [TFT]
- H10D30/0321—Manufacture or treatment of FETs having insulated gates [IGFET] of thin-film transistors [TFT] comprising silicon, e.g. amorphous silicon or polysilicon
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D30/00—Field-effect transistors [FET]
- H10D30/60—Insulated-gate field-effect transistors [IGFET]
- H10D30/67—Thin-film transistors [TFT]
- H10D30/6704—Thin-film transistors [TFT] having supplementary regions or layers in the thin films or in the insulated bulk substrates for controlling properties of the device
- H10D30/6713—Thin-film transistors [TFT] having supplementary regions or layers in the thin films or in the insulated bulk substrates for controlling properties of the device characterised by the properties of the source or drain regions, e.g. compositions or sectional shapes
- H10D30/6715—Thin-film transistors [TFT] having supplementary regions or layers in the thin films or in the insulated bulk substrates for controlling properties of the device characterised by the properties of the source or drain regions, e.g. compositions or sectional shapes characterised by the doping profiles, e.g. having lightly-doped source or drain extensions
Definitions
- the present invention relates to the field of methods for manufacturing polycrystal silicon thin film transistors and thin film transistors as employed in liquid crystal display devices and input and output devices including image sensors.
- the electron mobility of a polycrystal silicon thin film transistor is greater by a factor of 100 than that of an amorphous silicon thin film transistor.
- the use of polycrystal silicon thin film transistors allows the miniaturization of elements and the denser mounting of driving circuits on one substrate.
- polycrystal silicon thin film transistors are recently used in thin film transistor arrays with built-in driving circuits. These thin film transistor arrays with built-in driving circuits have been made possible by the development of technology to manufacture arrays on glass substrates which can be easily enlarged.
- IEEE Electron Device Letters, Vol. EDL-7, No. 5, May 1986, pp. 276-278 discloses technology related to excimer laser annealing.
- thermal annealing is used for activation, but the activation rate significantly drops as a result of reducing the processing temperature.
- Rapid thermal annealing (RTA) and excimer laser activation are proposed as methods for improving the dopant activation rate at low temperatures to counteract the above disadvantage.
- SID97 M/52 Recent Advances in Rapid Thermal Processing of Polysilicon TFT LCDs discloses RTA activation, and the Extended Abstract of the 18th (1986) International Conference on Solid State Devices and Materials, pp. 225-228, discloses excimer laser activation.
- FIGS. 3A to 3 D show process flow charts describing a conventional method of manufacturing polysilicon thin film transistors for the active matrix arrays used in liquid crystal display devices.
- a silicon oxide film which becomes a buffer layer 12 is formed on a transparent glass substrate 11 using the plasma CVD method.
- Amorphous silicon (a-Si) film is then deposited using the plasma CVD method without exposing the substrate 11 , on which the buffer layer 12 is formed, to air.
- a thermal treatment is applied to reduce the hydrogen in the a-Si film.
- the a-Si film is polycrystallized by excimer laser annealing to form a poly-Si film 13 a.
- the poly-Si film 13 a is processed into the size and shape required for a TFT.
- a silicon oxide film which becomes a gate insulation film 14 is formed.
- a gate electrode 15 typically made of Al alloy is formed and dopant is implanted to form a Lightly Doped Drain (LDD) region 13 b in the thin film transistor as shown by an arrow 100 in FIG. 3A.
- a mask for implanting dopant into the source and drain regions is then formed using a photo resist 25 in a manner to cover the LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor.
- a large quantity of phosphorus ion, the dopant is implanted into the source region 21 and drain region 22 by ion implantation, as shown by an arrow 100 in FIG. 3B.
- the source region 21 and drain region 22 which have high concentrations of dopant are called a SD region 13 C.
- excimer laser light is applied, as shown by an arrow 101 in FIG. 3C, to activate it.
- a silicon oxide film which becomes an interlayer insulation film 16 is formed and contact holes 17 a and 17 b are opened on the insulation film in the source region 21 and drain region 22 .
- a layered film of Ti and Al is formed and processed to form SD wirings 18 a and 18 b.
- a protective insulation film 23 made of silicon nitride is formed, and annealed in a hydrogen atmosphere. Hydrogen annealing fills the empty ionic bonds in the polycrystal silicon thin film with hydrogen, enabling the characteristics of the thin film transistor to be improved.
- the conventional method of activation using an excimer laser causes a high degree of thermal damage to the gate electrode 15 . More specifically, as shown in FIG. 3C, an irradiated excimer laser light is applied to and absorbed by the polycrystal silicon through the gate insulation film 14 at the source region 21 and drain region 22 of the thin film transistor. The laser light applied to the gate electrode 15 region is also directly absorbed by the gate metal, causing the gate electrode's temperature to rise. If metals with high melting points such as W, Mo, and Cr are used for the gate electrode 15 , cracks or peeling of the gate electrode 15 may occur as a result of thermal shock due to laser irradiation. If Al alloy is used for the gate electrode 15 , quality problems such as an increase in hillocks may occur. Hillocks are the phenomenon whereby the material surface becomes bumpy as a result of temperature rise.
- the present invention provides a thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor which reduces the thermal damage to gate electrodes caused by laser irradiation during the manufacture of thin film transistors which includes the process of dopant activation by laser irradiation.
- a method for manufacturing thin film transistors in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention includes the steps of forming a semiconductor thin film on a transparent substrate; forming a first insulation film having a refractive index n 1 and film thickness d 1 on the semiconductor thin film as a gate insulation film; forming a gate electrode on the first insulation film; implanting dopant into the semiconductor thin film; forming a second insulation film having refractive index n 2 and film thickness d 2 in a way to cover the first insulation film and gate electrode; and activating dopant implanted by applying laser with wavelength ⁇ after forming the second insulation film.
- the film thicknesses d 1 and d 2 practically satisfy a set of Formulae (1) and (2) as follows:
- n and m 1 are any given positive integer.
- Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention refers to a method for manufacturing thin film transistors including the steps of forming the semiconductor film on the transparent substrate; forming the first insulation film having refractive index n 1 and film thickness d 1 on the semiconductor thin film as a gate insulation film; forming the gate electrode on the first insulation film; implanting dopant into the semiconductor thin film after forming the gate electrode; forming the second insulation film having refractive index n 2 and film thickness d 2 in a way to cover the first insulation film and gate electrode; and activating dopant implanted by laser irradiating with a wavelength ⁇ after forming the second insulation film.
- the film thickness d 1 of the first insulation film and film thickness d 2 of the second insulation film fall in a range practically satisfying a set of Formulae (5) and (6) when m and m 1 are any given positive integers.
- the above acceptable range for the film thicknesses d 1 and d 2 allows to reduce the thermal damage to the gate electrode by laser irradiation, and also to achieve efficient dopant activation by the laser.
- the first insulation film is silicon oxide made by decomposing a gaseous material containing at least organic silicon material by plasma.
- a thin film transistor of the present invention includes a semiconductor thin film formed on a transparent substrate; a first insulation film having refractive index n 1 and film thickness d 1 formed on the semiconductor thin film as a gate insulation film; a gate electrode formed on the first insulation film; dopant implanted into the semiconductor thin film; and a second insulation film having refractive index n 2 and film thickness d 2 formed in a way to cover the first insulation film and gate electrode.
- Implanted dopant is activated by applying the laser with wavelength ⁇ .
- the film thicknesses d 1 and d 2 practically satisfy a set of Formulae (1) and (2) when m and m 1 are any given positive integers.
- FIGS. 1A to 1 D are sectional views illustrating processes of a method for manufacturing thin film transistors in a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 2A shows a characteristics chart illustrating the relation between the film thickness of an insulation film and reflectance of laser light.
- FIG. 2B is a sectional view of regions A and B in the thin film transistor.
- FIGS. 3A to 3 D are sectional views illustrating processes of a conventional method for manufacturing thin film transistors.
- FIG. 1A A method for manufacturing thin film transistors in a preferred embodiment of the present invention is described below with reference to FIGS. 1A to 1 D.
- a silicon oxide film of 400 nm thick is formed on a transparent glass substrate 11 using the plasma CVD method to form a buffer layer 12 .
- amorphous silicon (a-Si) is deposited up to 50 nm thick using the plasma CVD method without exposing the glass substrate 11 , on which the silicon oxide thin film is formed, to air.
- the glass substrate 11 is thermally treated at 450° C. for 90 minutes under the reduced nitrogen atmosphere of 1 Torr.
- the a-Si film is polycrystalized by excimer laser annealing to form a poly-Si film 13 a which is a non-single crystal semiconductor thin film.
- excimer laser XeCl excimer laser with a wavelength of 308 nm is used, and irradiated in a vacuum. Its energy density is 350 mJ/cm 2 , and average irradiation shots are 35 shots/point.
- the poly-Si film 13 a is processed into the size and shape required for a TFT.
- a silicon oxide film of 50 nm thick is deposited to form a gate insulation film 14 which is a first insulation film.
- This silicon oxide film is made from a mixed gas of oxygen gas and TEOS (tetraethylorthosilicate, Si(OCH 2 CH 3 ) 4 ) gas, which is an organic silicon material using the plasma CVD method.
- the film thickness is set to 45 nm.
- a gate electrode 15 made of Al alloy is then formed.
- An LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor is formed by implanting dopant using the gate electrode 15 as a mask. Phosphorus ion is excited at the accelerated voltage of 70 keV, and implanted to the direction of an arrow 100 for a dose rate of 10 13 /cm 2 .
- photo resist 25 is applied to cover the LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor, as shown in FIG. 1B, to form a mask for implanting dopant into the source region 21 and drain region 22 .
- the LDD region is not essential, but is effective for reducing the OFF-state current of the thin film transistor.
- a silicon oxide film of 215 nm thick is formed as a second insulation film, as shown in FIG. 1C, to form an interlayer insulation film 16 .
- a short-wave excimer laser is applied to activate implanted dopant as shown by an arrow 101 in FIG. 1C.
- the laser used for activation is XeCl excimer laser, and has a wavelength ⁇ of 308 nm, and a half width of 30 nm. Its energy density is 300 mJ/cm 2 , and the average irradiation shots are 20 shots/point.
- the refractive index n 1 is both 1.46.
- FIG. 2A shows the reflectance of laser light against the thickness of insulation film when the laser light enters the insulation film (SiO 2 ) from the air.
- FIG. 2B shows a sectional view of the thin film transistor during activation by the laser light. This figure corresponds to the sectional view in FIG. 1C.
- the reflectance of the laser light entering the insulation film from the air repeats the maximum and minimum reflectance in a cycle of ⁇ /(4*n), as shown in FIG. 2A, when the laser wavelength is ⁇ and refractive index of the insulation film is n.
- the sum d 1 +d 2 of both insulation film thicknesses is an odd multiple of a half period of the reflectance, i.e.,
- d 1 + d 2 (2* m 1 ⁇ 1)* ⁇ /(4 *n 1 ).
- m and m 1 are any given positive integers.
- the dopant is ideally activated by the laser when a set of Formulae (1) and (2) are satisfied.
- contact holes 17 a and 17 b are opened on the interlayer insulation film 16 as shown in FIG. 1D, and then SD wiring 18 a and 18 b made of a Ti and Al layered film are respectively formed.
- a protective insulation film 23 made of silicon nitride is formed, and annealed in a hydrogen atmosphere. Accordingly, empty ionic bonds in the polycrystal silicon thin film are filled with hydrogen to improve characteristics of the thin film transistor.
- Annealing in the above description is preferably conducted at between 250° C. and 400° C. for 30 minutes to 3 hours.
- annealing temperature is 350° C.
- annealing time is 1 hour.
- the manufacturing method of the present invention thus enables excimer laser light to be reflected off the interlayer insulation film 16 on the gate electrode 15 .
- interlayer insulation film 16 and gate insulation film 14 on the source region 21 , drain region 22 , and LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor prevents reflection of the excimer laser.
- This allows efficient absorption of laser energy at regions requiring dopant activation, and at the same time, prevents absorption of laser energy at the gate electrode which requires to avoid temperature rise.
- materials which likely to cause hillocks, cracks and the like by temperature rise such as Al and metals having a large stress and high melting point including Cr, Mo, W, and Ni, may be used for gate wiring.
- the preferred embodiment uses the same material for the gate insulation film and interlayer insulation film, which means the same refractive index n 1 for both films. However, there is no need to use materials having the same refractive index.
- the film thicknesses d 1 and d 2 may satisfy a set of the following Formulae (5) and (6) when m and m 1 are any given positive integers:
- film thickness of the gate insulation film is d 1 and its refractive index is n 1
- film thickness of the interlayer insulation film is d 2 and its refractive index is n 2 .
- organic silicon material such as TEOS gas decomposed by plasma for making the gate insulation film, as described in the preferred embodiment, is effective for improving the reliability of the thin film transistor because a damage to the base layer at depositing the film is little.
- the present invention enables formation of an optical reflective film on the gate electrode against the laser light, and formation of a reflection preventive film on the source and drain regions of the thin film transistor when the laser light is applied to activate the dopant.
- This enables the gate electrode to reflect the laser beam during activation, and at the same time, allows the regions where dopant is implanted to absorb energy efficiently. Accordingly, cracks and peeling of the gate electrode is preventable even in laser annealing conditions achieving sufficient activation rate.
- the present invention significantly improves the yield in the manufacturing of thin film transistors.
- silicon oxide film made by decomposing an organic silicon material by plasma for covering the source region and the drain region of the thin film transistor by an insulation film enables further improvement in the reliability of the thin film transistor.
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Description
- The present invention relates to the field of methods for manufacturing polycrystal silicon thin film transistors and thin film transistors as employed in liquid crystal display devices and input and output devices including image sensors.
- The electron mobility of a polycrystal silicon thin film transistor is greater by a factor of 100 than that of an amorphous silicon thin film transistor. The use of polycrystal silicon thin film transistors allows the miniaturization of elements and the denser mounting of driving circuits on one substrate. In the field of liquid crystal display devices, polycrystal silicon thin film transistors are recently used in thin film transistor arrays with built-in driving circuits. These thin film transistor arrays with built-in driving circuits have been made possible by the development of technology to manufacture arrays on glass substrates which can be easily enlarged.
- To form polycrystal thin film transistors at low temperatures, the development of a method for activating the dopant implanted into the polycrystal silicon thin film at low temperatures is important as well as technology to form polycrystal silicon thin film at low temperatures. Low temperature crystallization using excimer laser annealing is often employed to form good polycrystal silicon thin films on large substrates at low temperatures.
- For example, IEEE Electron Device Letters, Vol. EDL-7, No. 5, May 1986, pp. 276-278, discloses technology related to excimer laser annealing. In general, thermal annealing is used for activation, but the activation rate significantly drops as a result of reducing the processing temperature.
- Rapid thermal annealing (RTA) and excimer laser activation are proposed as methods for improving the dopant activation rate at low temperatures to counteract the above disadvantage. SID97 M/52: Recent Advances in Rapid Thermal Processing of Polysilicon TFT LCDs discloses RTA activation, and the Extended Abstract of the 18th (1986) International Conference on Solid State Devices and Materials, pp. 225-228, discloses excimer laser activation.
- FIGS. 3A to 3D show process flow charts describing a conventional method of manufacturing polysilicon thin film transistors for the active matrix arrays used in liquid crystal display devices. As shown in FIG. 3A, a silicon oxide film which becomes a
buffer layer 12 is formed on atransparent glass substrate 11 using the plasma CVD method. Amorphous silicon (a-Si) film is then deposited using the plasma CVD method without exposing thesubstrate 11, on which thebuffer layer 12 is formed, to air. - Next, a thermal treatment is applied to reduce the hydrogen in the a-Si film. The a-Si film is polycrystallized by excimer laser annealing to form a poly-Si film 13 a. Finally, the poly-Si film 13 a is processed into the size and shape required for a TFT.
- Next, a silicon oxide film which becomes a
gate insulation film 14 is formed. Agate electrode 15 typically made of Al alloy is formed and dopant is implanted to form a Lightly Doped Drain (LDD) region 13 b in the thin film transistor as shown by anarrow 100 in FIG. 3A. As shown in FIG. 3B, a mask for implanting dopant into the source and drain regions is then formed using a photo resist 25 in a manner to cover the LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor. A large quantity of phosphorus ion, the dopant, is implanted into thesource region 21 anddrain region 22 by ion implantation, as shown by anarrow 100 in FIG. 3B. Thesource region 21 and drainregion 22 which have high concentrations of dopant are called a SD region 13C. - Since the implanted dopant is electrically inactive, excimer laser light is applied, as shown by an
arrow 101 in FIG. 3C, to activate it. - Then, as shown in FIG. 3D, a silicon oxide film which becomes an
interlayer insulation film 16 is formed and contact holes 17 a and 17 b are opened on the insulation film in thesource region 21 anddrain region 22. A layered film of Ti and Al is formed and processed to form SD wirings 18 a and 18 b. - Finally, a
protective insulation film 23 made of silicon nitride is formed, and annealed in a hydrogen atmosphere. Hydrogen annealing fills the empty ionic bonds in the polycrystal silicon thin film with hydrogen, enabling the characteristics of the thin film transistor to be improved. - However, the conventional method of activation using an excimer laser causes a high degree of thermal damage to the
gate electrode 15. More specifically, as shown in FIG. 3C, an irradiated excimer laser light is applied to and absorbed by the polycrystal silicon through thegate insulation film 14 at thesource region 21 anddrain region 22 of the thin film transistor. The laser light applied to thegate electrode 15 region is also directly absorbed by the gate metal, causing the gate electrode's temperature to rise. If metals with high melting points such as W, Mo, and Cr are used for thegate electrode 15, cracks or peeling of thegate electrode 15 may occur as a result of thermal shock due to laser irradiation. If Al alloy is used for thegate electrode 15, quality problems such as an increase in hillocks may occur. Hillocks are the phenomenon whereby the material surface becomes bumpy as a result of temperature rise. - The present invention provides a thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor which reduces the thermal damage to gate electrodes caused by laser irradiation during the manufacture of thin film transistors which includes the process of dopant activation by laser irradiation.
- A method for manufacturing thin film transistors in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention includes the steps of forming a semiconductor thin film on a transparent substrate; forming a first insulation film having a refractive index n 1 and film thickness d1 on the semiconductor thin film as a gate insulation film; forming a gate electrode on the first insulation film; implanting dopant into the semiconductor thin film; forming a second insulation film having refractive index n2 and film thickness d2 in a way to cover the first insulation film and gate electrode; and activating dopant implanted by applying laser with wavelength λ after forming the second insulation film. In this configuration, the film thicknesses d1 and d2 practically satisfy a set of Formulae (1) and (2) as follows:
-
d 2*n 2=2*m*λ/4 (1) -
d 1 *n 1 +d 2 *n 2=(2*m 1−1)*λ/4 (2) - Here, m and m 1 are any given positive integer.
- These film thicknesses enable the laser light to be reflected off the gate electrode and absorbed at portions other than the gate electrode. This allows a reduction in the thermal damage to the gate electrode by laser irradiation, and also achieves efficient dopant activation by the laser.
- Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention refers to a method for manufacturing thin film transistors including the steps of forming the semiconductor film on the transparent substrate; forming the first insulation film having refractive index n 1 and film thickness d1 on the semiconductor thin film as a gate insulation film; forming the gate electrode on the first insulation film; implanting dopant into the semiconductor thin film after forming the gate electrode; forming the second insulation film having refractive index n2 and film thickness d2 in a way to cover the first insulation film and gate electrode; and activating dopant implanted by laser irradiating with a wavelength λ after forming the second insulation film.
- In this configuration, the film thickness d 1 of the first insulation film and film thickness d2 of the second insulation film fall in a range practically satisfying a set of Formulae (5) and (6) when m and m1 are any given positive integers.
- abs{
d 2 *n 2−2*m*λ/4}<λ/ 8 (5); and - abs{(
d 2 *n 2 +d 1*n 1)−(2*m1−1)*λ/4}<λ/8 (6); - The above acceptable range for the film thicknesses d 1 and d2 allows to reduce the thermal damage to the gate electrode by laser irradiation, and also to achieve efficient dopant activation by the laser.
- In these methods for manufacturing thin film transistors, the first insulation film is silicon oxide made by decomposing a gaseous material containing at least organic silicon material by plasma.
- A thin film transistor of the present invention includes a semiconductor thin film formed on a transparent substrate; a first insulation film having refractive index n 1 and film thickness d1 formed on the semiconductor thin film as a gate insulation film; a gate electrode formed on the first insulation film; dopant implanted into the semiconductor thin film; and a second insulation film having refractive index n2 and film thickness d2 formed in a way to cover the first insulation film and gate electrode. Implanted dopant is activated by applying the laser with wavelength λ. In this configuration, the film thicknesses d1 and d2 practically satisfy a set of Formulae (1) and (2) when m and m1 are any given positive integers.
- FIGS. 1A to 1D are sectional views illustrating processes of a method for manufacturing thin film transistors in a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 2A shows a characteristics chart illustrating the relation between the film thickness of an insulation film and reflectance of laser light.
- FIG. 2B is a sectional view of regions A and B in the thin film transistor.
- FIGS. 3A to 3D are sectional views illustrating processes of a conventional method for manufacturing thin film transistors.
- A method for manufacturing thin film transistors in a preferred embodiment of the present invention is described below with reference to FIGS. 1A to 1D. As shown in FIG. 1A, a silicon oxide film of 400 nm thick is formed on a
transparent glass substrate 11 using the plasma CVD method to form abuffer layer 12. Then, amorphous silicon (a-Si) is deposited up to 50 nm thick using the plasma CVD method without exposing theglass substrate 11, on which the silicon oxide thin film is formed, to air. To reduce hydrogen in the a-Si film, theglass substrate 11 is thermally treated at 450° C. for 90 minutes under the reduced nitrogen atmosphere of 1 Torr. The a-Si film is polycrystalized by excimer laser annealing to form a poly-Si film 13 a which is a non-single crystal semiconductor thin film. As for excimer laser, XeCl excimer laser with a wavelength of 308 nm is used, and irradiated in a vacuum. Its energy density is 350 mJ/cm2, and average irradiation shots are 35 shots/point. - After crystallizing the a-Si film to form the poly-Si film 13 a, the poly-Si film 13 a is processed into the size and shape required for a TFT. A silicon oxide film of 50 nm thick is deposited to form a
gate insulation film 14 which is a first insulation film. This silicon oxide film is made from a mixed gas of oxygen gas and TEOS (tetraethylorthosilicate, Si(OCH2CH3)4) gas, which is an organic silicon material using the plasma CVD method. The film thickness is set to 45 nm. - A
gate electrode 15 made of Al alloy is then formed. An LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor is formed by implanting dopant using thegate electrode 15 as a mask. Phosphorus ion is excited at the accelerated voltage of 70 keV, and implanted to the direction of anarrow 100 for a dose rate of 1013/cm2. After forming the LDD region 13 b, photo resist 25 is applied to cover the LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor, as shown in FIG. 1B, to form a mask for implanting dopant into thesource region 21 and drainregion 22. The LDD region is not essential, but is effective for reducing the OFF-state current of the thin film transistor. - After implanting the dopant, a silicon oxide film of 215 nm thick is formed as a second insulation film, as shown in FIG. 1C, to form an
interlayer insulation film 16. Then, a short-wave excimer laser is applied to activate implanted dopant as shown by anarrow 101 in FIG. 1C. The laser used for activation is XeCl excimer laser, and has a wavelength λ of 308 nm, and a half width of 30 nm. Its energy density is 300 mJ/cm2, and the average irradiation shots are 20 shots/point. - The
gate insulation film 14, which is the first insulation film, has the film thickness d1=50 nm and refractive index n1=1.46. Theinterlayer insulation film 16, which is the second insulation film, formed on thegate insulation film 14 has the film thickness d2=215 nm and refractive index n1=1.46. Accordingly, insulation film on thesource region 21 and drainregion 22 of the thin film transistor which requires dopant activation has a film thickness of d1+d2=265 nm. The refractive index n1 is both 1.46. - FIG. 2A shows the reflectance of laser light against the thickness of insulation film when the laser light enters the insulation film (SiO 2) from the air. FIG. 2B shows a sectional view of the thin film transistor during activation by the laser light. This figure corresponds to the sectional view in FIG. 1C. The reflectance of the laser light entering the insulation film from the air repeats the maximum and minimum reflectance in a cycle of λ/(4*n), as shown in FIG. 2A, when the laser wavelength is λ and refractive index of the insulation film is n.
- FIG. 2A shows the case when the wavelength λ of excimer laser is 308 nm, and refractive index n of the insulation film (SiO 2) is 1.46. In this case, a half cycle λ/(4*n) of the reflectance is 52. 7 nm. Accordingly, since laser light enters the interlayer insulation film (d2=215 nm) on the region A shown in FIG. 2B, which is the gate electrode, the reflectance becomes almost the maximum as shown in FIG. 2A, and incident laser energy is scarcely absorbed by the
gate electrode 15 of the thin film transistor - On the other hand, on the region B shown in FIG. 2B, which is the
source region 21,drain region 22, and LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor, the laser light enters the film having the thickness of the sum of the film thickness d1=50 nm of the gate insulation film and the film thickness d2=215 nm of the interlayer insulation film i.e., d1+d2=265 nm. Accordingly, the reflectance is almost minimum as shown in FIG. 2A, and incident laser energy reaches the bottom poly-Si film 13 a most efficiently. The poly-Si film 13 a is thus most efficiently annealed, and dopant implanted is satisfactorily activated. - The above findings may take the next numerical forms.
- Ideal conditions are achieved when the interlayer insulation film thickness d 2 is an even multiple of a half period of the reflectance, i.e.,
-
d 2=2*m*λ/(4*n 1); and - the sum d 1+d2 of both insulation film thicknesses is an odd multiple of a half period of the reflectance, i.e.,
-
d 1+d 2=(2*m 1−1)*λ/(4*n 1). Here m and m1 are any given positive integers. - These formulae may then be rearranged as follows:
-
d 2*n 1=2*m*λ/4; and - (d 1+d 2)*
n 1=(2*m 1−1)*λ/4. - These formulae may be generalized for the case when refractive index n 2 of the interlayer insulation film is different from refractive index n1 of the gate insulation film as follows:
-
d 2*n 2=2*m*λ/4 (1); and -
d 2*n 2+d 1*n 1=(2*m 1−1)*λ/4 (2). - In other words, the dopant is ideally activated by the laser when a set of Formulae (1) and (2) are satisfied.
- After dopant activation, contact holes 17 a and 17 b are opened on the
interlayer insulation film 16 as shown in FIG. 1D, and then SD wiring 18 a and 18 b made of a Ti and Al layered film are respectively formed. Lastly, aprotective insulation film 23 made of silicon nitride is formed, and annealed in a hydrogen atmosphere. Accordingly, empty ionic bonds in the polycrystal silicon thin film are filled with hydrogen to improve characteristics of the thin film transistor. - Annealing in the above description is preferably conducted at between 250° C. and 400° C. for 30 minutes to 3 hours. Here, annealing temperature is 350° C., and annealing time is 1 hour. A thin film transistor manufactured using the manufacturing method of the present invention demonstrates mobility of 150 cm 2/V·sec and Vth=2.0 V. An increase in hillocks is not observed in a process of dopant activation by the laser even if Al alloy is used for the
gate electrode 15. - The manufacturing method of the present invention thus enables excimer laser light to be reflected off the
interlayer insulation film 16 on thegate electrode 15. On the other hand,interlayer insulation film 16 andgate insulation film 14 on thesource region 21,drain region 22, and LDD region 13 b of the thin film transistor prevents reflection of the excimer laser. This allows efficient absorption of laser energy at regions requiring dopant activation, and at the same time, prevents absorption of laser energy at the gate electrode which requires to avoid temperature rise. Accordingly, materials which likely to cause hillocks, cracks and the like by temperature rise, such as Al and metals having a large stress and high melting point including Cr, Mo, W, and Ni, may be used for gate wiring. - As shown in FIG. 2A, minimum and maximum reflectance repeat in every insulation film thickness of λ/(4*n 1) [nm] against wavelength λ of the laser in use and refractive index n1 of the insulation film. Accordingly, errors in the film thickness of the insulation film are preferably within the range of a half of a minimum interval where the reflectance becomes the maximum and minimum, i.e., ±λ/(8* n1) [nm]. If this condition is quantified, the film thickness d1 of the gate insulation film and the film thickness d2 of the interlayer insulation film may satisfy a set of the following Formulae (3) and (4) when m and m1 are any given positive integers:
- abs{
d 2 *n 1−2*m*λ/4}<λ/8 (3); and - abs{(d 2+d 1)*
n 1−(2*m 1−1)*λ/4}<λ/8 (4). - The preferred embodiment uses the same material for the gate insulation film and interlayer insulation film, which means the same refractive index n 1 for both films. However, there is no need to use materials having the same refractive index. When materials having different refractive index are used for the gate insulation film and interlayer insulation film, the film thicknesses d1 and d2 may satisfy a set of the following Formulae (5) and (6) when m and m1 are any given positive integers:
- abs{
d 2*n 2−2*m*λ/4}<λ/8 (5); and - abs{(
d 2*n 2+d 1*n 1)−(2*m 1−1)*λ/4}<λ/8 (6); - where film thickness of the gate insulation film is d 1 and its refractive index is n1, and film thickness of the interlayer insulation film is d2 and its refractive index is n2.
- The same effects as described in the preferred embodiment are achievable when the above Formulae (5) and (6) are satisfied.
- The use of organic silicon material, such as TEOS gas decomposed by plasma for making the gate insulation film, as described in the preferred embodiment, is effective for improving the reliability of the thin film transistor because a damage to the base layer at depositing the film is little.
- As described above, the present invention enables formation of an optical reflective film on the gate electrode against the laser light, and formation of a reflection preventive film on the source and drain regions of the thin film transistor when the laser light is applied to activate the dopant. This enables the gate electrode to reflect the laser beam during activation, and at the same time, allows the regions where dopant is implanted to absorb energy efficiently. Accordingly, cracks and peeling of the gate electrode is preventable even in laser annealing conditions achieving sufficient activation rate. As a result, the present invention significantly improves the yield in the manufacturing of thin film transistors.
- Furthermore, the use of silicon oxide film made by decomposing an organic silicon material by plasma for covering the source region and the drain region of the thin film transistor by an insulation film enables further improvement in the reliability of the thin film transistor.
Claims (19)
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/941,980 US6420760B2 (en) | 1999-05-10 | 2001-08-29 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
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|---|---|---|---|
| JP11-128121 | 1999-05-10 | ||
| JP12812199A JP3318285B2 (en) | 1999-05-10 | 1999-05-10 | Method for manufacturing thin film transistor |
| US09/566,609 US6309917B1 (en) | 1999-05-10 | 2000-05-09 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
| US09/941,980 US6420760B2 (en) | 1999-05-10 | 2001-08-29 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
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| US09/566,609 Division US6309917B1 (en) | 1998-06-02 | 2000-05-09 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
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| US20020004260A1 true US20020004260A1 (en) | 2002-01-10 |
| US6420760B2 US6420760B2 (en) | 2002-07-16 |
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| US09/566,609 Expired - Fee Related US6309917B1 (en) | 1998-06-02 | 2000-05-09 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
| US09/941,980 Expired - Fee Related US6420760B2 (en) | 1999-05-10 | 2001-08-29 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
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| US09/566,609 Expired - Fee Related US6309917B1 (en) | 1998-06-02 | 2000-05-09 | Thin film transistor manufacturing method and thin film transistor |
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|---|---|
| US (2) | US6309917B1 (en) |
| JP (1) | JP3318285B2 (en) |
| KR (1) | KR100605773B1 (en) |
| CN (1) | CN1144275C (en) |
| TW (1) | TW472393B (en) |
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-
1999
- 1999-05-10 JP JP12812199A patent/JP3318285B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
-
2000
- 2000-05-09 CN CNB001086448A patent/CN1144275C/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 2000-05-09 TW TW089108839A patent/TW472393B/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 2000-05-09 US US09/566,609 patent/US6309917B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 2000-05-09 KR KR1020000024562A patent/KR100605773B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| TW472393B (en) | 2002-01-11 |
| KR100605773B1 (en) | 2006-07-28 |
| US6420760B2 (en) | 2002-07-16 |
| JP3318285B2 (en) | 2002-08-26 |
| US6309917B1 (en) | 2001-10-30 |
| CN1144275C (en) | 2004-03-31 |
| KR20010014887A (en) | 2001-02-26 |
| JP2000323713A (en) | 2000-11-24 |
| CN1273436A (en) | 2000-11-15 |
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