Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing

A theory of the sub-ambient fluid pressure phenomenon observed during the wet sliding of a disk on a polymeric pad is presented. Two-dimensional fluid pressure mapping using membrane pressure sensors reveals a large, asymmetrical sub-ambient pressure region occupying about 70 percent of the disk-pad...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ng, Sum Huan
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/6857
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-6857
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-68572013-01-07T20:11:54ZMeasurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishingNg, Sum HuanContactPolishingSemiconductorsPressureMaterial removalLubrication and lubricantsFluid dynamicsGrinding and polishingIntegrated circuits Design and constructionA theory of the sub-ambient fluid pressure phenomenon observed during the wet sliding of a disk on a polymeric pad is presented. Two-dimensional fluid pressure mapping using membrane pressure sensors reveals a large, asymmetrical sub-ambient pressure region occupying about 70 percent of the disk-pad contact area. At the same time, a small positive pressure region exists near the trailing edge of the disk. This phenomenon is believed to be present during chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) and can contribute to the contact pressure, affecting the material removal rate and removal uniformity. Depending on the load and pad speed, the real contact pressure can be more than 2 times the nominal contact pressure due to the applied load. Tilt measurements of the disk carried out by a capacitive sensing technique indicate that the disk is tilted towards the leading edge and pad center when the pad is rotating. In addition, wafer bow is found to be less than 2 m and wafer tilt with respect to the wafer carrier is 5 to 7 m in the CMP configuration. A two-dimensional mixed-lubrication model based on the Reynolds equation is developed and solved using a finite differencing scheme. The pad is modeled as two layers: a top asperity layer described by the Greenwood and Williamson equation, and the bulk pad as linearly elastic. The orientation of the disk is determined by balancing the fluid and solid forces acting on it and solving using a modified Newtons method. It is found that the tilt of the disk and the pad topography play important roles in the distribution of fluid pressure through affecting the film thickness distribution. For a pad with severe topography, minimum and maximum fluid pressures of -90 kPa and +51 kPa respectively are detected. The model is able to recreate the experimental pressure maps. A material removal rate model based on mechanical abrasion and statistics has also been developed. Comparisons of model predictions and silicon oxide polishing results show agreement.Georgia Institute of Technology2005-07-28T17:53:33Z2005-07-28T17:53:33Z2005-03-03Dissertation5773618 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/6857en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Contact
Polishing
Semiconductors
Pressure
Material removal
Lubrication and lubricants
Fluid dynamics
Grinding and polishing
Integrated circuits Design and construction
spellingShingle Contact
Polishing
Semiconductors
Pressure
Material removal
Lubrication and lubricants
Fluid dynamics
Grinding and polishing
Integrated circuits Design and construction
Ng, Sum Huan
Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
description A theory of the sub-ambient fluid pressure phenomenon observed during the wet sliding of a disk on a polymeric pad is presented. Two-dimensional fluid pressure mapping using membrane pressure sensors reveals a large, asymmetrical sub-ambient pressure region occupying about 70 percent of the disk-pad contact area. At the same time, a small positive pressure region exists near the trailing edge of the disk. This phenomenon is believed to be present during chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) and can contribute to the contact pressure, affecting the material removal rate and removal uniformity. Depending on the load and pad speed, the real contact pressure can be more than 2 times the nominal contact pressure due to the applied load. Tilt measurements of the disk carried out by a capacitive sensing technique indicate that the disk is tilted towards the leading edge and pad center when the pad is rotating. In addition, wafer bow is found to be less than 2 m and wafer tilt with respect to the wafer carrier is 5 to 7 m in the CMP configuration. A two-dimensional mixed-lubrication model based on the Reynolds equation is developed and solved using a finite differencing scheme. The pad is modeled as two layers: a top asperity layer described by the Greenwood and Williamson equation, and the bulk pad as linearly elastic. The orientation of the disk is determined by balancing the fluid and solid forces acting on it and solving using a modified Newtons method. It is found that the tilt of the disk and the pad topography play important roles in the distribution of fluid pressure through affecting the film thickness distribution. For a pad with severe topography, minimum and maximum fluid pressures of -90 kPa and +51 kPa respectively are detected. The model is able to recreate the experimental pressure maps. A material removal rate model based on mechanical abrasion and statistics has also been developed. Comparisons of model predictions and silicon oxide polishing results show agreement.
author Ng, Sum Huan
author_facet Ng, Sum Huan
author_sort Ng, Sum Huan
title Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
title_short Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
title_full Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
title_fullStr Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
title_full_unstemmed Measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
title_sort measurement and modeling of fluid pressures in chemical mechanical polishing
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/6857
work_keys_str_mv AT ngsumhuan measurementandmodelingoffluidpressuresinchemicalmechanicalpolishing
_version_ 1716474193608966144