Continued dimensional scaling of the elements of integrated circuits places significant restrictions on the
width, density and current carrying capability of metallic interconnects. It is expected that, by the year 2000,
the transistor channel length will be at 0.l8piri [1], while microprocessors will pack more than 15 million
transistors over an area of '-700mm2. To conserve area, interconnects will continue to be stacked at an increasing
number of levels (6 by the year 2000, vs 4 in todays leading microprocessors) and the minimum spacing and
width within an interconnect layer will shrink to 0.3.tm. In addition, it is expected that future interconnects
will need to sustain increasingly higher current densities without electromigration failures [2].
Aluminum alloys are the conductors of choice in present-day interconnects, and much effort is focused n
means to extend the usefulness of aluminum through improvements in reliability, either by new alloy
formulations [3], or by the development of complicated multimetal stacks [4. A more radical approach, which
is gaining increased attention, is the replacement of aluminum altogether by copper. The bulk resistivity of
copper is significantly lower than that of aluminum (1.7.tW-cm for Cu vs. 3.0iW-cm for Al-Cu), which is
expected to translate to interconnects of higher performance because of reduction in signal propagation delay. In
addition, the significantly higher melting temperature of copper (.-1100°C vs. -600°C for Al-Cu alloys) and its
higher atomic weight are expected to translate to improved resistance to electromigration [5].
However, as with any new process trying to break into the mainstream, significant improvement in
reliability and performance over that achievable with aluminum alloys must be demonstrated first. Towards
this purpose, processes need to be developed that deposit conformal copper films of high purity with
acceptable throughput, and integration schemes need to be developed which produce interconnects and
multilevel metal structures with reliability significantly better than that of aluminum. This article describes
our efforts to integrate copper in the backend of integrated circuits. The first part deals with the chemical
vapor deposition (CVD) of copper films. The second describes the integration of copper into the last metal level
of a 2-level metal 0.5um BiCMOS SRAM circuit.
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