Foreword In 1970, when I began my career in semiconductors, gate oxide thickness was 120 nm, Vdd was -12 V, and gate lengths were 10 Jim (called 0.4 mil in 1970). Howard Huff and Nick Holonyak capture the heady excitement of the early days of integrated circuit fabrication in the opening papers of these proceedings. In 1970, measurements were a major challenge: measurement of oxide thickness and measurement of gate length. Materials characterization was also a major challenge: Sodium in the gate oxide was a particularly nettlesome problem. Then, as now, measurement of ever shrinking feature size and characterization of new materials were key enablers to the advancement of technology. In the intervening 30 years, feature sizes have shrunk by 200x (Gate length from 10 jam to 50 nm), and the commensurate measurement and characterization challenges have become ever more demanding. In the 70's, airborne contamination layers were hundreds of angstroms thick. Now, the layers are only a monolayer and are not detected by current optical methods, limiting yields at the most recent technology nodes. Ultra-sensitive surface analysis in concert with high resolution chemical speciation are required to identify and quantify this type of elusive and insidious source of defects. As this example shows, technological advances in characterization and metrology are continually required, in order to insure high impact through the enabling role they play in progress of the industry. silicon and high-K materials where the interface is a significant fraction of the total film thickness and (ii) high-K diffusion characteristics within two nanometers of the dielectric interface. Defects: The defect problems of the 70's have largely been solved. But as layers become thinner, and new materials are introduced, new defect issues emerge: • Gate insulators discussed above • Barrier layers for Cu metallization • Cu itself • LOW-K dielectrics • Stress-induced defects in Si • Monolayer molecular contamination CD Control: There is a major section of the proceedings devoted to lithography and gate patterning. Today, not only is gate CD of critical importance, but also the profile of the gate in three dimensions is important. Measurement of this 3-D profile requires complex AFM and DUV scatterometry techniques to be developed and implemented in manufacturing. Shallow Junctions: The dopant behavior in ultra shallow junctions depends on interaction with the surface, and surface preparation and characterization become increasingly important. At the same time, measurement of dopant atoms becomes more difficult. The transition layer at the surface is becoming a significant fraction of the total dose in ultra shallow junctions. The current conference proceedings provide an excellent summary of the measurement and characterization challenges today: Gate Dielectric: The very large number of papers in these proceedings reflects the challenge posed by gate dielectric characterization. Not only are today's gate dielectrics 4-5 atomic layers thick, and becoming thinner, but characterization of nitrogen dose and depth profile through these ultra-thin silicon oxide layers is required in production. Moreover, introduction of new high-K materials poses demanding characterization challenges associated with understanding (i) interfacial interaction between Stress: Stress is becoming increasingly important because, at small dimensions, stress in the conduction channel is increasing and is affecting to a larger degree channel mobility and drive current. Techniques to nondestructively measure stress at the 1-10 nm scale need to be developed. Xlll In-line Measurement and Characterization: The new measurement and characterization techniques that are being developed to deal with ever shrinking dimensions and new materials are finding their way into wafer fabs as in-line measurement tools as indicated by several of the conference papers. Grand Challenges: Silicon technology as we know it is approaching the end of Moore's Law scaling. Pessimists predict the demise of Moore's Law scaling within the next 10-15 years. Optimists argue that there is no cause for alarm, and that scaling will continue for at least 10-15 more years. Both optimists and pessimists agree that we are approaching atomic dimensions. Both agree that it is impossible to make a gate insulator thinner than a couple of atomic layers. Both understand that dopant atoms are spaced a minimum of 4 nm apart, and that it is not feasible to control the threshold of a 4 nm device with dopant atoms. Silicon CMOS is indeed approaching the atomic limit of the constituent materials, and as we approach those limits the Grand Challenges for measurement and characterization are to measure individual atoms and to characterize materials in terms of the positions of the atomic nuclei and the distribution of electrons at atomic dimensions. Finally, let me say that this book needs to be on the shelves of those of us who believe that metrology advances are critical to the continued advances in semiconductor technology. The authors and editors should be commended for making an outstanding contribution to the semiconductor industry by assembling such a magnificent compendium of excellent papers. Dennis Buss, Vice President, Silicon Technology Development, Texas Instruments June 2003 xiv
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