Abstract
Evolution of etched profiles has been numerically studied during low-pressure, high-density (LPHD) plasma etching of Si in Cl2. The surface etch rates were calculated using a reaction model of synergism between incoming ions and neutral reactants, including the spread of ion angular distributions due to their thermal motions and the transport of neutrals arising from the reemission on surfaces in a microstructure. Etched profiles were then simulated using a so-called two-dimensional string algorithm to examine the effects of ion temperature kTi and energy (or sheath voltage) eVs on the etch anisotropy for different neutral-to-ion flux ratios Γn/Γi toward the substrate. Numerical results indicated that in typical Cl2 LPHD plasma etching environments, where the neutral-to-ion flux ratio is Γn/Γi∼1 and the ratio of sheath voltage to ion temperature is eVs/kTi∼100, the chlorinated surface coverage is microscopically nonuniform in etched features: The coverage is very low at the bottom (α∼0.1), whereas the sidewall surface (α∼1) is almost saturated with neutrals. This microscopic nonuniformity of the coverage in etched features is the proposed mechanism responsible for the inversely tapered profiles that often occur in LPHD plasma etching. Additionally, the decrease in vertical etch rate in microstructures or the reactive-ion-etching lag due to neutral shadowing effects is also found to become significant in LPHD plasma etching. At such a low flux ratio of Γn/Γi∼1, more directional ions with a higher ratio of eVs/kTi≳500 are required for the anisotropic etching; e.g., for an ion energy (or sheath voltage) of eVs=50 eV, the ion temperature in a plasma is required to be kTi≲0.1 eV.
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