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Author

Naoto Tsuji

Bio: Naoto Tsuji is an academic researcher from ASM International. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dielectric & Inert gas. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 41 publications receiving 1703 citations.
Topics: Dielectric, Inert gas, Susceptor, UV curing, Silicon

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the growth per cycle (GPC) temperature dependence was investigated for SiO 2 films prepared by plasmaenhanced atomic layer deposition (PEALD) using bis-diethyl-amino-silane.

155 citations

Patent
09 Mar 2007
TL;DR: In this article, a method for increasing the mechanical strength of a dielectric film was proposed, where the porogen was removed and the dielectrics were irradiated with a second UV light having a shorter wavelength than the first wavelength.
Abstract: A method for increasing mechanical strength of a dielectric film includes: providing an initial dielectric film containing porogen; irradiating the initial dielectric film with first UV light having a first wavelength which is substantially or nearly similar to a maximum light absorption wavelength of the porogen for removing the porogen; and then irradiating the porogen-removed dielectric film with second UV light having a second wavelength which is shorter than the first wavelength, thereby increasing mechanical strength of the dielectric film.

151 citations

Patent
13 Mar 2013
TL;DR: A method for forming a silicon-containing dielectric film on a substrate by atomic layer deposition (ALD) includes: providing two precursors, one containing a halogen in its molecule, another precursor containing a silicon but no halogen, adsorbing a first precursor, which is one of the two pre-agents onto a substrate to deposit a monolayer of the first preagent, and exposing the second preagent to radicals of a reactant to cause surface reaction with the radicals as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: A method for forming a silicon-containing dielectric film on a substrate by atomic layer deposition (ALD) includes: providing two precursors, one precursor containing a halogen in its molecule, another precursor containing a silicon but no halogen in its molecule, adsorbing a first precursor, which is one of the two precursors onto a substrate to deposit a monolayer of the first precursor; adsorbing a second precursor, which is the other of the two precursors onto the monolayer of the first precursor to deposit a monolayer of the second precursor; and exposing the monolayer of the second precursor to radicals of a reactant to cause surface reaction with the radicals to form a compound monolayer of a silicon-containing film.

151 citations

Patent
Naoto Tsuji1
05 Oct 2012
TL;DR: In this article, a UV irradiation apparatus for processing a semiconductor substrate is described, which consists of a UV lamp unit having at least one dielectric barrier discharge excimer lamp and a reaction chamber.
Abstract: A UV irradiation apparatus for processing a semiconductor substrate includes: a UV lamp unit having at least one dielectric barrier discharge excimer lamp which is constituted by a luminous tube containing a rare gas wherein an inner surface of the luminous tube is coated with a fluorescent substance having a peak emission spectrum in a wavelength range of 190 nm to 350 nm; and a reaction chamber disposed under the UV lamp unit and connected thereto via a transmission window.

148 citations

Patent
31 Oct 2012
TL;DR: In this article, a UV irradiation apparatus for processing a semiconductor substrate is described, which includes a UV lamp unit, a reaction chamber, a gas ring with nozzles serving as a first electrode, and an RF power source for supplying RF power to one or two electrodes.
Abstract: A UV irradiation apparatus for processing a semiconductor substrate includes: a UV lamp unit; a reaction chamber disposed under the UV lamp unit; a gas ring with nozzles serving as a first electrode between the UV lamp unit and the reaction chamber; a transmission window supported by the gas ring; an RF shield which covers a surface of the transmission window facing the UV lamp unit; a second electrode disposed in the reaction chamber for generating a plasma between the first and second electrodes; and an RF power source for supplying RF power to one of the first or second electrode.

148 citations


Cited by
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Patent
01 Aug 2008
TL;DR: In this article, the oxide semiconductor film has at least a crystallized region in a channel region, which is defined as a region of interest (ROI) for a semiconductor device.
Abstract: An object is to provide a semiconductor device of which a manufacturing process is not complicated and by which cost can be suppressed, by forming a thin film transistor using an oxide semiconductor film typified by zinc oxide, and a manufacturing method thereof. For the semiconductor device, a gate electrode is formed over a substrate; a gate insulating film is formed covering the gate electrode; an oxide semiconductor film is formed over the gate insulating film; and a first conductive film and a second conductive film are formed over the oxide semiconductor film. The oxide semiconductor film has at least a crystallized region in a channel region.

1,501 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Willi Volksen joined the IBM Research Division at the IBM Almaden Research Center in San Jose, CA, where he is an active research staff member in the Advanced Materials Group of the Science and Technology function.
Abstract: Modern computer microprocessor chips are marvels of engineering complexity. For the current 45 nm technology node, there may be nearly a billion transistors on a chip barely 1 cm2 and more than 10 000 m of wiring connecting and powering these devices distributed over 9-10 wiring levels. This represents quite an advance from the first INTEL 4004B microprocessor chip introduced in 1971 with 10 μm minimum dimensions and 2 300 transistors on the chip! It has been disclosed that advanced microprocessor chips at the 32 nm node will have more than 2 billion transistors.1 For instance, Figure 1 shows a sectional 3D image of a 90 nm IBM microprocessor, containing several hundred million integrated devices and 10 levels of interconnect wiring, designated as the back-end-of-the-line (BEOL). Since the invention of microprocessors, the number of active devices on a chip has been exponentially increasing, approximately doubling every two years. This trend was first described in 1965 by Gordon Moore,2 although the original discussion suggested doubling the number of devices every year, and the phenomenon became popularly known as Moore’s Law. This progress has proven remarkably resilient and has persisted for more than 50 years. The enabler that has permitted these advances is known as scaling, that is, the reduction of minimum device dimensions by lithographic advances (photoresists, tooling, and process integration optimization) by ∼30% for each device generation.3 It allowed more active devices to be incorporated in a given area and improved the operating characteristics of the individual transistors. It should be emphasized that the earlier improvements in chip performance were achieved with very few changes in the materials used in the construction of the chips themselves. The increase of performance with scaling * Corresponding author. E-mail: gdubois@us.ibm.com. † IBM Almaden Research Center. ‡ Stanford University. Willi Volksen received his B.S. in Chemistry (magna cum laude) from New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in 1972 and his Ph.D. in Chemistry/Polymer Science from the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, in 1975. He then joined the research group of Prof. Harry Gray/Dr. Alan Rembaum at the California Institute of Technology as a postdoctoral fellow and upon completion of the one-year appointment joined Dr. Rembaum at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory as a Senior Chemist in 1976. In 1977 Dr. Volksen joined the IBM Research Division at the IBM Almaden Research Center in San Jose, CA, where he is an active research staff member in the Advanced Materials Group of the Science and Technology function.

714 citations

Patent
16 Feb 2005
TL;DR: In this article, a bypass pipe is connected between the mechanical booster pump and the rest vacuum pumps located at a downstream side of the booster pump to prevent the exhaust gas from diffusing back to the inside of a process chamber.
Abstract: Process gas discharged from a bypass pipe to a gas exhaust system can be prevented from diffusing back to the inside of a process chamber without having to install a dedicated vacuum pump at the downstream side of the bypass pipe. The substrate processing apparatus includes a process chamber accommodating a substrate, a gas supply system supplying process gas from a process gas source to the process chamber for processing the substrate, a gas exhaust system configured to exhaust the process chamber, two or more vacuum pumps installed in series at the gas exhaust system, and a bypass pipe connected between the gas supply system and the gas exhaust system. The most upstream one of the vacuum pumps is a mechanical booster pump, and the bypass pipe is connected between the mechanical booster pump and the rest vacuum pumps located at a downstream side of the mechanical booster pump.

644 citations

Patent
26 Oct 2004
TL;DR: In this paper, a silicon dioxide-based dielectric layer is formed on a substrate surface by a sequential deposition/anneal technique, and the layer is then annealed, ideally at a moderate temperature, to remove water and thereby fully densify the film.
Abstract: A silicon dioxide-based dielectric layer is formed on a substrate surface by a sequential deposition/anneal technique. The deposited layer thickness is insufficient to prevent substantially complete penetration of annealing process agents into the layer and migration of water out of the layer. The dielectric layer is then annealed, ideally at a moderate temperature, to remove water and thereby fully densify the film. The deposition and anneal processes are then repeated until a desired dielectric film thickness is achieved.

431 citations

Patent
29 Mar 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, a method of forming a layer on a substrate in a chamber, wherein the substrate has at least one formed feature across its surface, is provided, which includes exposing the substrate to a silicon-containing precursor in the presence of a plasma to deposit a layer, treating the deposited layer with a plasma, and repeating the exposing and treating until a desired thickness of the layer is obtained.
Abstract: A method of forming a layer on a substrate in a chamber, wherein the substrate has at least one formed feature across its surface, is provided. The method includes exposing the substrate to a silicon-containing precursor in the presence of a plasma to deposit a layer, treating the deposited layer with a plasma, and repeating the exposing and treating until a desired thickness of the layer is obtained. The plasma may be generated from an oxygen-containing gas.

379 citations