Effect of Skin Layer on Brush Loading, Cross-Contamination, and Cleaning Performance during Post-CMP Cleaning
- Authors
- Sahir, Samrina; Cho, Hwi-Won; Jalalzai, Palwasha; Peter, Jerome; Singh, Randeep; Hamada, Satomi; Kim, Tae-Gon; Park, Jin-Goo
- Issue Date
- May-2022
- Publisher
- Electrochemical Society, Inc.
- Keywords
- Brush scrubbing; Brush skin layer; Ceria abrasive contamination; Cleaning efficiency; Post CMP cleaning
- Citation
- ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology, v.11, no.5, pp 1 - 8
- Pages
- 8
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology
- Volume
- 11
- Number
- 5
- Start Page
- 1
- End Page
- 8
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/107873
- DOI
- 10.1149/2162-8777/ac6979
- ISSN
- 2162-8769
2162-8777
- Abstract
- The use of polyvinyl acetal (PVA) brushes is one of the most effective and prominent techniques applied for the removal of chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) contaminants. However, the brush can be a source of defects by entrapping the abrasives inside its porous structure during brush scrubbing. In this study, the effect of brush top skin layer was extensively studied on contamination, cross-contamination, and cleaning performance by comparing brushes with and without skin layer. The presence of a dense top skin layer resulted in larger contact areas and high ceria particle adsorption on the skin layer. This leads to higher cross-contamination of the wafers during scrubbing along with high cleaning performances. Conversely, the brushes without skin layer showed lower contamination and negligible cross-contamination with a reduced cleaning performance (removal of ceria particles from oxide surface). Therefore, the role of the brush skin layer is significant and needs to be considered while designing a post-CMP cleaning process. (C) 2022 The Electrochemical Society ("ECS"). Published on behalf of ECS by IOP Publishing Limited.
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Collections - COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES > DEPARTMENT OF MATERIALS SCIENCE AND CHEMICAL ENGINEERING > 1. Journal Articles
- COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES > MAJOR IN APPLIED MATERIAL & COMPONENTS > 1. Journal Articles

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