Chemical Mechanical Planarization for Ta-based Superconducting Quantum Devices

Abstract

We report on the development of a chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) process for thick damascene Ta structures with pattern feature sizes down to 100 nm. This CMP process is the core of the fabrication sequence for scalable superconducting integrated circuits at 300 mm wafer scale. This work has established the elements of the various CMP-related design rules that can be followed by a designer for the layout of circuits that include Ta-based coplanar waveguide resonators, capacitors, and interconnects for tantalum-based qubits and single flux quantum (SFQ) circuits. The fabrication of these structures utilizes 193 nm optical lithography, along with 300 mm process tools for dielectric deposition, reactive ion etch, wet-clean, CMP and in-line metrology, all tools typical for a 300 mm wafer CMOS foundry. Process development was guided by measurements of physical and electrical characteristics of the planarized structures. Physical characterization such as atomic force microscopy across the 300 mm wafer surface showed local topography was less than 5 nm. Electrical characterization confirmed low leakage at room temperature, and less than 12% within wafer sheet resistance variation, for damascene Ta line-widths ranging from 100 nm to 3 μm. Run-to-run reproducibility was also evaluated. Effects of process integration choices including deposited thickness of Ta are discussed.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…