Quantitative measurement of the effect of annealing on the adhesion of thin copper films using superlayers

M. D. Kriese, N. R. Moody, W. W. Gerberich

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nanoindentation at loads from 100 to 750 mN was used to measure the interfacial adhesion energy of sputtered copper thin-films, for which the release of elastic strain energy drives delamination. The as-sputtered films were of four thicknesses, nominally 225 nm, 400 nm, 600 nm and 1000 nm, and were deposited onto Si/SiO2 wafers; one wafer of each two-wafer run was annealed at 600 °C for 2 hrs in a nitrogen atmosphere. Subsequently, a nominally 700 nm thick sputtered superlayer of tungsten was deposited over all wafers. The tungsten overlayer was used to promote delamination at the copper-SiO2 interface. The energies for fracture ranged from 1 to 80 J/m2, increasing with increased indentation depth, and a trend of higher adhesion energy for annealed films. The large values of adhesion energy with respect to the thermodynamic work of adhesion are attributed primarily to plasticity and/or void nucleation within the copper film, which appears to be strongly influenced by the constraint of an overlayer.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)363-368
Number of pages6
JournalMaterials Research Society Symposium - Proceedings
Volume505
StatePublished - 1998
EventProceedings of the 1997 MRS Fall Meeting - Boston, MA, USA
Duration: Nov 30 1997Dec 4 1997

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