Tungsten CMP Slurry Selection Guide
Tungsten CMP Slurry Selection Guide
Tungsten plugs and local interconnects demand high, stable removal rates with tight topography control. This guide explains how to select a tungsten CMP slurry — the oxidiser system, the static-etch and galvanic effects, the selectivity challenge and the defect modes to watch.
Where Tungsten CMP Fits
Tungsten fills contacts and vias — the plugs that connect transistor and interconnect levels — and forms some local interconnects. CMP removes the tungsten overburden to leave planar plugs flush with the surrounding dielectric. The step rewards high, repeatable removal rate combined with disciplined topography control, because thousands of plugs across a wafer must all finish flush. For the selection method, see the selection framework; for fundamentals, the pillar guide.
Oxidiser-Driven Chemistry
Tungsten CMP slurries are typically built around a peroxide-based oxidiser system that forms a thin tungsten-oxide layer for the abrasive to clear. Removal rate is strongly governed by oxidiser concentration and abrasive loading, while pH and stabilisers keep the system robust. Iron- or other catalyst-assisted chemistries have historically been used to accelerate the oxidation, with newer formulations reducing metal-ion content for cleaner integration. The ingredient roles are explained in the composition guide.
Because tungsten slurries run at high reactivity and often near acidic pH, {A(‘CMP Slurry Stability and Particle Agglomeration’,’dispersion stability’)} and oxidiser handling are central — oxidiser is frequently blended at point of use to preserve shelf life.
Static Etch and Galvanic Effects
Two chemistry-driven effects shape tungsten CMP. Static etch — chemical removal of tungsten with no mechanical contact — must be low, or recessed plugs keep dissolving and recess grows. Galvanic interaction between tungsten and its adhesion/barrier layer (often titanium or titanium nitride) can accelerate localised attack when both are exposed. A good tungsten slurry keeps static etch minimal while delivering high mechanically-driven removal, maximising the contrast between contacted and recessed regions.
The Selectivity Challenge
Tungsten and the surrounding dielectric or barrier behave very differently under the slurry, so selectivity tuning is central. Too much oxide removal causes erosion and recess; too little leaves tungsten residue (stringers) that can short adjacent features. The target selectivity depends on the integration scheme — plug-only steps and tungsten local-interconnect steps have different requirements — so the slurry must be matched to the specific structure.
Tungsten recess — the plug sitting below the dielectric surface — raises contact resistance and can starve the next layer. It is controlled through low static etch, selectivity and endpoint precision, not just raw rate.
Abrasive Systems for Tungsten
Tungsten slurries use silica or, for more aggressive removal, alumina abrasives. The choice trades rate and hardness against defectivity: alumina can drive higher rates on hard tungsten but raises scratch risk, while silica is gentler. Particle size and the large-particle tail are tightly controlled because scratches in a tungsten layer can propagate into reliability failures.
Defect and Topography Control
Key tungsten CMP defects are recess, erosion of dense plug arrays, residual tungsten stringers and scratches from oversized particles. Controlling them means pairing the right selectivity with a stable, tight-distribution slurry, low static etch and accurate endpointing. The principles overlap with copper CMP, where soft-metal dishing is the analogous concern, and with oxide control covered in the oxide and dielectric guide.
Selecting Your Tungsten Slurry
Specify your removal-rate and uniformity targets, define the required tungsten-to-oxide selectivity for your integration scheme, set recess and erosion limits, choose an abrasive that meets rate without excess defectivity, and validate on your own pad and clean. Favour slurries with a wide, forgiving process window so normal drift in oxidiser, temperature and dilution does not push recess off target.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What oxidiser is used in tungsten CMP slurry?
What is tungsten recess?
Why is selectivity important in tungsten CMP?
What abrasive is used for tungsten CMP?
How is tungsten CMP different from copper CMP?
Talk to the JEEZ slurry engineering team
From first slurry selection to defectivity optimisation and multi-source qualification, JEEZ — Jizhi Electronic Technology Co., Ltd. — helps you match the right polishing slurry to your material and process targets.
Contact JEEZ →Part of the JEEZ Polishing Slurry knowledge series. Reviewed and updated June 2026 by Jizhi Electronic Technology Co., Ltd.