Title: OUTLINE
1Lecture 42
- OUTLINE
- IC technology
- MOSFET fabrication process
- CMOS latch-up
- Reading Chapter 4
2Integrated Circuit Technology
Planar fabrication process Simultaneous
fabrication of many chips on a wafer, each
comprising an integrated circuit (e.g. a
microprocessor or memory chip) containing
millions or billions of transistors
Method Sequentially lay down and pattern thin
films of semiconductors, metals and insulators.
- Materials used in a basic CMOS integrated
circuit - Si substrate selectively doped in various
regions - SiO2 insulator
- Polycrystalline silicon used for the gate
electrodes - Metal contacts and wiring
3Formation of Insulating Films
- The favored insulator is pure silicon dioxide
(SiO2). - A SiO2 film can be formed by one of two methods
- Oxidation of Si at high temperature in O2 or
steam ambient - Deposition of a silicon dioxide film
Applied Materials low-pressure chemical-vapor
deposition (CVD) chamber
ASM A412 batch oxidation furnace
4Patterning the Layers
Planar processing consists of a sequence of
additive and subtractive steps with lateral
patterning
- Lithography refers to the process of transferring
a pattern - to the surface of the wafer
- Equipment, materials, and processes needed
- A mask (for each layer to be patterned) with the
desired pattern - A light-sensitive material (called photoresist)
covering the wafer so as to receive the pattern - A light source and method of projecting the image
of the mask onto the photoresist (printer or
projection stepper or projection scanner) - A method of developing the photoresist, that is
selectively removing it from the regions where it
was exposed
5Pattern Transfer by Etching
In order to transfer the photoresist pattern to
an underlying film, we need a subtractive
process that removes the film, ideally with
minimal change in the pattern and with minimal
removal of the underlying material(s)
- Selective etch processes (using plasma or
aqueous chemistry) - have been developed for most IC materials
Jargon for this entire sequence of process steps
pattern using XX mask
6The Photo-Lithographic Process
optical
mask
Oxidation or thin-film deposition
photoresist exposure
photoresist coating
photoresist
removal (ashing)
photoresist develop
etch
optional additional process step(s)
spin, rinse, dry
7Adding Dopants into Si
Suppose we have a wafer of Si which is p-type and
we want to change the surface to n-type. The way
in which this is done is by ion implantation.
Dopant ions are shot out of an ion gun called
an ion implanter, into the surface of the wafer.
Eaton HE3 High-Energy Implanter, showing the
ion beam hitting the end-station
Typical implant energies are in the range 1-200
keV. After the ion implantation, the wafers are
heated to a high temperature (gt1000oC). This
annealing step heals the damage and causes the
implanted dopant atoms to move into
substitutional lattice sites.
8N-channel MOSFET
4 lithography steps are required 1. active
area 2. gate electrode 3. contacts 4. metal
interconnects
channel width, W
gate length, Lg
9CMOS Technology
- Both n-channel and p-channel MOSFETs are
- fabricated on the same chip (VTp -VTn )
- Primary advantage
- Lower average power dissipation
- Ideally, in steady state either the NMOS or PMOS
device is off, so there is no DC current path
between VDD GND - Disadvantages
- More complex (expensive) process
- Latch-up problem
10Need p-regions (for NMOS) and n-regions (for
PMOS) on the wafer surface, e.g.
ND n-well
NA
- Single-well technology
- n-well must be deep enough
- to avoid vertical punch-through
p-substrate
ND n-well
NA p-well
- Twin-well technology
- Wells must be deep enough
- to avoid vertical punch-through
p- or n-substrate (lightly doped)
11Modern CMOS Fabrication Process
- A series of lithography, etch, and fill steps are
used to create silicon mesas isolated by
silicon-dioxide - Lithography and implant steps are used to form
the NMOS and PMOS wells and to set the channel
doping levels
12- The thin gate dielectric layer is formed
- Poly-Si is deposited and patterned to form gate
electrodes - Lithography and implantation are used to form
NLDD and PLDD regions
13- A series of steps is used to form the deep source
/ drain regions as well as body contacts - A series of steps is used to encapsulate the
devices and form metal interconnections between
them.
14Intels 65 nm CMOS Technology
NMOSFET
- Lg 35 nm
- Tox 1.2 nm
- Strained Si channel
- NMOS tensile capping layer
- PMOS epitaxial Si1-xGex embedded in S/D
PMOSFET
15CMOS Inverter
Vin
VSS
VDD
Vout
n
p
p
n
n
p
SiO2
n-well
p-Si
VDD
Equivalent circuit
Vin
Vout
16CMOS Latchup
Coupled parasitic npn and pnp bipolar transistors
If either BJT enters the active mode, the SCR
will enter into the forward conducting mode
(large current flowing between VDD and GND) if
bnpnbpnp gt 1 gt circuit burnout!
- Latch-up is triggered by a transient increase in
current, caused by - transient currents (ionizing radiation, impact
ionization, etc.) - voltage transients
- e.g. negative voltage spikes which forward-bias
the pn junction momentarily
17How to Prevent CMOS Latchup
1. Reduce minority-carrier lifetimes in
well/substrate 2. Use highly doped substrate or
wells
n-well
(a)
Rsub npn
p epitaxial layer
p-substrate
Rwell pnp
n
(b)
p-sub
n
retrograde well
18IC Technology Trends
- Increasing of levels of wiring (Cu
interconnects) - Up to 8 levels of metal are used in ICs today.
Photo from IBM Microelectronics
Gallery Colorized scanning-electron micrograph
of the copper interconnect layers, after removal
of the insulating layers by a chemical etch
- Increasing variety of materials
- high-k gate dielectric, metal gate, low-k
intermetal dielectrics, etc.
- Continued scaling of MOSFETs toward 10 nm Lg
- CMOSFETs with gate lengths below 20 nm have
already been demonstrated by leading
semiconductor manufacturers. - ? The most advanced transistor designs are based
on UC-Berkeley research (Profs Hu, King Liu,
Bokor).