Title: Manufacturing Process
1ManufacturingProcess
2What is a Semiconductor?
- Low resistivity gt conductor
- High resistivity gt insulator
- Intermediate resistivity gt semiconductor
- conductivity lies between that of conductors and
insulators - generally crystalline in structure for IC devices
- In recent years, however, non-crystalline
semiconductors have become commercially very
important
polycrystalline amorphous crystalline
3Semiconductor Materials
Phosphorus (P)
Gallium (Ga)
4Silicon
- Si has four valence electrons. Therefore, it can
form covalent bonds with four of its nearest
neighbors. - When temperature goes up, electrons can become
free to move about the Si lattice.
5Doping (N type)
- Si can be doped with other elements to change
its electrical properties. - For example, if Si is doped with phosphorus (P),
each P atom can contribute a conduction electron,
so that the Si lattice has more electrons than
holes, i.e. it becomes N type
Notation n conduction electron
concentration
6Doping (P type)
- If Si is doped with Boron (B), each B atom can
contribute a hole, so that the Si lattice has
more holes than electrons, i.e. it becomes P
type
Notation p hole concentration
7CMOS Process
8A Modern CMOS Process
Dual-Well Trench-Isolated CMOS Process
9Circuit Under Design
10Its Layout View
11The Manufacturing Process
For a great tour through the IC manufacturing
process and its different steps,
check http//www.fullman.com/semiconductors/semico
nductors.html
12Patterning of SiO2
Chemical or plasma
etch
Si-substrate
Hardened resist
SiO
2
(a) Silicon base material
Si-substrate
Photoresist
SiO
2
(d) After development and etching of resist,
chemical or plasma etch of SiO
2
Si-substrate
Hardened resist
(b) After oxidation and deposition
SiO
of negative photoresist
2
Si-substrate
UV-light
Patterned
(e) After etching
optical mask
Exposed resist
SiO
2
Si-substrate
Si-substrate
(f) Final result after removal of resist
(c) Stepper exposure
13Photo-Lithographic Process
optical
mask
oxidation
photoresist coating
photoresist
removal (ashing)
stepper exposure
Typical operations in a single
photolithographic cycle (from Fullman).
photoresist
development
acid etch
process
spin, rinse, dry
step
14CMOS Process at a Glance
15CMOS Process Walk-Through
16CMOS Process Walk-Through
17CMOS Process Walk-Through
18CMOS Process Walk-Through
19Advanced Metallization
20Advanced Metallization
21Implantation
- Diffusion implantation
- The wafers are placed in a quartz tube embedded
in a heated furnace. - A gas containing the dopant is introduced in the
tube. The high temperatures of the furnace,
typically 900 to 1100 C, cause the dopants to
diffuse into the exposed surface both vertically
and horizontally. - Ion implantation
- Dopants are introduced as ions into the material.
- The ion implantation system directs and sweeps a
beam of purified ions over the semiconductor
surface. - The acceleration of the ions determines how deep
they will penetrate the material, while the beam
current and the exposure time determine the
dosage. - The ion implantation method allows for an
independent control of depth and dosage.
22Deposition
- Oxidation
- The wafer is exposed to a mixture of high-purity
oxygen and hydrogen at approximately 1000C. - The oxide is used as an insulation layer and also
forms transistor gates. - Chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
- CVD uses a gas-phase reaction with energy
supplied by heat at around 850C. - silicon nitride (Si3N4) ,Polysilicon,
- Sputtering
- The aluminum is evaporated in a vacuum, with the
heat for the evaporation delivered by
electron-beam or ion-beam bombarding.
23Etching
- Wet etching
- It uses many types of acid, base and caustic
solutions to remove a material. - For instance, hydrofluoric acid buffered with
ammonium fluoride is typically used to etch SiO2. - Dry or plasma etching
- A wafer is placed into the etch tool's processing
chamber and given a negative electrical charge. - The chamber is heated to 100C and brought to a
vacuum level of 7.5 Pa, - It then filled with a positively charged plasma
(usually a mix of nitrogen, chlorine and boron
trichloride). - The opposing electrical charges cause the rapidly
moving plasma molecules to align themselves in a
vertical direction, forming a microscopic
chemical and physical sandblasting action which
removes the exposed material. - It creates patterns with sharp vertical contours.