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1. Microelectronics – Historical Perspective
PRESENT ERA BEGINS WITH THE INVENTION OF
SOLID STATE ELECTRONICS
Point Contact Transistor
invented in 1947 by
Bardeen, Brattain,
Schockly at Bell
Telephone Laboratories
Santiram Kal - Nobel prize in 1956
Department of Electronics & ECE Oxidation demonstrated
Indian Institute of Technology in 1953 by Brattain and
Kharagpur - 721302 Bardeen at Bell
Telephone Laboratories
Courtesy: Lucent Technologies, Bell Labs Innovations
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Microelectronics – Historical Perspective Microelectronics – Historical Perspective
Integrated Circuit – 1958
Nobel Prize in 2000
Jack Kilby
US Patent # 3,138,743
ICs in the early 1960s (four ICs in the early 1990s (over
Filed Feb. 6, 1959
BJTs and several resistors) one million MOS transistors )
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Why silicon for VLSI ? Crystallographic Planes
Pure silicon has a relatively high electrical
resistivity
By adding ppm level of special impurities
(dopant), resistivity can be lowered by many
orders of magnitude
There are two types of mobile carriers
(electron & holes) in Si: Donor dopants will
increase the electron concentration;
Acceptor dopants will increase hole
concentrations
Good dielectrics such as SiO2 and Si3N4 can High performance semiconductor require
easily be formed from silicon. defect-free crystal
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
2. Si and Ge crystal has the three-dimensional
diamond structure
Viewing direction S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Silicon VLSI – Status & in VLSI
Technology Trends Trends Silicon VLSI – Status & in VLSI
Technology Trends Trends
10 um
Modern CMOS
Modern CMOS
Moore's Law
Beginning of
Beginning of
Submicron CMOS
Submicron CMOS
1 um Deep UV Litho
Deep UV Litho
34 Years of
Scaling History 90 nm in 2004
90 nm in 2004
Every generation
100 nm – Feature size shrinks by 70%
– Transistor density doubles Presumed Limit
Presumed Limit
– Wafer cost increases by 20% to Scaling
to Scaling
– Chip cost comes down by
40%
10 nm
Generations occur regularly
– On average every 2.9 years
over the past 34 years
– Recently every 2 years
1 nm
1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Fundamental scaling limits for Technology Trends in MOS VLSI
conventional MOS devices
• Gate oxide thickness MOS gate dimensions
• Junction depths reduced from 10 µm
• Source-Drain Extension (SDE)
• Gate lengths (1970’s) to 0.1 µm (2005)
Unacceptable off-state leakage
currents below 0.1 µm gate length
Gate leakage for
different toxide
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
3. Technology Trends in MOS VLSI
Power Management in VLSI Technology
Total chip power dissipation (P) = Dynamic power
dissipation (Pdyn) + Static power dissipation (Pstat)
Pdyn = Cactive Vdd f clock
2
PStatic = N off W Vdd I leak
1
τi = = C g V dd / I on
Power supply and threshold voltage Chip power and frequency trends fi
scaling trends Vdd = power supply voltage τi = transistor intrinsic delay
Cactive = total capacitance being fi = transistor intrinsic frequency
switched during an average clock
cycle Cg = gate capacitance per micron of
transistor width for a MOSFET of gate
Fclock = chip clock frequency length Lg
Noff = No. of transistors that do not Ion = transistor saturation drive current,
switch during an average clock cycle. which must be maximized to maximize fi
W = average transistor width
Ileak = total transistor leakage
Off-state leakage vs L for 0.25 Active and standby power trends current ( A/ µm of transistor width)
transistor with different Vth S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
High Performance Technology Requirement Table
(Data from 2003 ITRS) Low Power VLSI Technology
Year Units 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2018
Lgate nm 45 28 20 14 10 7
Major Issues……..
EOT A 13 10 8 7 6 5 • Reduction of power supply
Vdd V 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 • Reduction of device leakage currents
Vth V 0.21 0.21 0.16 0.14 0.12 0.11 • Reduction of parasitic resistances and
Parasitic Ohm
capacitances
180 171 144 116 88 60
(RSD) µm
Cg F/µm 7.4E-16 5.7E-16 5.8E-16 4.4E-16 3.5E-16 2.7E-16
Active power is set by circuit switching, P = CLoad Vcc2 f
( f is operating freq. and CLoad is the switching capacitance of the gate and wire load )
Cpara F/µm 2.4E-16 2.3E-16 1.9E-16 1.5E-16 1.2E-16 8.0E-17
4.0E-07 6.1E-07 7.7E-07 9.9E-07 2.6E-06 3.9E-06
Standby power results from junction and transistor sub-
Psatic W/µm
threshold source-to-drain leakage
tD pS 30.24 18.92 12.06 7.47 4.45 2.81
(NAND)
Equivalent Oxide Thickness (EOT) = Td / ( K/Kox) ; using high-K dielectric
of thickness Td and relative dielectric constant K. Kox = 3.9 (SiO2) S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
The fabrication process sequence of an
Low Power VLSI Technology
Integrated Circuit
Solutions……..
• Use of proper isolation scheme to reduce
parasitics
• SOI Technologies
• Complementary transistor structures
• BiCMOS Technologies
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
4. Crystal Growth
VLSI Technology :Unit Processes
• Wafer Cleaning
• Oxidation
• Lithography
• Etching
• Diffusion
• Ion-implantation
• Epitaxy
• Deposition of thin films
• Metallization
• Bonding & Packaging
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Wafer Cleaning & Clean Room Contaminants Impact of Defects
Killing Defects and
Contaminations in VLSI
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
DEFECTS & CONTAMINATIONS DEFECTS & CONTAMINATIONS
Impact of Contaminants on Device Parameters
Parameters Hydro
- Alkali metals Heavy Dopants Particulates
Carbons,O2, metals
N2
Clean Room Performance ( Yellow Room )
MOS drive X X X
currents 1. Cleanliness class → Process area ≤ 10
Threshold, X X X → Service area ≤ 1000
Flatband
Oxide leakage X X X
2. Temperature → 22 ± 0.5 º C
Minority life X X X
time
3. Humidity → 43 ± 5 %
Diode leakage X X X X
Junction break
down
- X X X X
4. Air quality → NO2 < 0.5 ppb
Bipolar gain X X → SO2 < 0.5 ppb
Crystal defects X X X → Hydrocarbon < 100 ppb
Inter c
- onnect X X
open/short
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
5. LITHOGRAPHY LITHOGRAPHY
Photolithography is a process of transferring an image from
a photographic mask to a resultant pattern on a wafer.
A photosensitive polymer film is applied to the silicon wafer,
dried and then exposed with the proper geometrical patterns
through a photomask to UV light or other radiation and
finally developed.
Depending on the polymer used, either exposed or non-
exposed area of the film is removed in the developing process.
It requires resists, spinner, mask, mask-aligner, developer
solution, baking ovens etc.
Resists are made sensitive to a) UV light b) Electron beam c)
X-rays d) Ion beams.
Photolithography process using positive & negative resists
S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
ETCHING
Etching
ETCHING is a process by which patterns are
transferred by selective removal of un-
masked portions of a layer. Pattern resist
mask
Two types of Etching:
Etching thin
1. Wet Etching: Removal of unmasked layer is film
done by selective liquid etchants.
2. Dry Etching: (Synonymous with plasma- Etching
completed
assisted etching) Here plasma is used in the
form of low-pressure gaseous discharges to
remove unmasked layer. Remove
Examples: Plasma etching, Sputtering, RIE, resist mask
IBE, RIBE etc.
Etching (Anisotropic) Etching (Isotropic)
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
ETCHING Thermal Oxidation
Temp. 900-1200oC
Si + SiO2 ⇒ SiO2 Si + 2 H2O ⇒ SiO2 + 2H2
O2 (or H2O) diffuses through SiO2 and reacts with Si at
the interface to form SiO2.
1 μm of SiO2 formed consumes 0.44 μm of Si substrate
Thin oxide growth (e.g. gate oxide) use O2 dry oxidation
Subtractive Additive while thick oxide growth (e.g. field oxide) – use H2O.
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur Wet oxidation S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
6. Uneven surface topography with window Local Oxidation (LOCOS)
oxidation
Note surface
topography
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
ION IMPLANTATION Ion Implantation
Typically used to introduce dopants in to
Ion implantation is a process of introduction semiconductor
of ionized projectile atoms (impurity) in to
targets (Si-substrates) with enough energy to
penetrate beyond surface region of a single
crystal substrate in order to change its
electronic properties.
Dopant atoms are vaporized, accelerated and
directed at silicon substrate.
Dopants enter the crystal lattice, collide with
silicon atoms, gradually lose energy, finally
coming to rest at some depth within the lattice
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Thermal Diffusion
Predeposition + Drive-in
To introduce dopants
into semiconductor Half-Gaussian
(Predeposition) profile after long
To spread out the drive-in
dopant profile ( Drive-in) Dopant dose
conserved
during drive-in
Diffusion
distance,
≅ Dt
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
7. ION IMPLANTATION
In present VLSI process pre-deposition diffusion is totally Physical vapor deposition
replaced by ion implantation. Why?
(Evaporation deposition)
Implant Pre-deposition
diffusion
a. Control of doping Excellent Good
profile 0
b. Shallow junction Min. 100 A No
c. Max. doping > Solid solubility Solubility limit
d. Control parameter Electrical Thermodynamic
(Ion energy,dose, ( Temp, time )
ion current)
e. Elec. conductivity Poor (requires Good
annealing)
f. Damages High (requires Low
annealing)
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Physical vapor deposition Chemical vapor deposition
(Sputtering deposition)
Solid films are formed by chemical
reaction taking place at the surface
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
EPITAXY
Epitaxial Growth
Epitaxy
Epitaxy ( “epi” → upon + “taxis” → ordered ) is
the ordered growth of thin single crystal layer
upon a crystalline substrate
Purity and crystal quality of epi-layer is better
than in substrate
Silicon epitaxy is used for bipolar devices and
in CMOS –latch up prevention
Processing temperature 950 – 1050 deg C
Widely employed in compound semiconductor Require an ultra-clean Si surface prior to epi
materials growth
Bipolar IC application (1 – 3 μm in high speed Require deposition of Si at very high temperature
digital circuits and 3 – 10 μm in linear circuits) for perfect crystallinity
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
8. EPITAXY EPITAXY
Molecular Beam Epitaxy
Vapor Phase Epitaxy reactor system
Features :
Non – CVD vapor phase epitaxy via evapo-
ration of material in ultra – high vacuum
environment. By utilizing very low growth
rates ( ≈ 1 μm/hour) can tailor doping profiles
and composition on a monolayer scale.
Growth temperature 400o – 800oC
Background vacuum pressures ≈ 10-11 Torr
Used for growth of Silicon, GaAs, AlGaAs, II –
VI materials
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
EPITAXY
MBE Reactor Configuration
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
6
Device Isolation Methods ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY
Junction / Diode Isolation
This method makes use of the fact that a reverse
biased p – n junction has extremely low leakage
current. Two regions on a semiconductor substrate
are effectively isolated by applying a suitable reverse
bias
Junction isolation suffers from low breakdown voltage
and unwanted parasitic capacitances which prevent it
to be used for high frequency application
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
9. ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY
Complete Dielectric Isolation Oxide Isolation
This is basically a junction – dielectric isolation
This isolation scheme produces several pockets on a
where p-n junction isolation is combined with
single crystal substrate surrounded by thin dielectric
isolation produced by local oxidation of silicon
layers
This scheme produces
isolated silicon islands,
whose boarders are
defined by a frame of
locally thermally grown
SiO2 that completely or
partially penetrates the
epitaxial layer.
This technique has resulted in great reduction in the
This scheme is specially suitable for high voltage physical dimension of the devices making it suitable
applications and for nuclear-radiation environments for VLSI circuits.
S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY
LOCal Oxidation of Silicon (LOCOS) Isolation LOCOS
Since oxidation consumes 44% as much silicon as it
LOCOS has now become the standard isolation grows, the resultant oxide is partially recessed and has
scheme in VLSI. It addresses both the isolation and a gradual step on to the field that forms Bird’s Head.
parasitic device formation.
Oxide encroachment in active area produces Bird’s
Beak
Formation of defects (dislocation) in silicon because of If the silicon is etched first, the field oxide can be made fully
stress; Si3N4 causes Kooi effect or white ribbon effect i.e., it recessed, resulting a nearly planner surface.
inhibits subsequent oxidation due to nitride patches
Although recessed silicon with pad oxide offers isoplanar surface
Pad oxide is used ⇒ get Bird’s Head, Bird’s Beak and reduces Bird’s Head, Bird’s Beak still remains.
S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY
Side Wall Masked Isolation ( SWAMI) Process Silicon on Insulator (SOI) Isolation
Important consequence of Bird’s Beak from device Encasing of each device in an insulating material is an
standpoint are —— ideal method of device isolation. Generically they are
called Silicon on Insulator (SOI)
o Encroachment reduces the active width of the device,
reducing the amount of current that a transistor will SOI devices suffer from problems related to defect
drive density. For that reason Si SOI technologies occupied
small market such as radiation hardened devices
o Field doping may increase the threshold voltage
reducing its drive current – known as narrow channel One of the most promising SOI technique discussed
effect. earlier is SIMOX, where a buried oxide is formed by
implanting the wafer with 150 to 300 keV O+ at doses
of about 2 X 1018 cm -2
SWAMI process reduces
real estate waste. It redu- One of the first SOI methods, called dielectric isolation
(DI). DI was developed to build high voltage telecomm-
ces Bird’s Beak length unication ICs that required electrically isolated bi-
directional switches
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
10. ISOLATION TECHNOLOGY
Contacts to Silicon
Silicon on Insulator Isolation Technique
Deep grooves are first etched
in the surface of the wafer
The wafer is oxidized and a
very thick ( > 200 μm) poly-Si
is deposited by conventional
CVD
The wafer is turned over and
mechanically ground until the
grooves penetrate through
the wafer
Finally the wafer is chemically
polished and devices are
fabricated in the isolated
islands
Problems are planarity, high
cost, small isolation density
S.KAL, IIT- KHARAGPUR
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Contacts to Silicon Resistance and Sheet Resistance
Sheet Resistance
(in ohms/square)
RS = ρ /t
when W = L
R = RS L / W
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
BASE DIFFUESD RESISTOR
RESISTOR CROSS SECTION
RESISTOR GEOMETRIES
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
11. CROSS SECTION SCHEMATIC OF AN
INTEGRATED NPN TRANSISTOR CONCENTRATION PROFILE (INTRINSIC REGION)
OF N-P-N TRANSISTOR
I. ISOLATION
EPITAXY: 5.2 μm, P, 5×1015/cc
II. DEEP
BURIED LAYER: SB,
COLLECTOR
80 Kev, 1.5 × 1015 cm –2
III. EXTRINSIC
EMITTER JUNCTION: 1.08 μm
COLLECTOR
BASE JUNCTION: 1.78 μm
IV. INTRINSIC
EPI / SUB JUNCTION: 9.42 μm
BASE
BASE WIDTH = 0.7 μm
V. EXTRINSIC
NET EPI WIDTH = 1.12 μm
BASE
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Progress of transistor geometries from Planar to BIPOLAR PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 9
the Isoplanar II Process flow for an oxide isolated triple diffused bipolar
technology
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
BIPOLAR PROCESS TECHNOLOGY BIPOLAR PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 11
Process flow for an oxide isolated triple diffused bipolar Process flow for an oxide isolated triple diffused bipolar
technology technology
Steps include:(a) buried layer formation, (b) epitaxial
growth, (c) LOCOS patterning, (d) silicon recessing
and channel stop implants, (e) local oxidation, (f)
intrinsic base implant, (g) contact growth, (h) extrinsic
base implant, (i) emitter and collector contact implant,
and (j) metallization.
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
12. BIPOLAR PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 24 BIPOLAR PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 25
Process flow for a self aligned double poly bipolar tech. Process flow for a self aligned double poly bipolar tech.
After buried collector and A second oxide is deposited or
isolation formation, a p+ grown and reactive ion etched
layer of polysilicon is back down to substrate, leaving
deposited. This layer is sidewall spacers on the base
doped in-situ during contacts
deposition The intrinsic base is implanted
A layer of oxide is then through the hole
deposited or grown on The second poly is deposited,
the p+ poly doped n-type, and the emitter is
The first poly is then driven
patterned to open window Finally some of the base and
in an active region emitter areas may be silicided to
reduce series resistance
The extrinsic base is
diffused out of the first Base and emitter contacts align themselves automatically due
poly to the surface topology without the need for a critical
alignment step
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
BIPOLAR PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 31
Sidewall Base Contact Structure ( SICOS) Transistor
1. An n– collector is selec-
tively grown epitaxially in
the window and p-silicon
is formed epitaxially
2. Base contacts are diffused
laterally from the p+ poly
3. After oxide patterning, n+
poly is deposited and n+
poly contact emitter is
formed
Although many reports of SICOS have appeared, it is
yet to be used in any mainstream process because of
higher defects and leakage during selective epi growth
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
MOS PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 9 MOS PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 10
Salicide NMOS Process Sequence Salicide NMOS Process Sequence
After LOCOS process, thin Metal (Ti, Co) is deposited
gate oxide is formed. Poly then annealed using RTP.
– Si deposited and Metal film is allowed to
patterned. Source/ Drain react with exposed active
implanted regions of the devices and
silicides are formed over
Formation of sidewall gate and S/D contacts. Un-
oxide spacers – the
spacers is formed by reacted metal is removed
depositing oxide layer selectively
about 200 nm thick and
etching it with anisotropic It is found that Ti thickness
RIE. All the oxide in the showed to be one fifth of
field will be cleared except the original junction depth
at regions next to sharp in order to avoid excessive
steps where deposited leakage current
oxide is thickest.
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
13. MOS PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 11 MOS PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 12
Salicide NMOS Process Sequence Hot Carrier Effects in Short-Channel MOS
• In the reverse-bias drain-to-substrate junction, the electric field
Glass passivation layer is may be quite high in the short-channel devices
deposited, contacts are
• Carriers that are injected into the depletion layer are
formed and metallization accelerated by the high field, and some of them may gain
follows enough energy to cause impact ionization. These carriers have
higher energy than the thermal energy and are called hot
The use of salicide carriers
process can significantly • Holes – may terminate to substrate giving Isubs, may find their
reduce the parasitic way to source lowering the source barrier to induce electron
series resistance of the injection
MOSFET • Drain-channel-source structure now acts as npn transistor
with floating base and collector under avalance multiplication
→ Although TiSi2 is highly popular in SALICIDE process
MoSi2 may be a better choice for NMOS application • The electrons may be attracted to +ve gate and may tunnel into
because of its lower barrier height (0.55 eV) which oxide to produce gate current. Trapped electrons in gate oxide
may change Vt
provides a lower sp. contact resistance
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
MOS PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 13 MOS PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 17
Drain Engineering in MOS Lightly Doped Drain (LDD) MOS Process
Lightly Doped Drain (LDD) structure Formation of oxide
sidewall spacers
Hot carrier effects are alleviated by LDD structure
which reduces the drain field Source/ drain implant
In LDD structure, the drain is formed by two implants, Silicide contact forma-
one of these is self-aligned to the gate electrode and tion and metallization
the other is self-aligned to an oxide spacer at the
edge of the gate However, LDD structure
Lateral dimension of oxide spacer ≈ 75 % of oxide adds additional parasi-
thickness. In nMOS ; lighter drain → P, 10-13 cm-2 tic resistance
dose and higher doped region → As, 10-15 cm-2 dose,
LS ≈ 160 nm ≈ 0.16 μm An optimization process for the reachthrough doping,
Thus electric field is reduced to an acceptable level depth and length must be carried out in which the tra-
near the gate edge because of lighter drain. nsistor performance must be balanced against device
reliability
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
BiCMOS TECHNOLOGY BiCMOS TECHNOLOGY
Standard Buried Collector (SBC) BiCMOS Process
BiCMOS is a technology that integrates both CMOS and bipolar
device structures on the same chip 3D BiCMOS suffers from high collector resistance due
to use of lightly doped n-well as collector
CMOS can offer low power and high density to a digital IC, but it
is usually slower than the emitter-coupled logic (ECL)-based ICs
Bipolar transistors, on the other hand, can deliver large drive
currents, operate with small logic swings, and have high noise
immunity; however, they exhibit high power consumption, poor
density, and limited circuit options.
BiCMOS offer the benefits of both bipolar and CMOS circuits
By appropriate trading off the characteristics of each SBC BiCMOS process uses a buried n+ layer under the
technology, speed and power can be balanced n-well
This desirable result, however, is attained with the penalty of Buried n+ layer is first formed in p-substrate by
adding more process complexity
arsenic implant and capped with 2 μm thick n-epi layer
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
14. BiCMOS TECHNOLOGY BiCMOS TECHNOLOGY
Twin-Well BiCMOS Process
Twin-Well BiCMOS Process
Earlier BiCMOS processes suffer from low packing
density due to p- substrate doping level and large
spacing between collectors to prevent punch through
Raising doping level would increase collector-to-
substrate capacitance
P-type epi-layer is to be counter doped to form n-well
regions (p-MOS) which cause process control
difficulties
Standard n-MOS and p-MOS implant to set MOS device threshold
Twin-well BiCMOS process improves bipolar packing
Pattern contact plug and high dose phosphorus implant for npn
density by self-aligning buried p-layer to the buried collector
n+ region at the cost of higher collector-to-substrate
capacitance Form gate oxide and deposit n+ poly layer
Form electrodes for MOS and poly-Si emitter contact for BJT
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
BiCMOS TECHNOLOGY BiCMOS TECHNOLOGY
High Performance Twin-well Sub-micron BiCMOS High Performance Sub-micron Trench-isolated BiCMOS
Features: Double level metal interconnect, LDD structure
Local interconnect without need for contact holes and metal Features: Trench isolation
borders Self-aligned silicided gates, emitters for low Sheet Res.
Salicide process in which gates, emitters and diffusions are LDD n-MOS and p-MOS structure
silicides in a self-aligned manner to reduce Sheet Res. Double level metal interconnect
Self-aligned p+ ext. base
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
Future MOS for 21st Century Future MOS for 21st Century
Dynamic Threshold Voltage MOS Inverter
SOI MOS Structure
Serious complications for circuit
design due to floating body effect.
• Si1 xGex under compressive
-
strain improves hole mobility
over Si.
For low supply voltage operation ( < 0.6 V), a dynamic
• Valence band offset between threshold MOS device (DTMOS) is proposed by connecting
Si and Si1 xGex localizes the
- the gate to the well, which causes the threshold voltage of
hole inversion charge away the device to be lowered during switching thereby
from the SiO2/Si interface, increasing the transistor drive current
Si1 xGex channel MOS structure
- which reduces the effects of
surface roughness scattering.
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR
15. Conclusions Conclusions
Traditional scaling methods will not continue
• Historical perspective beyond 0.10 µm device technologies
Fundamental limitations in….
• Technology Trends
• SiO2 scaling due to tunneling current
• Low power management in VLSI • SDE junction depths due to large increase in
external resistance
• Basics of IC Technology
• Well engineering due to leakage constraints
• Bipolar VLSI processes
No clear device architecture for continuing the
• MOS VLSI Processes present performance trends
Aggressive exploration continues….
• BiCMOS VLSI Processes
• High dielectric constant materials
• Future MOS structure for 21st century • Developing a way to reduce SDE resistance
S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur S. Kal, IIT-Kharagpur
S.KAL, IIT - KHARAGPUR