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Overview Integration Matching/ Accommodating different processes to obtain a ‘passing’ or good chip Process Integration Design/ Process Integration Modifying the design (slightly), to suit the process Usually, the electrical circuit is not altered Assumes that process has been developed or optimized to the maximum possible extent Always remember that the cost /benefit is the ‘bottom line’ 2 23-May-17 Index Miscellaneous Electro migration Scaling in MOS Electrical Structure (mostly FEOL) BEOL Cu vs Al and Low-K vs Oxide 3 23-May-17 Electro migration Due to movement of electrons, the atoms in a very small line move formation of voids, increase in electrical resistance, complete breakdown hillocks, whiskers ==> shorts Minimum length needed “Blech Length” for a given current density Depends on the material Copper, Gold good electromigration resistance Reliability issue 4 23-May-17 Electro migration Mean Time to Fail (MTF) depends on Current Density E (J) 1 kTa MTF 2 e J Current Density few million Amp/sq cm Grain size: movement along grain boundaries faster For very small lines, grain size = line width if av grain size is 1 um, a 10 um line will fail quickly (for the same current density, a 1 um line will fail later, a 0.5 um line may fail more quickly) also depends on arrangement and orientation of grain 5 23-May-17 Electro migration Al is more prone to electromigration, however... Cu does not form a stable strong oxide Delamination from the liner is an issue EM failures in copper likely to be in the interface, in Al, in the bulk Also, W has very high resistance to electromigration Length of a path may not become very high In Cu, (especially with dual damascene), for the same design, length may become more 23-May-17 6 Reliability regime (components of poor quality) Working life Regime Wear Out regime Fail/unit time Infant Mortality Arrhenius equation Time High Temp Operation Test - HTOT Highly accelerated Stress Tests (HAST): - high humidity, high temp 23-May-17 7 Different mechanisms of fail may have different activation energies ==> Bimodal Cumulative % Fails Reliability distribution of fails Temp Arrhenius equation is suitable for chemical reactions Not always suitable for explaining physical failure mechanisms 8 23-May-17 Scaling Scaling: If you reduce all the features (or some set of parameters) by a constant factor, will the performance be similar? Better? Worse? Eg. Important dimensions are TOX, L, X L Gate Source Depletion Region 23-May-17 TOX Drain X 9 Scaling Information from W. Maly: Atlas of IC Technologies If all dimensions are reduced by 2 (for example) CS0 CS L/2 X/2 Gate TOX/2 X/2 With same diffusion process, to obtain a shallower junction, need to start with lower initial concentration ==> very high sheet resistance (shallow Jn, low dopant) 23-May-17 10 Scaling If only some dimensions are scaled eg. TOX and L, but not Junction depth CS0 L/2 X Gate TOX/2 X Depletion regions merge, short channel 11 23-May-17 Scaling If dimensions are scaled and dopant concentration “increased” CS CS0 L/2 X X/2 Gate TOX/2 X/2 Tolerable sheet resistance ==> High gradient of dopant in the Jn (hot electron effect) ==> LDD etc 12 23-May-17 Scaling Constant Field : Reduce a physical dimension by ‘k’ , then reduce the voltage also by k This reduces drain current, gate delay and gate-channel capacitance by k Number of circuits/ sq cm increases by k2 13 23-May-17 Scaling Power per unit area remains constant in CMOS. NMOS and Bipolar do not follow this scaling rules ==> Issues Power Delay product (PDP) NOTE: Total power, not power per unit area: Reduces by cubic Practical Limitations by processes (eg. Litho resolution, alignment, process marginalities) 14 23-May-17 Metal Gate MOS: using metal gates: Gate oxide etch/growth N N N N Si N N Source/Drain Diff and oxide growth 23-May-17 Contact Etch 15 Metal Gate Source Gate N N Metal Dep N Drain N Metal Etch Minimum Feature Size is 2l Alignment tolerance l Based on the above steps, only 5% of the area is used for transistor channel Overlap of gate to source and gate to drain ==> capacitance 16 23-May-17 Poly Gate MOS: using poly gates: Active Mask (STI for example) Poly dep/etch/ implantation (self aligned) Contact formation --- Withstands high temp Active channel area is about 12% of total area lower capacitance better channel definition one more interconnect layer (poly) 17 23-May-17 Electrical Structures Electrical Structures: Resistor: Poly (silicided) for low resistance and unsilicided for high resistance silicided: 5 to 10 ohm/square unsilicided 300 to 500 ohm/square (depends on dopant level and type) undoped silicon (intrinsic) very high resistance, not usually used Can be ‘created’ during gate formation 23-May-17 18 Electrical Structures Active (source/drain) areas can also be used for high resistance Ohmic vs Schottky contact for lightly doped n structure P type or highly doped N type CAPACITOR: MOS capacitor, similar to transistor In the BEOL in some cases (Metal Insulator Metal Capacitor ) (Use Al for better thickness control) Deep Trench capacitor (FEOL) for DRAM 19 23-May-17 Electrical Structures INDUCTOR: Metal ‘circle’ Inductance related to number of turns, radius etc Parasitic resistance, capacitance BEOL Diode: PN Junction diode Schottky Diode high reverse bias current Many ‘slotted’ N+ in P well, with merging depletion region, for good reverse bias current (appears as PN in reverse, as Schottky in fwd) 20 23-May-17 FEOL Flow-I Review Sequence with more detail than what we saw before Start with bulk P type silicon Oxidize and strip (obtain clean surface) Pad oxide and Nitride Trench Lithography Active (source drain) and gate area definition CD measurement for example Trench Etch post etch CD measurement etch bias 21 23-May-17 FEOL Flow-II Trench Etch blind etch less than a micron depth post etch CD measurement etch bias 22 23-May-17 FEOL Flow-III Trench oxidation (very small thickness) TEOS Dep (0.5 micron for example, above active)+ Anneal Reverse Active Mask: Litho, etch (about 0.5 micron) To reduce the ‘load’ on STI CMP load here means planarization load, NOT the removal load STI CMP target 0.5 micron removal on small active (faster polish area) for example Other integration LOCOS OR modification of STI by Poly Dep+CMP .... Nitride Removal 23-May-17 23 FEOL Flow-IV Pad oxide removal Sacrificial oxidation (10 nm) Nwell implant Pwell implant Gate Oxidation Poly deposition (perhaps thin cap oxide for hard mask) Gate Litho(use ARC)/ Etch NMOS implant (LDD, Halo): Not the main implants PMOS implant (LDD, Halo): Not the main implants RTP 24 23-May-17 FEOL Flow-V Spacer Formation Nitride Spacer etch NMOS (main) implant PMOS (main) implant RTP If you need unsilicided areas, you need to mask them with oxide/nitride Pre-silicide clean (eg. Sputter the surface, or light chemical etch) Co dep Anneal (about a minute, 500 C) Un-reacted Co removal Nitride Dep (for contact etch) 25 23-May-17 FEOL / BEOL BPSG Dep + Anneal + CMP (0.5 um thick remaining) Cap Ox (to withstand W CMP in the next steps) Contact photo + etch Ti/TiN Liner dep (IMP Ti, CVD TiN) W CVD W CMP ILD/PMD Oxide for Copper, Barrier Dep for Al 26 23-May-17 BEOL (Aluminum) Barrier Dep (Ti/TiN) Al Dep (PVD) + Ti/TiN Al Photo + Etch (M1 levl) Oxide Dep Oxide CMP (blind) Via12 etch and so on... 27 23-May-17 BEOL (Copper) Oxide Dep M1 photo + Etch Liner (Ta/TaN) Dep Cu (seed + electrochem) Dep Cu CMP Nitride (via etch stop layer) dep Oxide Dep V12-photo + etch (stop on nitride) M2 photo + etch (blind) and so on... OR M2 photo + blind etch followed by V12-photo+ stop on nitride etch 23-May-17 28 BEOL (Copper) Via first integration Resist removal from the bottom of via can be an issue Metal first integration Resist pooling an issue Some Other schemes: Single damascene Intermediate (stop on) nitride increased cost, lower throughput 29 23-May-17 BEOL Integration Some Issues: Over etch: defectivity under etch: opens etch uniformity (center edge) CMP In Copper CMP, too much dishing/erosion ==> oxide needs to be planarized increased cost 30 23-May-17 Low -K Oxide vs Low K For RC delay reduction Need thermal stability chemical inertness (selective etch) mechanical strength (for Cu CMP) adhesion to barrier low stress Thermal expansion matching low diffusivity of contaminants (or copper) 31 23-May-17 Low -K Only if k < 3, it is considered as ‘real low-k’ FSG (fluorinated silicate glass) (k=3.5) not very low absorbs water (can create HF and hence havoc) Carbon Doped Silica (k = 3) commercial: AMAT Black Diamond , NOVELUS Coral uniform carbon doping is an issue Organic polymers low k, but soft (mechanical strength), temp stability, chemical reactivity (photoresist etc) thermal expansion mismatch ==> crack 32 23-May-17 Low -K Organic polymers low k, but soft (mechanical strength), temp stability, chemical reactivity (photoresist etc) thermal expansion mismatch ==> crack low thermal conductivity ==> more stress on metal Adhesion, Delamination eg. PTFE adhesion, delamination during CMP Absorbance of chemicals during process and subsequent release --> metal lines and transistors affected DLC (diamond like carbon) 23-May-17 etch etc not tested 33 Low -K Porous silica (or other materials) Thermal, chemical stability is good Diffusion of materials is high Mechanical strength (CMP) may be an issue Absorbance of chemicals an issue Good thermal insulator ==> very high stress on metal --> need to take heat conduction path in design Repeatability (of process and material quality) etc need to be tested New material: Not tested very well yet 34 23-May-17 Low -K CAP layer used to ‘increase’ mechanical strength eg SiC. (Has high K, so only very thin films can be used) DLC may also be used 35 23-May-17