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Semiconductor Manufacturing Silicon Chips By Drew Brumm Creating the Silicon Wafers • Wafer growing process – Similar to elementary science class (string in sugar water) • A seed crystal of silicon is immersed in a bath of molten silicon, and slowly pulled out. – Crystal growth occurs uniformly in all directions • This pulling process lasts for around 24 hours – Creating ingot with diameter larger than desired. – Ingot is ground down to required diameter and the end is cut off • The ingot is then sliced into very thin wafers – These wafers must be finely polished to meet surface flatness and thickness specifications. The Mask-Making Process • Composite of Mask – Film of chromium on a pure quartz glass plate. – Finished plates are called Reticles • Design of Mask – Reticles are manufactured by very sophisticated and expensive pattern generation equipment driven by the chip design database. – As more components are placed on each chip • More complex patterns are drawn • Which adds to the time to write the mask – Driven by new product acceleration. • Each new design or die shrink requires new mask tooling Epitaxy • Epitaxial Growth – Process of depositing a thin layer • 0.5 to 20 microns of single crystal material onto wafer – Must be ultra pure • In order to create best possible quality of silicon • Contaminant free for the construction of transistors – Called the epi-layer • Usually 3% or less of original wafer thickness. Photolithography • How photolithography works – Process of transferring a pattern from mask to surface of a silicon wafer. • Current Method – Wafer is coated with photoresist material – Reticle(Mask) is exposed by laser through lens system onto the wafer one die or a few at a time. Until entire wafer has been exposed – Similar to creating a photograph by means of a very sophisticated photographic negative. Oxidation & Exposure • Once Lithography has spun on photoresist – Baked to create harder surface – Then expose to reticle step by step creating pattern on wafer. – Implant process would destroy photoresist so next process is to move photoresist to tougher oxide layer. Etch & Strip • Etch Process can be wet or dry – Wet eats away but is not easily manageable. • Once on, beyond control could eat away at sides. – Dry controllable costly • Uses gas excited by radio freq generates plasma state. – Remove oxide layer • Were photoresist patter is not present. • Stripping Process – Photoresist has served its purpose and must be removed • Photoresist must be entirely removed since it consists of organic materials which if left on wafer surface will cause defects • Use both wet and dry techniques to strip this layer away from wafer. Diffusion & Implant • Classic approach to creating electrical pockets – Deposit material such as Boron on surface • Drive into surface of silicon by exposing to controlled periods of high temperature. Causes side ways diffusion • Device geometries are becoming smaller diffusion harder to deal with • Improved approach – Ion implantation process • Material is implanted vertically into surface by high energy ion beams penetrating silicon vertically without any side ways diffusion Deposition • Removal and regrowth of oxide layer – Repeat lithography, etch and strip processes with different mask to create a window opening in the oxide were the transistor gate is built. – The gate is a conductive layer which is separated from the silicon by a thin gate oxide. – Positive electrical charge on the gate will create an opposite negative field in the surface of the silicon – This creates a conductive channel between the source and the drain, letting current flow between them. – Gate must be thin to allow electrical field to transfer across insulator usually made by depositing silicon nitride film Oxidation • Oxides are grown or deposited – Used to insulate or protect formed transistors – Also used to insulate from its adjacent transistors – Dielectric isolation oxides • Used to insulate transistors from interconnection layers which will be built above – Passive oxides • Deposited on top of competed wafers to protect the surface from damage. Interconnect Vias • Photolithography again – Used to create holes etched down to the three transistor regions which will be connected to other components on the chip – Holes (Vias) are essentially chemically drilled holes which expose the contacts to the three terminals of the transistor. Interconnect – Metallization • A layer of aluminum is deposited on the surface and down into the via holes – Excess aluminum is etched away after another photolithography process • Another layer of dielectric oxide – Insulate the first layer of aluminum from the next one • Problems – Contours create obstacles or steps which make it difficult to lay down next metal layer. It is highly desirable to smooth the surface between steps. – Chemical Mechanical Planariazaion • Used to smooth surface circular sanding action polishes the surface of the wafer smooth Interconnect – Cont • After Chemical Mechanical Planarization – Another set of Via holes etched in the oxide – Contact plugs are deposited • Usually made from tungsten or titanium • Allows connection between two layers of aluminum – After plug is in next layer of aluminum is deposited • This process can be repeated up to 6 layers for very complex logic chips Memory chips usually on have 2 Inspection & Measurement • Inspection and Measurement is Critical – Chip making deals with so many state-of-the-art materials, and methods with small features and precision, that the ability to measure and monitor the process is vital. – Inspection deals with tools that deal with sub-micron levels, scanning electron microscopes must be used. – As Geometries get size down to .2 micros the ability to observe these defects becomes more challenging and expensive. Infrastructure - Yield • Defects kill yield and drive up cost – Inspection is vital in Fabrication. • What a defect causes – Cause electrical short circuits – Open circuits or breaks in aluminum traces • Causes of Defects – Atmosphere in the Fabrication process • Must have ultra clean room requirement – Materials Used or tools that were used – The smaller the die the larger the population of die per wafer and the lower the statistical impact of the defects Assembly & Packaging • Assimilation of Die – Wafer arrives with reject die marked with ink – Saw between each die in both directions separating the good die out – Die’s are die bonded or attached onto the frame of a package either epoxy or with silicon metal eutectic bond – Then each die pin is connected using thin gold or aluminum wire – Bonded die and frame are sealed either by a molded plastic compound or by attachment of a sealed lid – Depending on the package type, the pins or leads may have to be trimmed and formed to desired shape or use in applications. Recources • http://www.processpecialties.com/siliconp.htm • http://www.infras.com • http://www.facsnet.org/tools/sci_tech/tech/fun daments/semimfg.php3 • http://www.mcc.ac.uk/cem/hydrogen/hydroge n.html • http://www.microchrometechnology.com/info_7.p hp