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VLSI Digital Systems Design
CMOS Processing
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Si Purification
• Chemical purification of Si
• Zone refined
– Induction furnace
– Si ingot melted in localized zone
– Molten zone moved from one end to the other
– Impurities more soluble in melt than in solid
– Impurities swept to one end of ingot
• Pure Si = intrinsic Si (impurities < 1:109)
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Czochralski Technique for
Single-Crystal Ingot Growth, Melt
• Remelt pure Si
– Si melting point = 1412 C
– Quartz crucible with graphite liner
– RF induction heats graphite
• Dip small Si seed crystal into melt
– Seed determines crystal orientation
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Czochralski Technique for
Single-Crystal Ingot Growth,
Freeze
• Withdraw seed slowly while rotating
– Withdrawal and rotational rates determine ingot
diameter
– 30-180 mm/hour
– Largest current wafers = 300 mm
• Si crystal structure = diamond
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Single-Crystal Ingot to Wafer
• Diamond saw cuts grown crystal into slices =
wafers
– 0.25-1.00 mm thick
• Polish one side of wafer to mirror finish
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Oxidation Converts Si to SiO2
• Wet oxidation
– Oxidizing atmosphere contains water vapor
– 900-1000 C
– Rapid
• Dry oxidation
– Oxidizing atmosphere pure oxygen
– 1200 C
• Volume of SiO2 = 2 x volume of Si
– SiO2 layer grows above Si surface approximately
cmpe222_03process_ppt.ppt
as far as it extends
below Si surface
6
Dopants
• Si is semiconductor:
Rconductor < RintrinsicSi < Rinsulator
• Dopants = impurity atoms
– Can vary conductivity by orders of magnitude
• Dopant atom displaces 14Si atom in crystal
• Each 14Si atom shares 4 electrons
with its 4 neighbors in the crystal lattice,
to form chemical bond
– Group (column) IV-A of Periodic Table
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Donor Atoms Provide Electrons
•
•
•
•
Group V-A of Periodic Table
Phosphorus, 15P, and Arsenic, 33As
5 electrons in outer shell, 1 more than needed
Excess electron not held in bond is free to
drift
• If concentration of donors > acceptors,
n-type Si
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Acceptor Atoms Remove Electrons
from Nearby Atoms
•
•
•
•
Group III-A of Periodic Table
Boron, 5B
3 electrons in outer shell, 1 less than needed
Incomplete bond,
accepting electron from nearby atom
• Movement of electron is effective flow of
positive current in opposite direction
• If concentration of acceptors > donors,
p-type Si
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Epitaxy
• Greek for “arranged upon” or “upon-ordered”
• Grow single-crystal layer
on single-crystal substrate
• Homoepitaxy
– Layer and substrate are same material
• Heteroepitaxy
– Layer and substrate differ
• Elevate temperature of Si wafer surface
• Subject surface to
source of dopant
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Deposition and Ion Implantation
• Deposition
– Evaporate dopant onto Si wafer surface
– Thermal cycle
• Drives dopant from Si wafer surface into the bulk
• Ion Implantation
– Energize dopant atoms
– When they hit Si wafer surface,
they travel below the surface
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Diffusion
• At temperature > 800 C
• Dopant diffuses from area of high
concentration to area of low
• After applying dopant, keep temperature as
low as possible in subsequent process steps
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Common Dopant Mask Materials
•
•
•
•
Photoresist
Polysilicon (gate conductor)
SiO2 = Silicon dioxide (gate insulator)
SiN = Silicon nitride
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Selective Diffusion Process
1.Apply dopant mask material
to Si wafer surface
– Dopant mask pattern includes windows
2.Apply dopant source
3.Remove dopant mask material
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Positive Resist Example
• Apply SiO2
• Apply photoresist
– PR = acid resistant coating
• Pass UV light through reticle
– Polymerizes PR
• Remove polymerized areas with organic
solvent
– Developer solution
• Etch exposed SiO2 areas
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Lithography Pattern Storage,
Technique 1
• Mask
– Two methods for making
1.Electron beam exposure
2.Laser beam scanning
– Parallel processing
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Lithography Pattern Storage,
Technique 2
• Direct Write
– Two writing schemes
1.Raster scan
2.Vector scan
– Pro
• No mask expense
• No mask delay
• Able to change pattern from die to die
– Con
• Slow
• Expensive
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Lithography Pattern Transmission
• Four types of radiation to convey pattern to
resist
1.Light
• Visible
• Ultraviolet
2.Ion
3.X-ray (does not apply to direct write)
4.Electron
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Lithographic Printing
• Contact printing
• Proximity printing
• Projection printing
– Refraction projection printing
– Reflection projection printing
– Catadioptric projection printing
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Contact and Proximity Printing
• Contact printing
– 0.05 atm < pressure < 0.30 atm
• Proximity printing
– 20 μm < mask-wafer separation < 50 μm
– Pro
• Low cost
• Mask lasts longer because no contact
– Con
• Inferior resolution
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Projection Printing
• Projection printing
– Higher resolution than proximity printing
• Numerical Aperture
– It was once believed that a high NA
is always better.
– If NA too low,can't achieve resolution
– If NA too high, can't achieve depth of field
2
• DOF = lambda/(2 NA )
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Refraction Projection Printing
• High resolution
• To transmit deep UV, optical components are
– Fused silica
– Crystalline fluorides
• Lenses are fused silica
– Chromatic
– Source bandwidth must be narrow
• KrF laser
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Reflection and Catadioptric
Projection Printing
• Reflection projection printing
– Polychromatic, larger spectral bandwidth
• Catadioptric projection printing
– Combines reflecting and refracting components
– Larger spectral bandwidth
– More than one optical axis
• Aligning optical elements can be very difficult
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Minimum Channel Length
and Gate Insulator Thickness
Improve Performance
2
• Ids
= Beta(Vgs – Vt) / 2
• Beta
= MOS transistor gain factor
= ( (mu)(epsilon) / tox )( W / L )
• mu
= channel carrier mobility
• epsilon = gate insulator permittivity (SiO2)
• tox
= gate insulator thickness
• W/L
= channel dimensions
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Silicon Gate Process, Steps 1 & 2
• Initial patterning SiO2 layer
– Called field oxide
– Thick layer
– Isolates individual transistors
• Thin SiO2 layer
– Called gate oxide
– Also called thinox
– 10 nm < thin oxide < 30 nm
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Silicon Gate Process, Step 3
• Polysilicon layer
– Polycrystalline = not single crystal
– Formed when Si deposited
• Has high R when undoped
• Used as high-R resistor in static memory
– Used as
• Short interconnect
• Gate electrode
– Most important:
allows precise definition of source and drain electrodes
– Deposited undoped on gate insulator
– Then doped at same time as source and drain regions
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Silicon Gate Process, Steps 4 & 5
• Exposed thin oxide, not covered by poly,
etched away
• Wafer exposed to dopant source
by deposition or ion-implantation
1.Forms n-type region in p-type substrate
or vice versa
• Source and drain created in shadow of gate
• Si gate process called self-aligned process
2.Polysilicon doped, reducing its R
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Silicon Gate Process, Final Steps
•
•
•
•
•
SiO2 layer
Contact holes etched
Metal (Al, Cu) evaporated
Interconnect etched
Repeat for further interconnect layers
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Parasitic MOS transistors
• Formed from
– Diffusion regions of unrelated transistors
• Act as parasitic source and drain
– Thick (tfox) field oxide between transistors
overrun by metal or poly interconnect
• Act as parasitic gate insulator and
• parasitic gate electrode
• Raise threshold voltage of parasitic transistor
– Make tfox thick enough
– Add “channel-stop” diffusion between transistors
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Four Main CMOS Processes
1.
2.
3.
4.
n-well process
p-well process
Twin-tub process
Silicon on insulator
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n-well Process, n-Well Mask A
• Mask A defines n-well
• Also called
n-tub
• Ion implantation produces shallower wells than
deposition
– Deeper diffusion also spreads further laterally
– Shallower diffusion better for more closely-spaced
structures
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n-well Process, Active Mask B, Page 1
• Mask B defines thin oxide
• Called
active mask, since includes
– Area of gate electrode
– Area of source and drain
• Also called
•
•
•
thinox
thin-oxide
island
mesa
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n-well Process, Active Mask B, Page 2
• Thin layer of SiO2 grown
• Covered with SiN = Silicon Nitride
– Relative permittivity of SiO2 = 3.9
– Relative permittivity of Si3N4 = 7.5
– Relative permittivity of comb. = 6.0
• Used as mask for steps for
channel-stop mask C and
field oxide step D
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n-well Process, Channel-Stop Mask C
• Channel-stop implant
• Raises threshold voltage of parasitic transistors
• Uses p-well mask
= complement of n-well Mask A
– Where no nMOS, dope p-substrate to be p+
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n-well Process, Field Oxide Step D
•
•
•
•
Thick layer of SiO2 grown
Grows where no SiN
Grows where no mask B = no active mask
Called LOCOS = LOCal Oxidation of Silicon
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n-well Process, Bird‘s Beak
• Just as dopant diffuses laterally as well as
vertically:
• Field oxide also grows laterally,
underneath SiN
• Tapering shape called bird’s beak
• Causes active area to be smaller
– Reduces W
• Some techniques limit this effect
– SWAMI = SideWAll Masked Isolation
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n-well Process, Planarity
•
•
•
•
Field oxide higher than gate oxide
Conductor thins or breaks
Problem called step coverage
To fix,
pre-etch field oxide areas
by 0.5 field oxide depth
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n-well Process, Vt Adjust,
After Field Oxide Step D
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Threshold voltage adjust
Optional
Uses n-well mask A
0.5 v < Vtn < 0.7 v
-2.0 v < Vtp < -1.5 v
Add a negatively charged layer at Si-SiO2
Lowers channel
Called “buried channel” device
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n-well Process, Poly Mask E
• Mask E defines polysilicon
• Poly gate electrode
acts as mask for source & drain regions
• Called self-aligned
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n-well Process, n+ Mask F
• n+ mask defines active areas to be doped n+
– If in p-substrate,
n+ becomes nMOS transistor
– If in n-well,
n+ becomes ohmic contact to n-well
• Also called select mask
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n-well Process, LDD Step G
•
1.
2.
3.
LDD = Lightly Doped Drain
Shallow n-LDD implant
Grow spacer oxide over poly gate
Second, heavier n+ implant
– Spaced from edge of poly gate
4. Remove spacer oxide from poly gate
• More resistant to hot-electron effects
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n-well Process, p+ Mask H
• p+ diffusion
• Uses complement of n+ mask
• p+ mask defines active areas to be doped p+
– If in n-well,
p+ becomes pMOS transistor
– If in p-substrate,
p+ becomes ohmic contact to p-substrate
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n-well Process, SiO2,
After p+ Mask H
• Entire chip covered with SiO2
• No need for LDD for pMOS
– pMOS less susceptible to to hot-electron effects
than nMOS
• LDD = Lightly Doped Drain
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n-well Process, Contact Mask I
• Defines contact cuts in SiO2 layer
• Allows metal to contact
– Diffusion regions
– Poly gates
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n-well Process, Metal Mask J
• Wire it up!
• n-well Process, Passivation Step
– Protects chip from contaminants
• Which can modify circuit behavior
– Etch openings to bond pads for IOs
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p-Well Process
• Transistor in native substrate
has better characteristics
• p-well process has better pMOS than
n-well process
• nMOS have better gain (beta) than pMOS
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Twin-Tub Process
• Separately optimized wells
• Balanced performance nMOS & pMOS
1. Start with epitaxial layer
•
Protects against latchup
2. Form n-well and p-well tubs
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Silicon-on-Insulator Process
• Uses n-islands and p-islands of silicon
on an insulator
– Sapphire
– SiO2
• No n-wells, no p-wells
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SOI Process Advantages
• No n-wells, no p-wells
– Transistors can be closer together
– Higher density
• Lower parasitic substrate capacitance
– Faster operation
• No latchup
• No body effect
• Enhanced radiation tolerance
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