The invention relates to an acoustic mirror for a bulk acoustic wave resonator (BAW resonator) and a stacked-crystal filter (SCF) with at least one pair of layers for quarter lambda layers or 3λ/4 layers, where each pair of layers comprises a first layer with a first material of lower acoustic impedance and a second layer with a second material of relatively high acoustic impedance.
Volume oscillators, so-called FBARs (thin-film bulk acoustic resonators) or also, called BAW resonators, that work with acoustic waves are based on a piezoelectric base body that is provided on each of the two main surfaces with an electrode. Such a resonator has a resonance frequency fr that depends on the total thickness L0 of the oscillating base body approximately in accordance with the formula
fr=v/2L0
Here, v denotes the velocity of longitudinal waves in the piezoelectric base body. Such resonators can be used, for example, to construct HF filters. In addition, several such resonators can be connected in branching circuits into a filter network, a so-called reactance filter.
The required layer thickness L0 for a resonating BAW resonator in the HF range is in the μm and sub-μm range. Thin-layer processes are therefore required for the production of the layers of the base body.
In order to keep the energy of the acoustic waves inside the base body of the resonator, and to provide a sharp resonance frequency for the resonator, two main construction principles are known that make sufficiently high reflection of the acoustic waves possible at the boundaries in order thereby to provide an adequate filtering effect with low acoustic or electrical losses.
One possibility for keeping the energy of the acoustic waves within the base body of the resonator comprises arranging the base body over a hollow space, in which case a membrane can also be arranged between the lower electrode and the substrate. This arrangement is also called a bridge-type resonator.
Other BAW resonators of the mirror type use a so-called acoustic mirror. This consists of a number of layer pairs with alternating layers of materials with higher and lower acoustic impedance. Each of the layers has a layer thickness of one quarter lambda so that at each boundary reflected wave portions are superimposed constructively. In principle, in selecting the layer thicknesses, values would also be possible that correspond to odd multiples of quarter lambdas, thus λ/4, 3λ/4, . . . (2n−1)λ/4, with natural numbers n. For reasons of optimizing resonator characteristics, mirror-layer thickness can deviate slightly form the λ/4, 3λ/4, . . . (2n−1)λ/4 rule. SiO2 is used in particular as the material with lower acoustic impedance. As the material with higher acoustic impedance, in contrast, a heavy metal such as tungsten or molybdenum, or aluminum nitride, is used. The higher the impedance difference between the two materials, the fewer pairs are used for an acoustic mirror. Conventional acoustic mirrors need at least two λ/4 layer pairs between the lower electrode and the substrate. With each additional layer, however, the effective coupling of the resonator, and thus the bandwidth, is reduced. In contrast to a resonator of the bridge type, the bandwidth of the resonator can be reduced by up to 30% in this case. With such resonators, it is therefore significantly more expensive to construct a band-pass filter with adequate bandwidth.
Another disadvantage of a BAW resonator of the mirror type is in the complexity of the process for depositing and structuring the multilayer structure required for it. Each λ/4 layer increases the complexity, and thus the cost, of the production process. With the number of necessary layers, errors also become more frequent so that a significant scattering of resonance frequencies of the resonators over an entire wafer and, as a result, the average frequency of filters must be taken into account.
Since the bandwidth of the acoustic mirror is reduced as the number of layer pairs for the acoustic mirror increases, in a duplexer, for example, that has two filters with different passage ranges (pass bands), a separate acoustic mirror would be required for each of the two filters. The complexity of production is thereby increased.
Layers with high dielectric constants, such as the metal tungsten and molybdenum in particular, can result in coupling of electric signals to the substrate, which results in undesired speech overlap and an increase in insertion loss.
The object of the present invention is therefore to provide an acoustic mirror for a BAW resonator that is simpler to produce than known acoustic mirrors, and that avoids the above-mentioned disadvantages.
This object is solved according to the invention by an acoustic mirror with the characteristics of claim 1. Advantageous embodiments of the invention and a BAW resonator including the acoustic mirror, a filter constructed from BAW resonators, and a duplexer including such filters can be seen in the other claims.
The invention proposes making an acoustic mirror out of at least one pair of layers of materials with different acoustic impedances, such that a low-k dielectric is chosen as a material with lower acoustic impedance. If such a dielectric is combined with another layer of a material with high acoustic impedance, then a highly reflective acoustic mirror is obtained. According to the invention, material combinations for the mirror-layer pair have been found that make possible a highly reflecting mirror even with only one pair of layers.
The low-k dielectrics used according to the invention are known as insulation, covering, and intermediate layers for microelectronic applications. This class of materials, the low-k dielectrics include hardened foams, porous oxides, and aerogels, as well as networked hardened polymers and other organic materials that can deposited by the CVD (chemical vapor deposition) technique or the SOD (spin-on deposition) technique. These materials have a lower dielectric constant than SiO2 and have an ε less than 3. In addition, they have even lower densities, ρ, and small elastic constants, c. Since the acoustic impedance, Z, is calculated according to the formula
Z={square root}{square root over (ρ*c)}
extremely low acoustic impedances result with these two low values, c and ρ, which, in combination with materials of high impedance, Z, give the highly reflective acoustic mirror according to the invention. In combination with tungsten as a high-impedance material, the reflectivity of a single λ/4 layer pair is sufficient to produce a good acoustic mirror for a BAW resonator. By λ/4 layer pair, in terms of the invention, layer pairs with layer thickness of odd multiples of λ/4 are also to be understood, as well as layers that deviate slightly from this value. The acoustic reflectivity at the boundaries between the lower electrode and the low-k dielectric alone is over 90% when gold is chosen as the material for the lower electrode. When the conventional material SiO2 is used, the acoustic reflection at the boundary between the gold and the low-k material is only 40%. Here, the acoustic reflectivity, R, at the boundary between two layers, 1 and 2, is calculated according to the formula
Z1 corresponds to the acoustic impedance of gold (ZAu=63*106 kg/s/m2) and Z2 corresponds to the acoustic impedance of the low-k dielectric used (as an example for the low-k dielectrics SiLK® and BCB: Zlow-k<2*106 kg/m/m2) or the acoustic impedance of SiO2 (ZSiO2=14*106 kg/s/m2).
Since the acoustic impedance of a material rises or falls with its density, steps can be taken according to the invention that reduce the low acoustic impedance in the layers even further. It is advantageous, for example, to provide nanopores in the mirror layer with lower acoustic impedance. Such nanopores can be determined structurally in appropriate polymers or be present in a material with a 3D structure. Nanopores can also be generated later, however, for example by foaming the material with a gas-releasing substance, especially with a propellant. Siloxanes as well that are derived from silsesquioxanes have structurally determined hollow spaces that reduce the density and thereby the acoustic impedance. Materials like aerogels or porous silicates likewise have pores and thereby a lower density.
Low-k dielectrics preferred for the invention are polyaromatic polymers derived, for example, by polymerization of monomers of polyphenylene or bis-benzocyclobutene substituted with cyclopentadienone and acetylene. By means of the polymerization, for example, networked polyphenylene (trade name SiLK®) or networked bis-benzocyclobutene (trade name BCB) is obtained that has, for the example of BCB, a glass-transition temperature (maximum temperature stability) of more than 350° C., an elastic constant of about 2 GPa, an average density of 1.0 g/cm3, and thereby an acoustic impedance of only 1.4×106 kg/s/m2. The low-k dielectric SiLK has a glass-transition temperature (maximum temperature stability) of more than 490° C., an elastic constant of about 2.45 GPa, an average density of 1.2 g/cm3, and an acoustic impedance of only 1.7×106 kg/s/m2.
Commercial polymers on this basis are known, for example, from an article by S. J. Martin et al.: “Development of a Low-dielectric-constant Polymer for the Fabrication of Integrated Circuit Interconnect” in Adv. Mater. 2000, 12, No. 23, December 1, pages 1769-1778, and are also commercially available. The elastic constant of this material is in the GPa range and thus is an order of magnitude below the elastic constant of SiO2, which has been used so far as the low-impedance layer. Since the density of this material is also lower than that of SiO2, extremely low acoustic impedance results.
The high thermal stability of this material is most suitable for making subsequent layer deposition of additional functional layers possible, such as, for example, another high-impedance layer, piezoelectric layers, electrodes, diffusion barriers, or passivation, even at the high temperatures required for this. They can be applied in very homogeneous layer structures by the spin-on technique, in which a desired layer thickness can be set with high precision. With a mirror-layer pair that includes such a polyaromatic layer, coupling in the BAW resonator is increased. With this, the bandwidth in the BAW filter is also raised by an average of 14% with respect to conventional acoustic mirrors. In this way, a BAW resonator with an acoustic mirror becomes a fully equivalent alternative to a BAW resonator with a bridge structure.
The process costs in the production of a BAW resonator or even in the reduction of an acoustic mirror for a BAW resonator are reduced significantly by a reduction in the number of mirror layers needed. For a layer pair of tungsten/polyaromatic low-k dielectric, only a single layer pair is required.
By reducing the number of mirror layers, the diffusion of the average frequency over all resonators manufactured on a single wafer is reduced. In addition, the interrupting electric coupling to the substrate, caused especially by the use of metallic high-impedance layers in the acoustic mirror, is reduced by reducing the number of layers in the mirror and by reducing the relative dielectric constant of the low-k dielectric.
Another material besides SiLK® with a low dielectric constant, low density, and a small elastic constant c, is benzocyclobutene. This material is known as a dielectric in microelectronics by its abbreviation, BCB, and as an insulating and covering layer. It is also extremely well-suited for acoustic-mirror layers with low acoustic impedance according to the invention, since it also provides and achieves a highly homogeneous layer thickness during application and can be applied to a substrate reproducibly in a desired thickness, for example by the spin-on technique.
An acoustic mirror according to the invention finds an advantageous application in a BAW resonator, in which the layer of higher acoustic impedance, for example tungsten, is applied directly onto a material acting as the carrier, onto which the layer of lower acoustic impedance, for example a polyaromatic compounds, such as SiLK® or BCB, or another low-k dielectric is applied, and onto that a resonator consisting of a first electrode, a piezoelectric layer, and an upper second electrode are applied. Glass, ceramics or semiconductors, for example, are suitable as substrate materials. It is also possible to use a multilayer substrate, in which individual layers or the entire substrate can also comprise organic materials.
The layer thicknesses for the layer pair of the acoustic mirror are adapted to the desired resonance frequency of the resonators and thereby the average frequency of the filter resulting therefrom. Because of the high bandwidth, a suitable layer pair of λ/4 or 3λ/4 layers can be used not only for a given resonance frequency but also with other frequencies that lie within the bandwidth of the mirror or with resonators with such resonance frequencies.
For the material of the lower electrode, the metals aluminum, tungsten, molybdenum and gold are suitable. Advantageously, a material with high acoustic impedance is used for the lower electrode layer, whereby the highest possible reflection is achieved already at the boundary between the lower electrode and the low-k dielectric.
For the piezoelectric layer, a material with a higher coupling constant is selected advantageously that can be deposited uniformly in the desired thickness, depending on the average frequency. Zinc oxide and aluminum nitride are especially suitable for BAW resonators. However, other piezoelectric materials are suitable in principle, to the extent that they meet the boundary conditions mentioned.
For the upper electrode layer, the same choice applies in principle as for the lower electrode layer. Each of the “lower” layers of a BAW resonator layer structure serves as a “substrate” for the layer applied onto it and must accordingly withstand at least the conditions for the depositing of the layer above it without damage, and it must have only slight surface roughness so that no acoustic scatterings, losses, and growth disturbances appear that would reduce the dynamics of the resonators and thereby increase the insertion loss of the resulting filter.
In conventional acoustic mirrors with SiO2 as the mirror layer with low acoustic impedance, the surface roughness of SiO2 makes a polishing process (chemo-mechanical polishing, CMP, as a wet etching process, ion-radiation etching as a dry etching process) necessary before the lower electrode is deposited. One of the main reasons for the increased roughness of the uppermost SiO2 layer of conventional acoustic mirrors is that the SiO2 layers as low-impedance layers form the large surface roughnesses of the high-impedance layers (W, Mo, AlN) upward during deposition of the successive layers. Without this polishing step, the roughness appearing at the boundary between the lower electrode and the lower-impedance layer increases the acoustic losses in the resonators and thereby the insertion loss of the filter. Low-k dielectrics such as SiLK® and BCB, which are applied, e.g., by the spin-on technique onto a high-impedance layers such as tungsten, for example, smooth the roughnesses of the underlying layer through their flow properties. The surface roughness of the low-k dielectrics such as SiLK or BCB is itself extremely low after the hardening process of the layers. Typical RMS roughnesses are less than 1 nm. Other steps, such as costly and expensive polishing process to provide a homogeneous boundary are thus superfluous.
A BAW resonator or a stacked-crystal filter in a somewhat changed embodiment can be used as an impedance element for constructing a reactance filter, as is known, for example, from U.S. Pat. No. 5,910,756. Such a filter contains resonators connected in parallel and in series in a branching circuit, whereby the connection can be of the ladder type or the lattice type, for example. If the design rules for the reactance filters are also observed, a band-pass filter can be created in this way that has the required bandwidth for HF applications, in particular in current usual communications systems.
BAW resonators according to the invention, with an acoustic mirror according to the invention, already provide the increased bandwidth with respect to known resonators with conventional acoustic mirrors required for the individual resonators. This can be read directly from the admittance curve of the resonator, in which the distance between resonance and anti-resonance frequencies of the resonator represents a measurement of the bandwidth.
An advantageous application for a BAW resonator filter according to the invention with an acoustic mirror according to the invention is a duplexer. Such a duplexer comprises two band-pass filters, whose average frequencies are very close to each other and cover, for example, the transmitting and receiving bands of a communication system. The two band-pass filters of a duplexer must thus be tuned to each other such that each filter exhibits as high a level of attenuation as possible at the average frequency of the other filter. Depending on the required distance between the two average frequencies, it may also be required that the two facing flanks of the passage range of the two filters be set to be particularly steep. For such demands, high-quality filters are required that require high-value reactance filters, in the case of reactance filters. For this, for reactance filters comprised of BAW resonators, each resonance frequency has so far required its own acoustic mirror, adapted to the resonance frequency. With the aid of the acoustic mirror according to the invention, it is now possible to use an acoustic mirror comprised of only one pair of layers for both filters of a duplexer and thereby still meet the high requirements for flank steepness, bandwidths, and near selection. With the aid of the invention, only one substrate with a specific acoustic mirror applied over an entire surface is successfully realized for two filters working in closely adjacent frequency ranges. This simplifies production and thereby lowers costs. Because of reduced coupling through the acoustic mirror layers, it is also possible, with the acoustic mirror according to the invention, to expand the resonator further by applying the pair or pairs for the acoustic mirror to the entire surface and without additional structuring between individual resonators or individual filters.
In the following, the invention will be explained in more detail by means of embodiment examples and the associated diagrams.
a shows, in a schematic section, a BAW resonator with an acoustic mirror according to the invention.
b shows in a schematic cross-section a stacked-crystal filter (SCF) with an acoustic mirror according to the invention.
a shows an example of a possible structure of a reactance filter in a ladder-type structure.
b shows an example of another possible structure of a reactance filter in a ladder-type structure.
c shows an example of a possible structure of a reactance filter in a lattice structure.
a shows, in a schematic cross-section, a BAW resonator with an acoustic mirror according to the invention, the mirror layers of which can be realized as λ/4 layers or 3λ/4 layers independently of each other. Slight deviations from these conditions serve to optimize the resonator characteristics. Below the schematic cross-section, a substitute cross-section image of the BAW resonator is given. This is constructed on a substrate S that serves only as a mechanical solid carrier. Accordingly, the selection of materials suitable for it is broad. Directly onto the substrate, a first layer, HZ, with high acoustic impedance is applied, for example, a tungsten layer. This has an impedance of approximately 105×106 kg/sm2. The thickness of layer HZ is selected in such a way that at the desired resonance frequency of the BAW resonator and the spreading rate of acoustic waves given in the material (tungsten) has a thickness of λ/4. For example, these can be a resonance frequency of 2.1 GHz and a thickness of 611 nm. Above layer HZ, a low-k dielectric is arranged with a thickness of λ/4 or a thickness of 3λ/4, for example of a material sold by Dow Chemical Corporation under name SiLK®. The SiLK® material system consists of crosslinked polyphenylenes, obtained by polymerization of monomers that can be substituted with cyclopentadienone and acetylene. The acoustically very similar material BCB consists of crosslinked bis-benzocyclobutenone. When SiLK® or BCB is used, for example, the following mirror-layer thickness result: at a resonance frequency of 2.1 GHz, the mirror-layer thickness of a λ/4 wave is selected to be about 165 nm, and the mirror-layer thickness of a 3λ/4 layer is selected to about 500 nm.
With the given material combination, W/SiLK®, a broadband acoustic mirror, A, is realized that has a reflectivity for the acoustic energy of a wave of more than 95% at the average frequency mentioned. The acoustic mirror, A, can, however, also include additional layer pairs, thus additional layers with higher acoustic impedance, HZ, and additional layers with lower impedance, LK. These layers are arranged alternately in the desired number. Above the layer of low-k material, LK, is the lower electrode of the BAW resonator or an adhesion transmitter, diffusion barrier, or growth layers are formed, for example by depositing CVD or spattering a molybdenum layer with a layer thickness of about 195 nm.
Above the lower electrode, E1, a piezoelectric layer, F, is now applied, for example a zinc-oxide layer. A spattering process is used, for example, as the application process. The piezoelectric layer, P, can, however, consist of other materials, for example aluminum nitride or another suitable piezoelectric material.
As the upper electrode of the BAW resonator, a second electrode layer, E2, is arranged above the piezoelectric layer P, not necessarily of the same material as the first electrode layer, E1. In many cases, the upper electrode E1 is also provided with tuning, trimming, or passivation layers.
The resonance frequency of the BAW resonator is determined approximately according to the formula f=v/2L0, where L0 is the layer thickness of the BAW resonator and is composed of the layer thicknesses of the piezoelectric layer P, and the two electrode layers, E1 and E2. For the primary oscillation mode of the BAW resonator, the thickness is set to λ/2. It is also possible to set the thickness d, to a multiple of λ/2 and accordingly stimulate higher oscillating modes. Besides the schematic cross-section,
b shows, in a schematic cross-section, a stacked-crystal filter (SCF) with an acoustic mirror according to the invention, the mirror layers of which can be realized as λ/4 or 3λ/4 layers, independently of each other. Slight deviations from these conditions serve to optimize the SCF characteristics. The SCF corresponds in its main structure to a BAW resonator that is coupled with a second resonator, electrically and acoustically. Below the schematic cross-section, an electronic equivalent circuit diagram for the SCF is given. Various embodiment examples and developments of SCFs are found in an article by K. M. Lakin et al.: “High Performance Stacked Crystal Filters for GPS and Wide Bandwidth Applications” in IEEE 2001 Ultrasonics Symposium, paper 3E-6, Oct. 9, 2001.
A SCF is, as described in the preceding paragraphs on
In a possible variation of the SCF, one or more acoustic mirror layers are inserted between electrode E2a and another electrode E2b that may be deposited onto it, which layers change the electrical and the acoustical coupling between resonator E1-P1-E2a and resonator E2b-P2-E3. In these mirror layers that can be realized as λ/4 or 3λ/4 layers, low-k dielectrics such as SiLK or BCB, for example, can be used as low-impedance layers. Below the schematic cross-section an electronic equivalent circuit diagram of the simple embodiment of the SCF is given.
Advantageously, a reactance filter consists of a ladder-type structure, in which several BAW resonators, Rs1, Rs2, and Rs3 connected in series and several resonators Rp1, Rp2, connected in parallel, are connected to one another as shown. Beginning at one input or output, the structure can be abbreviated with the letters p for parallel resonator, Rp, or with s for serial resonator, Rs. In
The ladder-type structure can be expanded with an arbitrary number of additional serial and parallel resonators, whereby each parallel resonator, Rp, can be composed of two parallel resonators connected in parallel and each serial resonator, Rs can be composed of two resonators connected in series. The known design rules for ladder-type filters can be applied.
c shows the lattice-type structure of a reactance filter constructed of BAW resonators. This structure will be used advantageously for the so-called balanced-balanced mode of filters.
By increasing the boundary reflection and the bandwidth of the acoustic mirror according to the invention, a certain thickness tolerance also results for the thickness of λ/4 and 3λ/4 layers. Thus it is possible to use one and the same layer thickness for the acoustic mirror layers of two different filters, the resonance frequencies of which lie near to each other, for example a duplexer with an RX filter and a TX filter for the UMTS 3G standard.
In another experiment, the dependency of filter characteristics on variations in layer thicknesses within the acoustic mirror was determined. For this, with the RX/TX filter pair already described for a UMTS duplexer with an acoustic mirror according to the invention, the layer thickness of the low-k dielectric (here: SiLK®) was varied from the optimal value (here: 165 nm) by ±13 nm.
In
Although the invention has been described on the basis of just a few optimal combinations of materials, other variations concerning the materials used also lie within the framework of the invention. If a deviation is made from the mentioned low-k organic dielectrics that bring with them the optimal conditions for the acoustic mirror, then more than one layer pair of λ/4 and 3λ/4 layers can be required for an acoustic mirror according to the invention. This also applies when a deviation is made from using tungsten as the material for the layer with higher acoustic impedance and a transition is made to molybdenum or aluminum nitride is made, for example. In all cases, however, the acoustic mirror according to the invention the number of mirror layers required is reduced. This, in turn, reduces the interrupting electric coupling to the substrate and in all cases simplifies production of the mirror, which now no longer needs any structuring. In all cases, by using acoustic mirrors according to the invention, one obtains a higher degree of freedom in the selection of desired materials, which makes possible further optimization of BAW resonators and filters resulting from them. In doing so, the minimum characteristics of conventional BAW resonators are achieved, but for optimal layer combinations they are significantly exceeded, as illustrated.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 60 617.6 | Dec 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE02/04498 | 12/6/2002 | WO |