The present invention relates to integrated circuit (IC) devices. More particularly, the present invention relates to a strained silicon structure on an insulator substrate.
Semiconductor devices such as processors, non-volatile memory, and other circuits include semiconductor elements such as metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETS), diodes, resistors, and capacitors. For example, flash memory devices employ millions of floating gate FETs and processors employing millions of complementary MOSFETS. MOSFETS are generally disposed in active regions disposed in a base layer or substrate. Active regions typically include heavily doped silicon or other semiconductor regions. The regions can be doped with impurities such as phosphorous (P), boron (B), arsenic (As), or other impurities.
Semiconductor elements such as floating gate transistors and FETs are generally bulk semiconductor-type devices in contrast to semiconductor-on-insulator-type devices such as silicon-on-insulator (SOI) devices. The floating gate transistors and FETs are disposed in a single plane (e.g., a single active layer) on a top surface of a semiconductor substrate such as a single crystal silicon substrate.
Semiconductor-on-insulator (SOI) (e.g., silicon-on-insulator) devices have significant advantages over bulk semiconductor-type devices, including near ideal subthreshold voltage slope, elimination of latch-up, low junction capacitance, and effective isolation between devices. SOI-type devices generally completely surround a silicon or other semiconductor substrate with an insulator. Devices such as conventional FETs or other transistors are disposed on the silicon substrate by doping source and drain regions and by providing gate conductors between the source and drain regions. SOI devices provide significant advantages, including reduced chip size or increased chip density because minimal device separation is needed due to the surrounding insulating layers. Additionally, SOI devices can operate at increased speeds due to reduction in parasitic capacitance. These advantages are particularly important as integration technologies reach sub-100 nanometer levels for CMOS devices.
Conventional SOI devices generally have a floating substrate (i.e., the substrate is often totally isolated by insulating layers). SOI devices can be subject to floating substrate effects, including current and voltage kinks, thermal degradation, and large threshold voltage variations. Generally, SOI devices can include a very thin (200-800 Å thick) silicon film separated from a bulk substrate by a thick buried oxide (e.g., a 2000-3000 Å thick BOX layer).
Strained silicon (SMOS) processes are utilized to increase transistor (e.g., MOSFET) performance by increasing the carrier mobility of silicon, thereby reducing resistance and power consumption and increasing drive current, frequency response and operating speed. Strained silicon is typically formed by growing a layer of silicon on a silicon germanium substrate or layer. Germanium can also be implanted, deposited, or otherwise provided to silicon layers to change the lattice structure of the silicon and increase carrier mobility.
The silicon germanium lattice associated with the germanium substrate is generally more widely spaced than a pure silicon lattice, with spacing becoming wider with a higher percentage of germanium. Because the silicon lattice aligns with the larger silicon germanium lattice, a tensile strain is created in the silicon layer. The silicon atoms are essentially pulled apart from one another. Relaxed silicon has a conductive band that contains six equal valance bands. The application of tensile strength to the silicon causes four of the valance bands to increase in energy and two of the valance bands to decrease in energy. As a result of quantum effects, electrons effectively weigh 30 percent less when passing through the lower energy bands. Thus, lower energy bands offer less resistance to electron flow.
In addition, electrons meet with less vibrational energy from the nucleus of the silicon atom, which causes them to scatter at a rate of 500 to 1,000 times less than in relaxed silicon. As a result, carrier mobility is dramatically increased in strained silicon compared to relaxed silicon, providing an increase in mobility of 80 percent or more for electrons and 20 percent or more for holes. The increase in mobility has been found to persist for current fields up to 1.5 megavolt/centimeter. These factors are believed to enable device speed increase of 35 percent without further reduction of device size, or a 25 percent reduction in power consumption without reduction in performance.
Heretofore, it has been difficult to manufacture SMOS devices on SOI substrates. Generally, providing a suitable strained silicon layer above an insulative substrate to achieve the advantage of an SOI substrate can be problematic. In addition, providing a strained silicon layer thin enough for a fully depleted MOSFET above an insulative layer can be difficult using conventional processes. A fully depleted MOSFET is a transistor for which the depletion region encompasses the entire or nearly the entire channel region.
Thus, there is a need for an SOI and strained semiconductor device. Further, there is a need for an SOI device which includes a strained silicon layer. Further still, there is a need for method of manufacturing an SOI structure including a strained silicon layer. Yet further, there is a need for a fully depleted transistor which has some of the advantages of SOI devices and SMOS devices. Even further, there is a need for an efficient method of manufacturing an SMOS device on an insulative substrate. Further still, there is a need for an efficient process for fabricating fully depleted SMOS SOI transistors.
An exemplary embodiment relates to an integrated circuit. The integrated circuit includes a first wafer including a silicon germanium layer, a strained silicon layer, and a first insulating layer. The integrated circuit also includes a second wafer including a substrate and a second insulating layer. The second insulating layer is attached to the first insulating layer.
Another exemplary embodiment relates to a multi-layer structure containing a plurality of SMOS transistors. The multi-layer structure includes a semiconductor/germanium layer, a strained semiconductor layer below the semiconductor germanium layer, a gate dielectric, and a gate conductor. The strained semiconductor layer is below the semiconductor/germanium layer. The semiconductor/germanium layer includes an aperture. The gate dielectric is above the strained semiconductor layer and within the aperture, and the gate conductor is also within the aperture. The strained semiconductor layer includes a source and a drain.
Still another exemplary embodiment relates to a method of making an SMOS structure containing a plurality of transistors. The method includes providing a first semiconductor substrate including a base layer, a strained semiconductor layer, and a first oxide layer. The method also includes attaching a second semiconductor substrate including a second oxide layer to the first oxide layer and separating the base layer from the first substrate.
Exemplary embodiments will hereafter be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and:
With reference to
Integrated circuit 12 (
Structure 11 can be built on a bulk substrate including germanium, a semiconductor bulk substrate, or another IC substrate. Structure 11 preferably includes a strained semiconductor layer, such as a strained silicon layer 16.
Structure 15 includes a support substrate 19 and an insulating layer 21. Support substrate 19 can be a silicon substrate that along with layer 21 assists the formation of the SOI structure of integrated circuit 12.
Integrated circuit 12 can include a semiconductor device or portion thereof made from any of the various semiconductor processes such as a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process or any other semiconductor process. The portion of integrated circuit 12 shown in
Structure 11 includes a silicon/germanium layer 14, (e.g., a semiconductor/germanium layer), a strained semiconductor layer 16 (e.g., a strained silicon layer), and an insulating layer 17. Insulating layer 17 of structure 11 and insulating layer 21 of structure 15 are preferably bonded together at an interface represented by a dotted line between layers 17 and 21.
Process 100 can be utilized to form integrated circuit 12. According to process 100, structure 11 is formed including strained silicon layer 16 and silicon germanium layer 14 in a step 52. In a step 54, structure 15 is provided. Structure 15 can be comprised of a handle wafer substrate such as substrate 19. Insulating layer 21 can be grown or deposited upon substrate 19. Similarly, an insulative layer 17 can be grown upon layer 21. Alternatively, substrate 19 and structure 11 can be purchased with respective layers 17 and 21 already formed.
In a step 56, structures 11 and 15 are coupled together to form a compound multilayer structure in a step 56. Preferably, layers 17 and 21 are bonded by any known technique, such as a hydrogen bonding technique. Advantageously, structure 11 includes strained silicon layer 16 above insulative layers 17 and 21, thereby providing the advantages of SMOS and SOI processes.
In a step 58, support layers and other unnecessary layers associated with structure 11 can be removed from a top surface of layer 14. In a step 60, an aperture can be etched through layer 14 to form a gate structure. In a step 62, layer 16 can be doped to form source and drain extensions through the aperture associated with the gate structure. In a step 64, a gate structure 37 can be provided in the aperture.
With reference to
The transistor associated with source and drain regions 22 and 24 preferably is fully depleted so that the depletion region extends through the entire thickness of layer 16. Gate structure 37 between source and drain regions 22 and 24 includes a gate conductor 46 and a gate dielectric 47.
Gate dielectric 47 is preferably 5-30 Angstroms thick. Gate dielectric 47 can be silicon dioxide (SiO2), silicon nitride (Si3N4) or a high-k dielectric material.
Gate conductor 46 is surrounded by dielectric spacers 35. Gate conductor 46 can be a metal or doped polysilicon material. Dielectric spacers 35 can be comprised of a silicon dioxide or silicon nitride material.
Source and drain regions 22 and 24 preferably extend through the entire thickness of layer 16. Source region 22 and drain region 24 are preferably 100-200 Angstroms deep preferably formed by ion implantation. Extensions 23 and 25 are not necessary in the fully depleted embodiment of the transistor. Regions 22 and 24 can have a concentration of between approximately 1019 to 1021 dopants per cm3. The dopants can include boron (B), arsenic (As), phosphorous (P), boron difluoride (BF2), etc.
Referring to
In
Substrate 13 is optional and integrated circuit 12 can be provided with layer 14 as the bottom-most layer. Substrate 13 can be the same material or a different material than layer 14. In one embodiment, substrate 13 is a semiconductor substrate, such as a silicon substrate upon which layer 14 has been grown.
Silicon/germanium layer 14 is preferably a silicon germanium or other semiconductor material including germanium, and can be doped with P-type dopants or N-type dopants. Layer 14 can be an epitaxial layer provided on a semiconductor or an insulative base, such as substrate 13. Furthermore, layer 14 is preferably a composition of silicon germanium (Si1-xGex, where X is approximately 0.2 and is more generally in the range of 0.05-0.3). Layer 14 can be grown or deposited.
In one embodiment, layer 14 is grown above substrate 13 by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) using disilane (Si2H6) and germane (GeH4) as source gases with a substrate temperature of approximately 650° C., a disilane partial pressure of approximately 30 mPa and a germane partial pressure of approximately 60 mPa. Growth of silicon germanium material may be initiated using these ratios, or, alternatively, the partial pressure of germanium may be gradually increased beginning from a lower pressure of zero pressure to form a gradient composition. Alternatively, a silicon layer can be doped by ion implantation with germanium or by another process to form layer 14. Preferably, silicon/germanium layer 14 is grown by epitaxy to a thickness of less than approximately 5000 Å (and preferably between approximately 1500 Å and 4000 Å).
Strained silicon layer 16 is formed above layer 14 by an epitaxial process. Preferably, layer 16 is grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at a temperature of approximately 650° C. using silane or dichlorosilane. Layer 16 can be a pure silicon layer and have a thickness of 100-200 Å. Layer 14 maintains the strained nature of layer 16 throughout process 100.
Layers 14 and 16 can include isolation regions which separate active regions for transistors on structure 11. Isolation regions can be insulating regions such as silicon dioxide regions formed in conventional local oxidation of silicon (LOCOS) processes. Alternatively, isolation regions can be formed in a shallow trench isolation (STI) process.
Structure 11 can include an insulating layer 17. Insulating layer 17 is preferably a thermally grown or deposited silicon dioxide layer having a thickness of approximately 200-400 Å. In an alternative embodiment, layer 17 can be deposited as high-temperature oxide or in a tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) based process. In another alternative, layer 17 can be formed in an oxygen ion implantation process. Layer 17 is preferably utilized in the bonding technique associated with step 56 of process 100.
In
In
In
Preferably, wafer bonding (bonding of structures 11 and 15) is completed at room temperature and in a nitrogen (N2) ambient atmosphere in step 56. The wafer bonding is completed by atomic force. Alternatively, higher temperatures can be utilized during bonding.
In one embodiment, Smart-Cut® and Unibond® techniques can be utilized to bond structures 11 and 15. Smart-Cut® and Unibond® techniques are discussed in “Smart-Cut®: The Basic Fabrication Process for UNIBOND® SOI Wafers,” by Auberton-Herue, Bruel, Aspar, Maleville, and Moriceau (IEEE TRANS ELECTRON, March 1997), incorporated herein by reference. The Smart-Cut® and Unibond® techniques can reach temperatures of 110° C. to bond layers 17 and 21 together.
The Smart-Cut® and UNIBOND® techniques utilize a combination of hydrogen implantation and wafer bonding to form an SOI substrate. Applicants have modified the techniques to attach a strained silicon layer containing structure (structure 11) to a handle wafer (structure 15) to form a strained silicon on SOI layer. OH terminated clean oxide surfaces on layers 17 and 21 in hydrophilic conditions can be used to bond structures 11 and 15. Hydrogen bonding at the surfaces is achieved through water adsorption.
Alternative techniques for attaching wafers can be utilized without departing from the scope of the claims. For example, structures 11 and 15 can be bonded by an adhesive or other chemical means.
In
In one embodiment, a hydrogen breaking interface can be formed at the interface of layer 14 and substrate 13 or within a bottom portion of layer 14. The hydrogen breaking interface can be used to separate substrate 13 from layer 14 in a Smart-Cut® process.
In
In one embodiment, aperture 72 can be less than 500 A Angstroms deep formed by dry etching. In another embodiment, aperture 72 can extend into layer 16. Various etching processes selective to layer 14 can be utilized.
In one embodiment, an etching process which monitors the presence of germanium in etching byproducts is utilized. The reduction of the presence of germanium in the etching byproducts indicates that layer 16 has been reached (i.e., layer 16 does not include significant amounts of germanium). The etching process is preferably selective to silicon germanium with respect to silicon at a 2:1 ratio. The etching processes can be CF4, SF6, CF2CL2, HBr, and SF6/H2/CF4 processes (preferably CF4 and SF6 processes).
In
Layer 14 serves as a mask for the appropriate formation of extensions 23 and 25. In one embodiment, an angled dopant extension implant 32 can be utilized. Preferably, dopants are accelerated at an energy of 1×10 keV at an angle of 15-45 and a dose of 14-15 through aperture 72. Alternative methods can be utilized to form extensions 23 and 25. The dopants can be B, P, As, BF2, Sb, etc.
According to an alternative embodiment, spacers similar to spacers 35 can include dopants which are driven into extensions 23 and 25. In yet another embodiment, source and drain regions 22 and 24 and extensions 23 and 25 can formed by a conventional doping process before aperture 72 is formed.
In
In
In
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An insulating layer can be deposited above integrated circuit 12 shown in
With reference to
In
In
It should be understood that the detailed drawings and specific examples describe exemplary embodiments of the present invention and are provided for the purpose of illustration only. The apparatus and method of the invention is not limited to the precise details, geometries, dimensions, materials, and conditions disclosed. For example, although particular layers are described as being particular sizes, other sizes can be utilized. Further still, although polysilicon is used as a gate conductor, other conductor materials can be utilized. Even further still, the drawings are not drawn to scale. Various changes can be made to the precise details discussed without departing from the spirit of the invention which is defined by the following claims.
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