This specification relates to detecting light using an optical sensor.
Light propagates in free space or an optical medium is coupled to an optical sensor that converts an optical signal to an electrical signal for processing.
Optical sensors may be used to detect optical signals and convert the optical signals to electrical signals that may be further processed by another circuitry. Optical sensors may be used in consumer electronics products, data communications, time-of-flight (TOF) applications, medical devices, and many other suitable applications. Conventionally, silicon is used as a sensor material, but silicon has a low optical absorption efficiency for wavelengths in the near-infrared (NIR) spectrum or longer. Other materials and/or material alloys such as germanium and germanium-silicon may be used as sensor materials with innovative optical device structure design described in this specification. According to one innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification, an optical sensor is formed using materials such as germanium or germanium-silicon to increase the speed and/or the sensitivity and/or the dynamic range and/or the operating wavelength range of the device. In one implementation, a graded material layer having graded material bandgaps may be formed in between two material layers to form a sensor having an intrinsic electric field that enhances carrier transit within the sensor. In another implementation, two graded material layers may be formed on two ends of a material layer to allow free carriers at the ends of the sensor to be collected instead of being recombined. In another implementation, a lateral strain dilution technique may be used to form a germanium or germanium-silicon sensor having reduced defects or being defect-free, which results into a lower dark current and a better sensitivity/dynamic range. In another implementation, an energy filter may be defined to block dark currents while allowing photocurrents to pass through, which further reduces the lower dark current.
In general, one innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in an optical sensor that includes a first material layer including at least a first material; a second material layer including at least a second material that is different from the first material, where a material bandgap of the first material is larger than a material bandgap of the second material; and a graded material layer arranged between the first material layer and the second material layer, the graded material layer including an alloy of at least the first material and the second material having compositions of the second material that vary along a direction that is from the first material to the second material.
This and other implementations can each optionally include one or more of the following features. The first material may be silicon and the second material may be germanium. The compositions of germanium of the graded material may increase along the direction that is from the first material to the second material. The first material layer may include an alloy of germanium and silicon having a first germanium composition. The second material layer may include an alloy of germanium and silicon having a second germanium composition. The first germanium composition may be lower than the second germanium composition. The germanium compositions of the graded material layer may be between the first germanium composition and the second germanium composition. The first material layer and the second material layer may be doped.
The optical sensor may include a substrate; and circuitry arranged over the substrate. The second material layer may be arranged over the circuitry, and the first material layer may be arranged over the second material layer.
Another innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in a method for fabricating an optical sensor, including forming, over a substrate, a first material layer comprising at least a first material; forming, over the first material layer, a graded material layer comprising an alloy of at least the first material and a second material having compositions of the second material that vary along a direction that is perpendicular from the substrate; and forming, over the graded material, a second material layer comprising at least the second material that is different from the first material.
This and other implementations can each optionally include one or more of the following features. Circuitry may be formed over the second material layer. Before forming the first material layer, a segregation layer may be formed on the substrate. A top layer formed on the substrate may be bonded to the circuitry formed on a carrier substrate. The substrate and the segregation layer may be removed. A filter and a lens may be formed over the first material layer.
Another innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in an optical sensor including a first graded material layer including a composition of at least a first material and a second material, where compositions of the second material of the first graded material layer vary along a particular direction; a second graded material layer including a composition of at least the first material and the second material, where compositions of the second material of the second graded material layer vary along the particular direction; and a third material layer arranged between the first graded material layer and the second graded material layer, the third material layer including at least the second material.
This and other implementations can each optionally include one or more of the following features. The first material may be silicon and the second material may be germanium. The particular direction may a direction from the first graded material layer to the second graded material layer. The compositions of germanium of the first graded material layer may increase along the particular direction. The compositions of germanium of the second graded material layer may decrease along the particular direction. The first graded material layer may include multiple p-doped levels along the particular direction. The second graded material layer may include multiple n-doped levels along the particular direction. The optical sensor may include conductor layers configured to provide a bias the optical sensor.
Another innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in an optical sensor that includes a first graded germanium layer including multiple p-doped levels along a particular direction; a second graded germanium layer including multiple n-doped levels along the particular direction; a third germanium layer arranged between the first graded germanium layer and the second graded germanium layer; and conductor layers configured to provide a bias to the optical sensor.
Another innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in an optical sensor including a first layer formed over a substrate, the first layer including germanium-silicon having a first strain, and the first layer having a first area; and a second layer formed over the first layer, the second layer including germanium-silicon having a second strain that is lower than the first strain, and the second layer having a second area that is larger than the first area.
Another innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in a method for fabricating an optical sensor, the method including forming a dielectric layer on a silicon substrate; forming a first opening having a first area in the dielectric layer; forming a second opening having a second area that is larger than the first area in the dielectric layer; forming a first germanium-silicon layer in the first opening; and forming a second germanium-silicon layer in the second opening, wherein a strain of the first germanium-silicon layer is higher than a strain of the second germanium-silicon layer.
This and other implementations can each optionally include one or more of the following features. Circuitry may be formed over the second germanium-silicon layer. A top layer of the silicon substrate may be bonded to circuitry of a carrier substrate. The silicon substrate and at least a portion of the first germanium-silicon layer may be removed. A filter and a lens may be formed over the second germanium-silicon layer.
Advantageous implementations may include one or more of the following features. Germanium is an efficient absorption material for near-infrared wavelengths, which reduces the problem of slow photo-carriers generated at a greater substrate depth when an inefficient absorption material, e.g., silicon, is used. An increased operation speed allows the use of a higher modulation frequency in an optical sensing system, giving advantages such as a greater depth resolution. An alloy germanium-silicon material as the optical absorption layer provides higher optical absorption efficiency over conventional Si material, which may provide a more sensitive sensor in the visible and near-infrared spectrums, may reduce crosstalk between neighboring pixels, and may allow for a reduction of pixel sizes. A composition gradient within the alloy material may enhance carrier transit within the material, which reduces carrier recombination and hence improves quantum efficiency. A composition gradient within the alloy material may reduce the operation voltage of the image sensor. A composition gradient within the alloy material may reduce diode dark current. The sensor component can be readily integrated with existing CMOS sensor technology.
The details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other potential features and advantages will become apparent from the descriptions, the drawings, and the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements. It is also to be understood that the various exemplary embodiments shown in the figures are merely illustrative representations and are not necessarily drawn to scale.
Graded Material Sensors
In general, a material absorbs light at various wavelengths to generate free carriers depending on an energy bandgap associated with the material. For example, silicon may have an energy bandgap of 1.12 eV, germanium may have an energy bandgap of 0.66 eV, and a germanium-silicon alloy may have an energy bandgap between 0.66 eV and 1.12 eV depending on the composition. A material having a lower energy bandgap has a higher absorption coefficient at a particular wavelength. If the absorption coefficient of a material is too low, the optical signal cannot be converted to an electrical signal efficiently. However, if the absorption coefficient of a material is too high, free carriers will be generated near the surface of the material, which may be recombined to reduce efficiency. Silicon is not an efficient sensor material for NIR wavelengths. On the other hand, germanium has an absorption coefficient that may be too high for shorter wavelengths (e.g., blue), where free carriers may recombine at the surface. Incorporating a graded material structure design where the germanium-silicon composition varies along the propagation of the light in an optical sensor enables the optical sensor to have a wide absorption spectrum.
In some implementations, the first material layer 111 may be formed using a first material. For example, the first material may be silicon, germanium, or any other suitable semiconductor materials. In some implementations, the first material layer 111 may be formed using an alloy of different materials. For example, the first material layer 111 may be formed using germanium-silicon. In some implementations, the second material layer 113 may be formed using a second material. For example, the second material may be silicon, germanium, or any other suitable semiconductor materials. In some implementations, the second material layer 113 may be formed using an alloy of different materials. For example, the second material layer 113 may be formed using germanium-silicon. In some implementations, the graded material layer 115 may be formed using an alloy of at least the first material and the second material. For example, the graded material layer 115 may be formed using germanium-silicon.
In some implementations, the first material layer 111, the second material layer 113, and/or the graded material layer 115 may be doped to control the Fermi level of the material. For example, the first material layer 111 may be heavily p-doped, the second material layer 113 may be heavily n-doped, and the graded material layer 115 may be intrinsic or gradient-doped. When the thermal equilibrium is reached, an electric field may be formed in the graded material layer 115. The electric field enhances free carriers (e.g., electrons or holes) transit towards a carrier-collection circuitry to improve sensitivity and to reduce crosstalk of the optical sensor.
In some implementations, a control bias may be applied to the graded material optical sensor 100. Although not shown in
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Although not shown here, in some other implementations, the formation of the segregation layer 217 is not required. Without the formation of the segregation layer 217, the substrate 211 and the oxide layer 213 may be removed through any suitable techniques such as CMP or etching to expose the first material layer 221. A portion 221a of the first material layer 221 may then be removed through any suitable techniques such as CMP or etching.
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In some implementations, a control bias 427 may be applied to the graded material optical sensor 401. For example, the control bias may be a reverse bias in voltage. The control bias may increase the electric field between the first graded material layer 421 and the second graded material layer 423, which may further enhance free carriers transit towards a carrier-collection circuitry coupled to the metal contacts 428 and 429.
Sensors Formed Using Lateral Strain Dilution Technique
Traditional Si CMOS image sensor has very limited NIR sensing capability due to weak light absorption of Si material for wavelength beyond 800 nm. One possible approach is to replace photo sensing material from silicon to germanium-silicon to improve NIR sensing from 800 nm to beyond 1000 nm. However, lattice mismatch between silicon and germanium-silicon may limit the critical thickness of the germanium-silicon layer that can be grown on silicon, which may be thinner than the desired thickness for image sensing. When growing beyond this critical thickness, the germanium-silicon layer may become defective and introduce additional dark current.
An optical sensor based on a necking region structural design, fabricated by using a lateral strain dilution technique may share and dilute the strain energy of a germanium-silicon layer, and may therefore enable the thickness of the germanium-silicon layer to extend beyond the critical thickness without defect formation.
Referring to
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Strain energy Ee may be defined by:
where f is the lattice misfit ratio, al is the layer lattice constant, as is the substrate lattice constant, B is the material constant, A1 and h1 are the area and the height of the necking 621, and A2 and h2 are the height of the sensor region 623, respectively.
Referring to
In some implementations, a planarization step such as CMP is performed to planarize the surface area of the germanium-silicon film.
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Energy Selection Optical Sensors
In general, an electrical signal generated by an optical sensor includes two current components: a dark current and a photocurrent. Photocurrent is the desired signal and the dark current is often considered as noise. Conventionally these two current components are collected together, and to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), the dark current component needs to be minimized. However, to achieve a wider sensing spectrum with an improved absorption efficiency (i.e., a higher photocurrent at the target wavelengths), a smaller bandgap material (direct or indirect) needs to be used, and this often leads to higher dark current. As a result, conventionally there is a material-induced trade-off between sensing spectrum/efficiency and dark current. Improved photocurrent (absorption efficiency) often comes with larger dark current (noise). Consequently, it is difficult to improve the SNR or dynamic range of the optical sensor.
Conventionally, a conducting material (ex: metal) to collect the carriers is connected to the absorption material, which introduces no or little energy barrier to collect the carriers, hence collecting both photo and dark current components. By introducing an energy barrier at 1205, the lower energy state dark current component is blocked while the higher energy state photo current component can pass through the blocking material and being collected by the carrier collector terminals. In some implementations, the carrier transit time is preferably shorter than the energy relaxation time such that there is energy difference between photo current and dark current. An electric field may be applied between two terminals to provide high transit time for efficient carrier collection.
In some implementations, the distance within the absorption material, between the two carrier extraction interfaces, is applied with an electrical field, and the distance/thickness between the two carrier extraction interfaces is within a range such that when the generated photo carrier travels to the energy filter 1313, the residual energy is still higher than the dark current components such that these two components can be distinguished by their energy level to allow the blocking mechanism functioning to only one of the current component (i.e., dark current). Namely, the time it takes for the photon-excited carrier to travel to the interface is preferably shorter than or comparable to the energy relaxation time (ex: an order of magnitude shorter).
In some implementations, the energy relaxation time can be determined or modified by (a) using quantum confinement effect (ex: quantum dot, quantum wire, quantum well structures), (b) choice of indirect or direct bandgap material (intra-valley or inter-valley transition), (c) the density state and its occupancy of the material, (d) incident photon energy. In some implementations, material with indirect bandgap, or larger valley to valley separation, or lower density states can be used to increase the energy relaxation time.
In some implementations, the bandgap of the energy filter material 1313 is larger than the absorption material 1311, with a conduction band offset high enough to block the dark current and low enough to allow the photocurrent to pass. In some implementations, the energy filter material can have a significant energy barrier even higher than the energy level of the photo-excited carriers near the carrier collector 1315 interface, but includes at least one trap state with an energy level allowing the photo-excited carriers to pass the energy filter 1313 by mechanisms such as trap-assisted tunneling. In some implementations, the energy filter 1313 is thin enough to allow the higher energy carriers to tunnel directly through but block the lower energy carriers. Note that applying an electrical field will bend the band diagram and increase the carrier velocity.
In some implementations, the incident light direction is substantially different (ex: perpendicular) to the direction of the applied electrical field in the absorption material. In this case, the distance/thickness along the incident light direction can be sufficiently long to absorb enough incident light (photons) for further signal processing. In some other implementations, the incident light direction is substantially along the direction of the applied electrical field in the absorption material. In this case, the design of the distance/thickness along the incident light direction requires taking both the targeted amount of absorption and the carrier transit time (preferably shorter or comparable to the relaxation time) into account.
In some implementations, germanium, silicon, germanium-silicon, graded materials, III-V compounds, II-VI compounds, or their combination may be used as the absorption material 1311, and germanium-silicon, silicon, GeO, GeO2, oxide, nitride, graded materials or their combinations may be used as the energy filter 1313. In some implementations, the energy filter 1313 may be selected to filter electrons. In some implementations, the energy filter 1313 may be selected to filter holes. In some implementations, a passivation material can be used to passivate the surface of the absorption material to reduce the surface recombination for more efficient photo-excited carrier collection.
In some implantations, a nano-crystal structure can be used. The nano-crystal can further merge with one another to form a continuous layer. The nano-crystal structure may be used to modify its energy relaxation time due to quantum confinement. The nano-crystal structure may further reduce its intrinsic dark current generation due to quantum confinement. In some implementations, the nano-crystal can include Ge, and it can be formed by depositing Ge at low temperature on a heterogeneous material surface (ex: Si) such that Ge nucleates on the surface to form nano-crystal. In some implementations, the Ge can be deposited/grown via PVD or CVD, and it can be in an amorphous, a poly or a crystalline phase. The carrier collection can be done by applying an electrical field as described previously in this disclosure.
In some implementations, the absorption material can be Ge, Si, GeSi, III-V material or other compounds, alloys, two-dimensional material, elemental material which can absorb the target application wavelengths. The absorption material can be strained or relaxed to modify its bandgap to obtain a desired absorption rate. In some implementations, the absorption material can even be porous. In some implementations, the energy filter material can be Ge, Si, GeSi, nitride, oxide, doped nitride, doped oxide, III-V material or other compounds, alloys, elemental material which can introduce energy barrier to the absorption material at their interface. The energy filter material can even be porous. In some implementations, the absorption material is Ge, and its thickness/dimension is less than 100 nm. In some implementations, the thickness of the Ge can be around 50 nm such that an average carrier transit time is less than 500 fs to be with the same order of its energy relaxation time around hundreds of fs. In some implementations, the voltage applied to a Ge absorption layer needs to cause an electrical-field larger than 1000 V/cm to reach a high carrier velocity and lower than 100000 V/cm to be below the breakdown limit.
In some implementations, the energy filter material can be Si with larger bandgap and type I or type II (strained) band alignment to confine the lower energy carriers in a Ge absorption region. In some implementations, the energy filter material can be nitride with defects introduced inside to form a trapping energy state corresponding to the residual energy state when that the photo-excited carriers travel to the interface of absorption material 1311 and energy filter 1313.
A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. For example, various forms of the flows shown above may be used, with steps re-ordered, added, or removed.
Various implementations may have been discussed using two-dimensional cross-sections for easy description and illustration purpose. Nevertheless, the three-dimensional variations and derivations should also be included within the scope of the disclosure as long as there are corresponding two-dimensional cross-sections in the three-dimensional structures.
While this specification contains many specifics, these should not be construed as limitations, but rather as descriptions of features specific to particular embodiments. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments may also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment may also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination may in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or variation of a subcombination.
Similarly, while operations are depicted in the drawings in a particular order, this should not be understood as requiring that such operations be performed in the particular order shown or in sequential order, or that all illustrated operations be performed, to achieve desirable results. In certain circumstances, multitasking and parallel processing may be advantageous. Moreover, the separation of various system components in the embodiments described above should not be understood as requiring such separation in all embodiments, and it should be understood that the described program components and systems may generally be integrated together in a single software product or packaged into multiple software products.
Thus, particular embodiments have been described. Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. For example, the actions recited in the claims may be performed in a different order and still achieve desirable results.
This patent application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. Non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/981,713, filed May 16, 2018, which is a divisional of and claims priority to U.S. Non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/702,482, filed Sep. 12, 2017, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,269,862, which is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. Non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/216,924, filed on Jul. 22, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,786,715, issued on Oct. 10, 2017, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/195,795, filed Jul. 23, 2015, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/201,114, filed Aug. 5, 2015, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/201,590, filed Aug. 6, 2015, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/208,558, filed Aug. 21, 2015, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/209,349, filed Aug. 25, 2015, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/216,344, filed Sep. 9, 2015, all of which are incorporated by reference herein.
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