This invention relates to the field of integrated circuits. More particularly, this invention relates to double patterning technology for forming integrated circuits.
Integrated circuits may be formed using photolithography processes with illumination sources having wavelengths more than twice a desired pitch of contact geometries the integrated circuits. Attaining desired tradeoffs between fabrication costs and fabrication yield may be difficult. For example, standard single photoresist patterns begin to blur at about the 45 nm feature size and 100 nm pitch (feature size plus space between features) when printing with 193 nm wavelength light.
Double patterning technology (DPT), illustrated in
In a typical DPT process, first DPT contact photomask in
The size of integrated circuit geometries has been rapidly shrinking with each technology node. Technology node to technology node, design rules typically shrink to about 0.7 times previous node geometries. This means that the area of a geometry is reduced by approximately 50% (0.7×0.7=0.49) from one technology node to the next.
Contacts are typically drawn square and end up being approximately round on the integrated circuit. The reduction in area by approximately 50% significantly increases the resistance of contacts from one node to the next. This is not a significant problem for contacts to transistor gates, since very little current flows when charging the gate of a transistor, but is a significant problem for contacts to the source and drain of a transistor. Significant current flows through the source and drain contacts so the increased contact resistance due to the smaller area adds significant series resistance to the transistor and may significantly reduce transistor performance due to the increased resistance and due to the voltage drops across the high resistance.
An integrated circuit with long rectangular contacts to active where the active contact length is 2 times or more larger than the width and with short rectangular contacts to transistor gates where the transistor gate contact length is less than about 3 times the width. A method for forming an integrated circuit with long rectangular contacts to active where the active contact length is 2 times or more larger than the width and with short rectangular contacts to transistor gates where the transistor gate contact length is less than about 3 times the width.
In
The standard cell consists of n-type active areas 30 in which NMOS transistors are formed and p-type active areas 32 in which PMOS transistors are formed. Transistor gates 34 which cross both n-type active 30 and p-type active 32 form inverters. Transistor gate 33 which crosses n-type active only forms the gate of an NMOS transistor and transistor gate 35 which crosses p-type active only forms the gate of a PMOS transistor.
As shown in the example embodiment standard cell in
Also shown in
The printing of long rectangular contacts may be significantly improved by selecting an illumination mode that is optimized for printing long rectangular geometries.
The quadrupole illumination mode 72 shown in
The embodiment contacts illustrated in the standard cell in
Contacts to transistor gate in this embodiment are placed on a second DPT photomask and printed using the illumination mode illustrated in
In this embodiment long rectangular active contacts are placed on one DPT photomask and an illumination mode which is optimized for printing long rectangular contacts is selected for the widest possible processing margin and highest possible active contact yield. The long rectangular contacts to active significantly increase the contact area over conventional square or round contacts significantly reducing contact resistance and voltage drops, with a resultant increase in transistor performance.
In this embodiment contacts to the transistor gate are placed on a second DPT photomask and an illumination mode optimized for printing square or short rectangular contacts is selected to provide the widest possible processing margin and highest possible contact to transistor gate yield. Since transistor gate contacts pass little current the smaller contact size with higher contact resistance causes little voltage drop and no significant reduction in transistor performance. The smaller transistor gate contacts enable the contacts to be formed in a smaller area enabling smaller area standard cells and smaller area integrated circuits to be designed.
As shown in
As shown in
As is illustrated in
After the long rectangular contacts to active, the short rectangular contacts to transistor gate, and the local interconnect geometries are printed in photoresist on the premetal dielectric (PMD) layer, a contact etch may be performed to etch the contacts down to the active and the transistor gates. If desired the contacts may first be etched into hardmask material overlying the PMD and the resist stripped prior to etching the contacts to minimize etch loading due to resist erosion in the etching plasma. The PMD layer typically is silicon dioxide or doped silicon dioxide on a relatively thin (about 30 nm) etch stop layer such as silicon nitride. The contact etch first etches the silicon dioxide layer stopping on the etch stop layer. The contact etch chemistry is then changed to etch the contact openings through the etch stop layer. The etch stop layer makes it possible to etch contacts over isolation dielectric without the contact etch penetrating through the isolation dielectric and causing a short to substrate.
The rectangular contacts to active, the short rectangular contacts to transistor gate, and the local interconnect geometries may then be filled with a metal such as CVD-W to form contacts to active, contacts to gate, and local interconnect. Additional layers such as interconnect, vias, and protective overcoat may then be formed to complete the integrated circuit.
By placing long rectangular contacts on a first DPT photomask and using an illumination mode optimized to print long rectangular geometries and by placing square and short rectangular contacts on a second DPT photomask and using an illumination mode optimized to print short rectangular geometries and square geometries, a contact process with improved process window, improved transistor performance, and improved yield may be achieved.
Those skilled in the art to which this invention relates will appreciate that many other embodiments and variations are possible within the scope of the claimed invention.
This application claims the benefit of and incorporates by reference U.S. Provisional Application 61/536,340 (Texas Instruments docket number TI-69572), filed Sep. 19, 2011.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61536340 | Sep 2011 | US |