1. Field
The disclosed subject matter is in the field of semiconductor devices and, more particularly, semiconductor devices that include integrated capacitors.
2. Related Art
Semiconductor devices such as radio frequency (RF) devices and other devices that include analog or mixed signal functions may require one or more capacitors. The formation of these capacitors may be integrated into the semiconductor fabrication process used to form the semiconductor devices, typically using a metal-insulator-metal (MIM) capacitor structure. As suggested by its name, a MIM capacitor may include a pair of metallic capacitor plates above and below a capacitor dielectric. The fabrication of a MIM capacitor may leverage one or more steps from an existing semiconductor fabrication process and various architectures have been proposed for integrating MIM capacitors into existing fabrication processes.
The present invention is illustrated by way of example and is not limited by the accompanying figures, in which like references indicate similar elements. Elements in the figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale.
Turning now to the drawings,
Turning to
Although integrated MIM capacitors 10 as depicted in
In one aspect, a capacitive structure suitable for inclusion in a semiconductor device is disclosed. Some embodiments of the capacitive structure include a substrate, a first metallization level, a capacitor dielectric, a capacitor plate, an interlevel dielectric layer, and a second metallization level. The substrate includes a capacitor region and a non-capacitor region referred to herein as a field region. The first metallization level overlies the substrate and includes a first metallization plate overlying the capacitor region. The capacitor dielectric overlies the first metallization plate and includes a dielectric material such as a silicon dioxide or another silicon-oxygen compound, silicon nitride or another silicon-nitrogen compound, a high-K dielectric, or a combination thereof. The capacitor plate is an electrically conductive structure that overlies the capacitor dielectric. The capacitor plate may include one or more semiconductor materials such as heavily doped silicon, one or more metal materials such as aluminum, copper, tantalum nitride, titanium nitride, and the like, one or more silicide materials such as WTi, or a combination thereof.
The interlevel dielectric overlies the capacitor plate and may be formed of a conventional interlevel dielectric layer material such as a silicon-oxide compound, silicon nitride, a high K-material, or the like. The second metallization layer is formed overlying the interlevel dielectric layer and, in some embodiments, includes a second metallization plate and a routing element. The second metallization plate overlies the capacitor region while the routing element overlies a field region of the substrate where the capacitor region and field region are mutually exclusive. The routing element may be electrically connected to the capacitor plate.
Either or both of the metallization plates may include a fingered structure. In some embodiments, the fingered structure includes a plurality of flanges or elongated elements extending from a common connector or cross bar. In some embodiments, the fingered structure includes a plurality of rectangular fingers, each having a finger width and a finger length. Each adjacent pair of fingers may be separated by a finger spacing. In some embodiments, a ratio of the finger width to the finger spacing is the maximum permitted by the fabrication process. In fabrication processes that specify this parameter as a minimum spacing-to-period ratio, where the period includes the sum of the spacing and the finger width, the minimum spacing-to-period ratio may be approximately 20% and, therefore, the maximum width to spacing ratio is approximately equal to 4.
The capacitive structure may include an electrically conductive via connecting the routing element to the capacitor plate. The capacitive structure may also include a second capacitor dielectric overlying the first capacitor plate and underlying the interlevel dielectric layer and a second capacitor plate overlying the second capacitor dielectric and underlying the interlevel dielectric layer. The second metallization plate may be electrically connected to the routing element. The first metallization plate may be connected to the second capacitor plate. In some embodiments, the first metallization plate is connected to the second capacitor plate via a bridge routing element in the second metallization level.
In another aspect, a disclosed semiconductor device includes an integrated capacitor suitable for use in a variety of analog and mixed signal applications. The integrated capacitor may include first and second electrically conductive potential elements. The first potential element may include a first metallization plate overlying a capacitor region of the substrate. The second potential element may include a capacitor plate overlying the first metallization plate. The semiconductor device may further include a second metallization plate. The second metallization plate may be connected to the first potential element or the second potential element. One or both of the first metallization plate and the second metallization plate may include a fingered structure.
The semiconductor device may include a second capacitor plate overlying a second capacitor dielectric overlying the first capacitor plate. In these embodiments, the first potential element may include a combination of the first metallization plate and the second capacitor plate and the second potential element may include a combination of the first capacitor plate and the second metallization plate. In some embodiments, the fingered structure includes a plurality of elongated elements extending from a cross bar. The elongated elements may be separated by a gap. In these embodiments, a width of the gap may relatively small compared to a width of the elongated elements. The elongated elements may extend substantially in parallel with each other such that a separation between adjacent elongated elements remains fixed along a length of the elongated elements from the cross bar to the ends of the elongated elements.
In another aspect, a disclosed semiconductor fabrication process includes forming a first metallization level overlying a substrate. The substrate includes a capacitor region and a field region and the first metallization level includes a first metallization plate overlying the capacitor region. The process may further include forming a capacitor dielectric overlying the first metallization plate, forming a capacitor plate overlying the capacitor dielectric, and forming an interlevel dielectric layer overlying the capacitor plate. A second metallization level may then be formed overlying the interlevel dielectric layer. The second metallization level may include a second metallization plate overlying the capacitor region. One or both of the first metallization level and the second metallization level may be patterned to define fingered structures. A fingered structure may include a plurality of finger elements separated by a minimum spacing. In some embodiments, a second capacitor plate overlying the second capacitor dielectric may be formed prior to forming the interlevel dielectric layer. In some embodiments, the fingered structure is configured to achieve a metallization density substantially equal to or close to a maximum metallization density that the process supports.
Referring now to
As depicted in
As depicted in
Some embodiments of integrated MIM capacitor structure 100 described herein include one or more capacitive plate structures that employ a structure referred to herein as a fingered structure to increase the capacitive density of the integrated MIM capacitor structure 100. In the embodiment depicted in
The first metallization level 103 as show in
A MIM capacitor dielectric 105 is depicted overlying first metallization plate 104 within capacitor region 115 of substrate 102. Various dielectric materials may be used for capacitor dielectric 105. In some embodiments, for example, capacitor dielectric 105 may include silicon nitride, a silicon-oxide compound, or both. In other embodiments, capacitor dielectric 105 may include a high-K material such as hafnium silicate, zirconium silicate, hafnium dioxide and zirconium dioxide, typically deposited using atomic layer deposition. Although it is possible that the formation of capacitor dielectric 105 may leverage preexisting process steps for forming dielectric structures outside of capacitor region 115, capacitor dielectric 105 is, in at least some embodiments, unique to semiconductor region 115 and the formation of capacitor dielectric 105 requires a dedicated set of fabrication steps.
A MIM capacitor plate 107 of integrated MIM capacitor structure 100 as depicted in
An interlevel dielectric layer 110 is shown formed overlying capacitor plate 107 and an exposed portion of capacitor dielectric 105. In some embodiments, interlevel dielectric layer 110 is formed using conventional interlevel dielectric layer processes and materials. In these embodiments, depending upon the application, interlevel dielectric layer 110 may include a thermally formed silicon oxide, a low-K material such as fluorosilicate glass, a high-k material such as any of the high-K materials referred to in the preceding discussion or another suitable material. Although a high-K material may be desirable from the perspective of increasing capacitive density, a high-k material may not be suitable for use as an interlevel dielectric layer in field (non-capacitor) regions 117, where a high-k interlevel dielectric layer may increase the magnitude of unwanted capacitances include parasitic capacitances between adjacent metallization layers.
Second metallization level 130 as depicted in
Integrated MIM capacitor structure 100 may be characterized, modeled, or described as including two capacitors arranged in parallel where the two capacitors include a MIM capacitor 150 and a parasitic capacitor 152. The two capacitors are in parallel because the voltage or potential applied across the capacitor plates of the two capacitors is the same. Using this terminology, first metallization plate 104 serves as a first MIM capacitor plate of MIM capacitor 150, MIM dielectric layer 105 serves as the MIM capacitor dielectric, and MIM capacitor plate 107 serves as a second MIM capacitor plate. With respect to parasitic capacitor 152, MIM capacitor plate 107 serves as a first parasitic capacitor plate, second metallization plate 132 serves as a second parasitic capacitor plate, and interlevel dielectric layer 110 functions as the capacitor dielectric for parasitic capacitor 152.
Referring to
Although the embodiment of second metallization plate 132 depicted in
As depicted in
In some embodiments, fingered metallization plates optionally employed in one or more of the metallization layers are configured to achieve a metallization coverage ratio at or close to a limit on coverage ratio that the semiconductor process can sustain. In these embodiments, the width of finger 133 is substantially greater than the finger gap 138 between adjacent fingers. In some semiconductor processes, a maximum ratio of finger width 136 to finger gap 138 is approximately 4:1 and the fingered structures optionally employed in first metallization plate 104 and second metallization plate 132 may exhibit the maximum width-to-gap ratios.
Routing element 134 emphasizes the integration of second metallization plate 132 into an existing metallization layer, second metallization level 130, of a semiconductor fabrication process. Second metallization level 130 may include multiple routing elements connecting various nodes and elements of integrated the semiconductor device.
Referring now to
As depicted in
The implementations depicted in
As depicted in
Regardless of the specific implementation selected, integrated MIM capacitor structure 100 as described herein beneficially achieves improved capacitive density by configuring first metallization plate 104 and/or second metallization plate 130 with closely and densely spaced elongated fingers 133. When an electric potential is applied to first metallization plate 104 and second metallization plate 132, the electric fields will diverge at the edges of fingers 133 and create a fringe effect field the contributes to the overall capacitance of integrated MIM capacitor structure 100.
The embodiments of Integrated MIM capacitor structure 100 depicted in
Referring now to
As depicted in
As depicted in both
In the depicted embodiments, the electrical connection between first metallization plate 104 and second capacitor plate 111 is achieved through via 120, a bridge routing element 125 of second metallization level 130 and a via 124 connecting bridge routing element 125 to second capacitor plate 111. In the depicted embodiments, the electrical connection between first capacitor plate 107 and second metallization plate 132 is achieved through via 122.
In the depicted embodiments of
The embodiments of integrated MIM capacitor structure 100 depicted in
In the present document, the case where an integrated MIM capacitor 100 is formed between the first metallization level 103 and second metallization level 130 has been used as an illustration. However, an integrated MIM capacitor structure may be formed between any two of metallization layers that the fabrication process employs.
Although the invention is described herein with reference to specific embodiments, various modifications and changes can be made without departing from the scope of the present invention as set forth in the claims below. Accordingly, the specification and figures are to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the present invention. Any benefits, advantages, or solutions to problems that are described herein with regard to specific embodiments are not intended to be construed as a critical, required, or essential feature or element of any or all the claims.
Unless stated otherwise, terms such as “first” and “second” are used to arbitrarily distinguish between the elements such terms describe. Thus, these terms are not necessarily intended to indicate temporal or other prioritization of such elements.
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