The disclosure relates generally to a FinFET device structure and related fabrication method, and more particularly, to a FinFET device having improved reliability.
With the scaling of metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFET), MOSFETs physical dimensions have been reduced to maintain dimensional similitude and reliability. MOSFET constant electric field scaling theory requires the physical scaling of dimensions to maintain a constant reliability of the MOSFET gate dielectric. To maintain scaling of the transistor, the three-dimensional FinFET was introduced in advanced technology nodes.
FinFET structures have been proposed for both bulk CMOS and silicon on insulator (SOI) technology. In these advanced technology nodes, reliability is a concern in the FinFET devices. Reliability concerns in FinFETs include hot electron, drain induced barrier lowering (DIBL), gate induced drain leakage (GIDL), latchup, electrostatic discharge (ESD), electrical overstress (EOS), electromigration (EM), and detrimental effects associated with radiation. Radiation effects can include total dose gamma radiation degradation, total ionizing dose (TID), single event upsets (SEU), single event latchup (SEL), and single event gate rupture (SEGR). These reliability issues that occur in CMOS MOSFETs also occur in FinFET structures.
Radiation effects can occur from both radioactivity of naturally occurring materials used in semiconductors. Alpha particles are generated from the radioactive decay from uranium and thorium isotopes in materials used in semiconductor electronics (e.g. aluminum, silicon, lead). Cosmic rays create single event failures in both space and terrestrial environments. Cosmic rays include neutrons, protons, and muons. Neutrons can interact with the boron atoms used in borophosphosilicate glass (BPSG) back end of line (BEOL) materials. Cosmic rays introduce silicon recoil events, and silicon fission in the semiconductor substrate, leading to ionizing tracks. Ionizing tracks generate electron hole pair generation influencing FinFET devices. Heavy ions in space environments can lead to single event latchup (SEL). Ionizing radiation occurs naturally in the form of high-energy photons or charged particles that possess enough energy to break atomic bonds and create electron hole pairs in an absorbing material. These particles can include protons, electrons, atomic ions, and photons with energies greater than a bandgap of the absorbing material. When typical integrated circuits, such as FinFET integrated circuits, are exposed to the charged particles over a period of months or even years, the ionizing radiation can contribute to a total ionizing dose (TID). For example, as an ionizing particle passes through a FinFET device, it generates one or more electron-hole pairs which can be trapped in the gate oxides and the field oxides. Electrons in the semiconductor's valence band are raised to the conduction band. A fraction of the electron-hole pairs will undergo initial recombination and cause no damage, but such recombination decreases as the electric field increases, and the electrons and holes that survive it are free to diffuse and drift within the oxide where they will be swept from the insulator, recombine, or be trapped.
FinFET structures in bulk CMOS have small channel regions where self-heating occurs in the channel region. The physical separation from the silicon substrate prevents thermal transfer of the Joule heating to the bulk substrate. The region between the FinFET channel and the substrate adds thermal resistance leading to self-heating of the FinFET structures. The self-heating of the FinFET structure can lead to reliability concerns in the semiconductor chip.
FinFET structures formed in silicon on insulator (SOI) substrate have a buried oxide region 207, further separating the FinFET device active channel region from the silicon substrate. The thermal resistance from the FinFET to the bulk substrate is significantly increased because of the buried oxide structure. The self-heating is a function of the thickness of the buried oxide region. With a thick buried oxide region, the fin body temperature can increase due to self-heating from ambient temperature (e.g. T=300 K) to T=400 K. This can be detrimental to the reliability of the SOI FinFET structure. With the thermal resistance of the fin connecting region 203, the buried oxide layer 207, and the substrate 201, self-heating is a significant concern for 25 nm, 14 nm, 7 nm and 3 nm FinFET devices. Lower doped substrate wafers increases the thermal resistance to the contact structures to remove the Joule heating power generated in the FinFET structure.
CMOS latchup can also occur between a P-type FinFET, and an N-type FinFET. Parasitic bipolar transistors exist in CMOS associated with the parasitic device between the p-type FinFET diffusions, and the n-type FinFET diffusions. Isolation structures help reduce the lateral bipolar current gain between FinFET structures lowering the lateral bipolar current gain. With the tapering of the edges of the isolation, the CMOS latchup immunity is degraded. Hence, to reduce the thermal resistance in the connecting region, the self-heating is lowered, but this degrades the latchup immunity. Initiation of CMOS latchup can occur from electrical overshoot, or single events. Latch-up generally, and in the case of circuits in radiation environments SEL, is a serious failure mode in CMOS circuits. In the best case, latch-up results in soft failure with a loss of data or logic state. In the worst case, latch-up causes a destructive hard failure with permanent loss of the circuit. Thus, from a circuit reliability perspective, latch-up is to be avoided at all costs. As isolation widths shrink, device structures become even more susceptible to both latch-up failure modes.
As noted above, radiation environments present special problems to CMOS circuits in that high-energy particles form electron-hole pairs (EHP) generation in silicon and in the bulk substrate. The instantaneous generation of electron hole pairs deposited by a high-energy particle passing through an IC can immediately induce large displacement currents on the pico-second time scale accompanied with rapid potential shifts away from initial logic states. The deposition of energy by the particle typically causes diodes to forward bias, followed by large transient injection currents which reinforce the transient upset and can cause the CMOS circuit to latch-up.
Additionally, with the widening of the connecting region, more electron-hole pairs (EHPs) are collected in the connecting region of the FinFET, increasing the sensitivity of FinFETs to radiation events.
FinFET sensitivity to transient responses is key in future technology generations. These can include noise, ESD, EOS, and EMC events. Additionally, it is critical for single event upset (SEU) prevention that the circuitry is responsive to transient events to avoid change of circuitry logic states.
Further improvements in FinFET structures for bulk CMOS and for silicon on insulator (SOI) are desired.
FinFET devices with improved reliability are disclosed. In one example embodiment, a FinFET includes a substrate wafer, a fin body above the planar surface of said substrate wafer, an isolation structure from the planar surface of said substrate wafer forming a fin body connecting region, a gate dielectric on said fin body extending above the silicon substrate surface, a FinFET gate electrode on said gate dielectric, a heavily-doped buried layer (HDBL) in said substrate wafer, extending under said fin body connecting region, and under the fin body, and, a vertical connecting implant extending from the substrate wafer surface to the heavily-doped buried layer and within close proximity of the fin.
In another example embodiment, a FinFET device includes a substrate wafer, a fin body above the planar surface of said substrate wafer, an isolation structure from the planar surface of said substrate wafer forming a fin body connecting region, a gate dielectric on said fin body extending above the silicon substrate surface, a FinFET gate electrode on said gate dielectric, a heavily-doped buried layer in said substrate wafer, extending under said fin body connecting region, and under the fin body, a vertical connecting implant extending from the substrate wafer surface to the heavily-doped buried layer and within proximity of the fin, as well as a fin body-to-buried layer connecting implanted region placed under the fin body in the fin body connecting region connecting the fin body to the heavily-doped buried layer therebelow.
In another example embodiment, a FinFET includes a substrate wafer, a buried oxide layer in the substrate, an SOI vertical contact extending through the buried oxide layer, a fin body on the substrate wafer, an isolation structure from the planar surface of the substrate wafer forming a fin body connecting region, extending from the substrate wafer surface to the bottom of the isolation structure, a gate dielectric on the fin body extending above said isolation structure, a FinFET gate electrode on the gate dielectric, a heavily-doped buried layer in the substrate wafer above the buried oxide layer and coupled to the SOI contact; and a vertical connecting implant connecting said substrate wafer surface to the SOI vertical contact. In an additional embodiment, extending under said fin body connecting region, and under the fin body, a fin body-to-buried layer connecting implanted region placed under the fin body in the fin body connecting region connecting the fin body to the heavily-doped buried layer.
In another example embodiment, a method of forming a FinFET structure includes: (a) providing a substrate comprising a fin at a surface of the substrate; (b) implanting a heavily-doped buried layer in the substrate under the fin; (c) forming an isolation regions on opposite sides of the fin wherein the bottom surface of a fin is level with top surfaces of the isolation regions and an substrate contact region; (d) forming a gate dielectric on the fin; (e) forming a FinFET gate electrode on the gate dielectric; (f) implanting a first dopant vertical connecting implant in the substrate contact region of a depth to extend to the heavily-doped buried layer; and (g) implanting a second dopant in the substrate contact region to connect from the substrate surface to the first dopant vertical connecting implant.
In one aspect a FinFET device is provided. In an example embodiment, a FinFET device includes a semiconductor body having a first conductivity type and having an upper surface, and includes a fin body disposed on the upper surface of the semiconductor body. The FinFET also includes an isolation structure disposed in the semiconductor body below the upper surface and having respective first and second regions disposed on opposite sides of the fin body; a fin connecting region disposed in the semiconductor body below the fin body and between the first and second isolation regions; a gate dielectric layer disposed on three sides of the fin body; a gate electrode disposed on the gate dielectric layer; a heavily-doped buried layer of the first conductivity type disposed in the semiconductor body, extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions, and having a higher doping density than the semiconductor body. The device can also include a vertical conductive region disposed in the semiconductor body between a surface contact and the heavily-doped buried layer, and providing a lower resistance than otherwise would be provided by the semiconductor body in the absence of the vertical conductive region.
In some embodiments, the FinFET device may also include a buried oxide (BOX) layer disposed in the semiconductor body below the isolation structure; and a substrate contact pillar extending from the semiconductor surface, through the BOX layer, and to the semiconductor body below the BOX layer. In some embodiments, the substrate contact pillar may be laterally disposed within the vertical conductive region to thereby form an integrated vertical contact structure.
In some embodiments, the FinFET device may also include a third implanted region of the first conductivity type extending from the fin body downward into the fin connecting region. The third implanted region may extend through the fin connecting region and to the heavily-doped buried layer.
In some embodiments, the respective first and second isolation structure regions each have a substantially vertical sidewall adjoining the fin connecting region.
In another example embodiment, a FinFET device includes a semiconductor body having a first conductivity type and having an upper surface; a fin body disposed on the upper surface of the semiconductor body; an isolation structure disposed in the semiconductor body below the upper surface and having respective first and second regions disposed on opposite sides of the fin body; a fin connecting region disposed in the semiconductor body below the fin body and between the first and second isolation regions; a gate dielectric layer disposed on three sides of the fin body; a gate electrode disposed on the gate dielectric layer; a heavily-doped buried layer of the first conductivity type disposed in the semiconductor body, extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions, and having a higher doping density than the semiconductor body; a vertical conductive region disposed in the semiconductor body between a surface contact and the heavily-doped buried layer, and providing a lower resistance than otherwise would be provided by the semiconductor body in the absence of the vertical conductive region; a buried oxide (BOX) layer disposed in the semiconductor body and extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions; and a substrate contact pillar extending from the semiconductor surface, through the BOX layer, and to the semiconductor body below the BOX layer, said substrate contact pillar being laterally disposed within the vertical conductive region to thereby form an integrated vertical contact structure.
In another example embodiment, a FinFET device includes a semiconductor body having a first conductivity type and having an upper surface; a fin body disposed on the upper surface of the semiconductor body; an isolation structure disposed in the semiconductor body below the upper surface and having respective first and second regions disposed on opposite sides of the fin body; a fin connecting region disposed in the semiconductor body below the fin body and between the first and second isolation regions; a gate dielectric layer disposed on three sides of the fin body; a gate electrode disposed on the gate dielectric layer; a buried oxide (BOX) layer disposed in the semiconductor body and extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions; a vertical conductive region disposed in the semiconductor body between a surface contact and the BOX layer, and providing a lower resistance than otherwise would be provided by the semiconductor body in the absence of the vertical conductive region; and a substrate contact pillar extending from the semiconductor surface, through the BOX layer, and to the semiconductor body below the BOX layer, said substrate contact pillar being laterally disposed within the vertical conductive region to thereby form an integrated vertical contact structure.
In another aspect, a method for making a FinFET device is provided. In an example embodiment, the method includes providing a semiconductor body having a first conductivity type; forming a fin body on an upper surface of the semiconductor body; forming an isolation structure in the semiconductor body below the upper surface and having respective first and second regions disposed on opposite sides of the fin body, defining a fin connecting region disposed in the semiconductor body below the fin body and between the first and second isolation regions; forming a gate dielectric layer on three sides of the fin body; forming a gate electrode on the gate dielectric layer; forming a heavily-doped buried layer of the first conductivity type in the semiconductor body, extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions, and having a higher doping density than the semiconductor body. The method can also include forming a vertical conductive region in the semiconductor body between a surface contact and the heavily-doped buried layer, and providing a lower resistance than otherwise would be provided by the semiconductor body in the absence of the vertical conductive region.
In another example embodiment, the method includes providing a semiconductor body having a first conductivity type and having an upper surface; forming a fin body on the upper surface of the semiconductor body; forming an isolation structure disposed in the semiconductor body below the upper surface and having respective first and second regions disposed on opposite sides of the fin body, defining a fin connecting region disposed in the semiconductor body below the fin body and between the first and second isolation regions; forming a gate dielectric layer on three sides of the fin body; forming a gate electrode on the gate dielectric layer; forming a heavily-doped buried layer of the first conductivity type in the semiconductor body, extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions, and having a higher doping density than the semiconductor body; forming a vertical conductive region in the semiconductor body between a surface contact and the heavily-doped buried layer, and providing a lower resistance than otherwise would be provided by the semiconductor body in the absence of the vertical conductive region; forming a buried oxide (BOX) layer in the semiconductor body and extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions; and forming a substrate contact pillar extending from the semiconductor surface, through the BOX layer, and to the semiconductor body below the BOX layer, said substrate contact pillar being laterally disposed within the vertical conductive region to thereby form an integrated vertical contact structure.
In another example embodiment, the method includes providing a semiconductor body having a first conductivity type and having an upper surface; forming a fin body on the upper surface of the semiconductor body; forming an isolation structure in the semiconductor body below the upper surface and having respective first and second regions on opposite sides of the fin body, defining a fin connecting region in the semiconductor body below the fin body and between the first and second isolation regions; forming a gate dielectric layer on three sides of the fin body; forming a gate electrode on the gate dielectric layer; forming a buried oxide (BOX) layer in the semiconductor body and extending laterally beneath the fin connecting region and beneath the first and second isolation regions; forming a vertical conductive region in the semiconductor body between a surface contact and the BOX layer, and providing a lower resistance than otherwise would be provided by the semiconductor body in the absence of the vertical conductive region; and forming a substrate contact pillar extending from the semiconductor surface, through the BOX layer, and to the semiconductor body below the BOX layer, said substrate contact pillar being laterally disposed within the vertical conductive region to thereby form an integrated vertical contact structure.
The foregoing is a summary and thus contains, by necessity, simplifications, generalizations and omissions of detail. The details of various implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Consequently, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the foregoing summary is illustrative only and is not intended to be in any way limiting of the invention. It is only the claims, including all equivalents, in this or any non-provisional application claiming priority to this application, that are intended to define the scope of the invention(s) supported by this application.
The present disclosure and the corresponding advantages and features provided thereby will be best understood and appreciated upon review of the following detailed description of the disclosure, taken in conjunction with the following drawings, where like numerals represent like elements, in which:
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers are used herein to designate like elements throughout, the various views and embodiments of a FinFET device and methods are illustrated and described, and other possible embodiments are described. The figures are not necessarily drawn to scale, and in some instances the drawings have been exaggerated and/or simplified in places for illustrative purposes only. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate the many possible applications and variations based on the following examples of possible embodiments.
In the example of
For example, in the case of
A second step in addressing latch-up and other substrate current transients is to reduce the significant vertical resistance. Addition of a vertical conductor 309 extending between the buried layer 308 and a p-well contact region or some other substrate surface terminal significantly reduces this resistance. In one embodiment, the vertical conductor 309 is formed as a vertical impurity region having the same conductivity type as the substrate, but typically having an impurity concentration greater than that of the substrate. For example, where the substrate is a p− substrate, vertical conductor 309 can be formed from one or more p+ implants into the region extending between p-well contact and buried layer 308. High-energy ion-implantation combined with photoresist masking and/or multiple energy implantation can provide a vertical p+ doped region with high aspect ratio doping profile to bridge the uplink path from an ohmic VSS surface contact or Schottky diode to buried layer 308 or other p+ bulk layers as is typical for p− epi on p+ bulk substrates. For example, in one implementation vertical conductor 309 and 310 is formed by multiple ion-implant steps at one or more energy levels.
When buried layer 308 and vertical conductor 309 are used in conjunction with each other, a new protective structure is formed that offers several isolation attributes. Since the low resistance buried layer is now locally connected via a vertical doping region or other conductor: (1) a lower impedance is provided for most or all of the accumulated, deposited or injected charge occurring within the silicon substrate region; (2) transient times for charge termination are reduced thereby improving overall isolation by reducing or minimizing the duration of any n+/p− diode forward biasing which reduces injected currents; (3) the structure forms a low-resistance circuit leg back to the p-well contact terminal, thereby creating a current divider which effectively shunts and sinks a majority of any injected or deposited current away from the resistor legs, thereby significantly reducing base current feedback to the parasitic npn devices shown and limiting voltage transients for the p− bulk silicon region associated with the CMOS structure. The low resistance structure, by effectively shunting injected current or stray charge promptly to the VSS terminal, reduces or prevents voltage transients which could subsequently forward bias either or both of the n−/p− diodes (n-well/p− substrate diode inherent in CMOS FinFET twin well isolation) and the n+/p− diodes (inherent in NMOS FinFET transistor) and eliminates subsequent triggering of the pnpn SCR FinFET network. Latch-up with the buried layer isolation structure present then becomes difficult or impossible to initiate, thereby preserving the circuit from ever entering destructive latch-up. The three dimensional heavily doped layers extend both horizontally and vertically thus creating low ohmic regions of contiguous and/or connected to isolation doping regions which stand separated from the transistor doping regions.
As can be seen in
The low resistance structure and techniques can also be used to reduce or eliminate both single-event upset (SEU) and single-event transient (SET) events. SEU and SET can be caused by a high-energy particle, e.g., a single heavy ion or nuclear particle such as a neutron or alpha particle, passing through a critical node in an IC comprising of FinFET devices. Immediately after being struck by such a particle, electrons and holes will be separated from the silicon lattice as a function of the particle's energy which is expressed as the linear energy transfer (LET Mev/mg-cm) of the particular particle. If the electron-hole pairs generated and ultimately collected as free electrons and holes is greater than the critical charge of a FinFET memory cell or some other state-related device, a single-event upset can occur. The susceptibility of FinFET ICs to single-event upsets typically depends on the amount of critical charge required to “flip” a bit and the probability that a particle with a LET large enough to deposit that critical charge will strike a sensitive node. The production of large numbers of electron-hole pair (EHP) also creates a potential dipole within the particle track passing through the silicon material. The Hall effect segregates the holes and electron charges to opposite sides of the electrostatic field. Some electrons and holes can recombine in the lattice via SRH and Auger mechanisms. However, as a result of their higher mobility, electrons are quickly collected at the positive terminals, whereas the net concentration of holes, which have lower mobility and remain with the silicon body as static charge while un-recombined because of depleted electrons. The positive charges cause the local potential of the p− substrate to increase in voltage to a positive value and continues to influence the local potential of the p− substrate positively for several nanoseconds after the high energy particle strike. As a result of the potential upset within the p− substrate, other unstruck diodes are now activated which creates secondary currents and enhances the initial upset more significantly, an effect often referred to as single event transient (SET). While soft error results in data corruption, it is not destructive to the physical circuit.
Since CMOS FinFET logic typically uses inverter gates and cross coupled logic gates to store binary bits in any digital circuit, the aforementioned devices and techniques will prove useful in reducing SEU and SET. The FinFET with low resistance structure serves a similar role with regards to soft error as in the latch-up isolation. In both cases the structure effectively sinks excess positive charge generated by the upset event, while maintaining node potential, and limiting the transient voltage swing and duration following an SEU, SEL, or SET event.
Hence, a CMOS circuit can contain both dopant types of FinFETs.
Many of the enumerated steps are clear without further explanation or comment, but several comments may nonetheless be helpful. The implantation step 1362 forms the implanted region 1309, and the implantation step 1364 forms the implanted region 1313 in the fin connecting region 1303 beneath the fin body 1304. These implantations may be performed individually using separate implant energies and doses, or may be combined into a single implantation step using a common implant energy and dose, since both implanted regions are disposed at a similar depth and may have the same doping concentration. Similarly, the implantation step 1366 forms the implanted region 1310, and the implantation step 1368 forms the implanted region 1314 in the fin connecting region 1303 and overlapping the fin body 1304. These implantations may also be performed individually or may be combined into a single implantation step. Exemplary implantation parameters are described in regards to
In certain embodiments the heavily-doped buried layer is vertically spatially separated from said isolation regions. In certain embodiments, the heavily-doped buried layer vertically abuts the isolation regions.
In certain embodiments, the method may also include forming a buried oxide layer in the semiconductor body, and forming an SOI substrate contact. In certain embodiments the SOI substrate contact is integrated with the vertical conductive region.
The FinFET devices and techniques described in the present application can improve radiation immunity, by directly addressing one or more of the primary degradation radiation effects of ICs: Total Ionizing Dose (TID), Single Event Latch-up (SEL), and Single-Event Upset (SEU). In addition, other benefits and advantages are provided by one or more of the embodiments. For example, the tapering angle of the isolation regions adjacent to the fin connecting region below the fin body can be reduced (i.e., less tapered) due the presence of the heavily-doped buried layer, the vertical contact to the heavily-doped buried layer, and/or the BOX layer. In some cases the tapering angle of the isolation regions can be zero, which provides smaller fin-to-fin spacing and consequently better circuit density. A tradeoff can also be made between the tapering angle and the doping concentration in the fin connecting region below the fin body.
Certain embodiments described herein show an overlapping pair of implanted regions, one located vertically above the other, to form a conductive path to a lower structure, such as an underlying heavily-doped buried layer. Such overlapping pair of implanted regions may be viewed as a vertical conductive region. Also, certain embodiments may describe a heavily-doped buried layer and a doped buried layer. No distinction is intended between these terms, unless the context so requires.
Certain example embodiments presented herein describe a FinFET structure formed on a substrate or substrate wafer. In a broader sense, any of the disclosed embodiments may be formed on a semiconductor body and not just on a literal substrate such as a silicon wafer. A semiconductor body may be viewed as being a surface portion of an underlying substrate, which might be a ceramic, a semiconductor wafer, a semiconductor wafer bonded to another substrate, an epitaxial layer grown on an underlying substrate, a SON structure, or any number of other structures having a semiconductor surface region.
As used herein, a doping concentration (also known as a doping density) may be described as a number of dopant atoms per cubic centimeter, such as 1019/cm3. Such a concentration may equally well be written as 1019 cm−3. As used herein, reference to a film (e.g., gate dielectric film) may be used interchangeably with a layer (e.g., gate dielectric layer). As used herein, a reference to a top surface or upper surface of a region (e.g., top surface of a well region) may be used interchangeably with an upper boundary of the region (e.g., upper boundary of a well region). When referencing a structural drawing herein, a colloquial reference to an “implant” (e.g., implant 509) may be used interchangeably with a more precise reference to an “implant region” or “implanted region” (e.g., implanted region 509). As used herein, the term “exemplary” may be used merely to describe an example, and not to imply any superior or preferred aspect over other examples.
These approaches can further take advantage of a variety of different IC fabrication technologies, such as silicon-on-sapphire (SOS), silicon on nothing (SON) and the like. Additionally, although the examples of the present application focus on MOS (and particularly CMOS) implementations, it will be understood by those having ordinary skill in the art that the devices and techniques disclosed herein can be extended to other semiconductor architectures such as LDMOS, DeMOS, and BiCMOS, etc.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure that FinFET devices with improved reliability are described, for both CMOS and SOI FinFET structures. The disclosed embodiments may provide reduced self-heating of a FinFET structure, reduced sensitivity to latchup and other transient events, reduced taper of isolation regions on opposite sides of a fin body, and/or reduced lateral spacing between individual fins of a FinFET structure. In certain embodiments, such improvements may be accomplished by utilizing, alone or in combination, a heavily-doped buried layer coupled to a surface contact by a vertical conductive region, a buried oxide layer, an SOI contact structure, and an implanted region in the fin connecting region.
It should be understood that the drawings and detailed description herein are to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive manner, and are not intended to be limiting to the particular forms and examples disclosed. On the contrary, included are any further modifications, changes, rearrangements, substitutions, alternatives, design choices, and embodiments apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art, without departing from the spirit and scope hereof, as defined by the following claims. Thus, it is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such further modifications, changes, rearrangements, substitutions, alternatives, design choices, and embodiments.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/252,920, filed Aug. 31, 2016, entitled FINFET DEVICE STRUCTURE AND METHOD FOR FORMING SAME, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,038,058, which application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/333,176, filed May 7, 2016, entitled FINFET DEVICE STRUCTURE AND METHOD FOR FORMING SAME, which applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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62333176 | May 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15252920 | Aug 2016 | US |
Child | 16048133 | US |