1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of semiconductor device fabrication, and more specifically to a method and structure for constructing a structure using semiconductor device fabrication methods that shields semiconductor devices.
2. Discussion of Related Art
Today integrated circuits are made up of literally millions of active and passive devices such as transistors, capacitors, and resistors. In order to improve overall chip performance, some devices may need to be shielded from the electromagnetic interference (EMI) from adjacent devices, from heat, and from light.
a & 3b are illustrations of a deposition of a first dielectric layer onto a silicon substrate and a semiconductor device;
a,
4
b are illustrations of a photoresist layer on the first layer dielectric;
a & 5b are illustrations of via openings and a first slot;
a & 6b are illustrations of a first conducting layer;
a & 7b are illustrations of a deposit of a first conducting layer and a first layer of a wall;
a & 8b are illustrations of a metal one layer;
a & 9b are illustrations of a first interconnect layer and a second layer of the wall;
a & 10b are illustrations of a second dielectric layer;
a & 11b are illustrations of via a second dielectric layer with via openings, a third wall slot, and a base frame;
a & 12b are illustrations a second conductive layer deposited;
a & 13b are illustrations of a metal two layer deposited;
a & 14b are illustrations of a second layer interconnect, a fourth layer of the wall, vertical frame slots, and a pass-thru;
a & 15b are illustrations of a third dielectric layer;
a & 16b are illustrations of a fifth slot, and a top frame;
a & 17b are illustrations of a third conductive layer completing a fifth layer of the wall;
a & 18b are illustrations of a barrier coating on the lid;
a & 18b is an illustration of another embodiment having further layering;
A novel device structure and method for shielding a region on a semiconductor is described. In the following description numerous details are set forth such as specific materials and processes in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. In other instances, well known semiconductor processing techniques and machinery have not been set forth in detail to avoid obscuring the present invention.
The present invention is a novel device structure and method for shielding individual or a selection of semiconductor devices from conductive and/or radiated energy. Such as, for example, electromagnetic interference (EMI) from radiation originating outside the semiconductor or from adjacent devices on the semiconductor. The present invention may be also used to direct thermal energy relative to a semiconductor, or to shield a semiconductor from light.
In an embodiment, a Faraday cage is constructed on a silicon substrate, and encloses one or more semiconductor devices within a structure of metal. The semiconductor devices having input/output leads or pass-thrus that pass through the Faraday cage walls at one or more insulated locations.
The embodiment provides that interconnects and vias both inside and outside the disclosed Faraday cage may also be constructed in the same layers used to construct the Faraday cage.
To construct the Faraday cage with insulated pass-thrus, vias and interconnects, alternating layers of tungsten (W) and aluminum (Al) are used. The use of tungsten (conductive metal) will fill in via openings between interconnects to create plugs or filled vias. This tungsten layer will add metal layers to the Faraday cage wall(s) at the same time. Alternating with the tungsten layers, interconnects are etched from layers of aluminum or aluminum alloy. As with the tungsten layers, each aluminum layer will also add a layer in constructing the walls of the Faraday cage. Left within layers of the metal Faraday cage walls are pieces of dielectric material that will make up the insulation framework (frame) around each pass-thru. This insulation surrounds or frames each pass-thru lead at the point where it passes through the metal Faraday cage wall. For each pass-thru insulation or frame construction, one metal layer will have one horizontal block (base frame), the next metal layer will have one pair of vertical bars (vertical frame pairs), and finally the insulation will be complete with the next layer addition of another horizontal bar (top frame). However it is possible for multiple insulated pass-thrus to share common frame components.
The process of depositing layers of dielectric and metal, positive or negative photoresist and etching the layers to form vias and interconnects is well understood. In addition, at the same time for this embodiment, trenches (slots) will be etched in dielectric around the semiconductor device(s) to be enclosed by the Faraday cage. The slots will be filled with tungsten. Alternating the tungsten layers are layers of aluminum. These will be etched to add more layers to the Faraday cage walls and at the same time construct the interconnects. Finally a last metal layer will completely cover the area enclosed by the Faraday cage wall(s) to act as a roof or lid over the walls.
The following embodiment will describe the process of joint fabrication of the Faraday cage, enclosing with metal, one or more semiconductor devices having insulated pass-thrus (input/output leads or conductors) and layers of interconnects joined by vias to the semiconductor devices.
Referring to
As shown in
Turning to
A process known as patterning is next performed. This involves applying a photoresist coating over the substrate and then using well known photolithography steps such as masking, exposing, and developing, to form a patterned photoresist layer. The underlying material is then etched in alignment with the patterned photoresist layer. As shown in
The next step is an etch of the first dielectric layer 120 that follows the shape of the photoresist pattern 123. With this etch, the photoresist layer protects the dielectric layer 120 beneath from the etch operation. Referring to
Next, but not shown, a barrier coating may be applied to the etched dielectric 120 surface to improve adhesion between a metal coating to be next applied and the dielectric 120. This coating may be titanium or titanium nitride material. This barrier coating may be used on any dielectric surface when a metal coating will be applied over the dielectric.
Now, a fill layer of a material (first conducting layer) 125 is deposited as shown in
Referring now to
Turning to
Referring now to
The second dielectric (SiO2) layer 220 is patterned (photoresist+etch) as described above but not shown here. The results of the patterning is displayed in
Referring now to
a & b show a deposit of a second metal layer or metal two (M2) 230 of aluminum. After deposition, the M2230 is patterned as described above.
Turning now to
At this point (
Referring now to
The next patterning operation is not shown but uses the techniques described above with the results shown in
Turning now to
Referring now to
Referring to
Turning to
Referring to
In
It should also be understood that any number of layers of insulation or metal layers, M1, M2, M3 (metal four, metal five, etc.) may be used to construct multiple pass-thrus on a single level and multiple levels of interconnects and pass-thrus. In addition, for other embodiments, the metal layer deposited to form the lid in the disclosed embodiment may be patterned into interconnect circuitry for devices outside the Faraday cage.
Further, for other embodiments, there may be subsequent layers deposited above a Faraday cage lid to add interconnects, vias, and other Faraday cage walls to circuitry stacked outside and/or higher than a given Faraday cage.
This method of forming the Faraday cage could be employed to construct structures for other applications such as to redirect electrostatic discharge, to distribute thermal energy, or to shield light sensitive devices such as, for example, might be used in optical switching.
The present patent application is a continuation of application Ser. No.: 09/821,323 filed Mar. 28, 2001, which is currently pending, which is a divisional of application Ser. No.: 09/540,072 filed Mar. 31, 2000 which is now U.S. Pat. No. 6,400,015.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040032023 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09540072 | Mar 2000 | US |
Child | 09821323 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09821323 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 10637240 | US |