The present invention relates to the fabrication of a semiconductor device comprising a SiGe heterojunction bipolar transistor, including a bipolar transistor such as a SiGeC heterojunction bipolar transistor.
In particular, the present invention relates to a method of fabricating a semiconductor device comprising a SiGe(C) heterojunction bipolar transistor using a non-selective epitaxial growth including the steps of forming an insulating layer on a substrate, providing a layer structure including a conductive layer on the insulating layer, etching a transistor area opening through the conductive layer, depositing a SiGe base layer inside the transistor area opening, and including the step of filling the transistor area opening with an insulator which is to be subsequently etched.
In this manner, the present invention can relate to a SiGe(C) heterojunction bipolar transistor using non-selective epitaxial growth, an intrinsic SiGe base layer is grown inside a window in a stack consisting of thermal oxide, B-doped poly-silicon, TEOS and amorphous silicon, wherein the B-doped poly-silicon is employed for formation of the extrinsic base contact.
Such a process is known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,169,007 which discloses a method of fabricating a self-aligned non-selective thin-epi-base SiGe heterojunction bipolar transistor in which a TEOS or spin-on-glass silicon dioxide etch back is used. The manner of fabrication disclosed in this document seeks to provide for the fabrication of the transistor such that it is self-aligned to a single mask since this can lead to transistors exhibiting smaller device areas while exhibiting reduced parasitic problems. There are currently known two different integration schemes for the integration of, for example, a SiGe and including a SiGeC, heterojunction bipolar transistor. The first is based upon a double-poly structure and employs selective epitaxial growth in a cavity underneath the base-poly-silicon in order to form an extrinsic base contact. The second is based upon non-selective, or differential, epitaxial growth, in which poly-SiGe is grown on field oxide regions of the structure and mono-SiGe is grown in the active area. In this second known scheme, the extrinsic base contact is formed by the poly-silicon grown on the field oxide.
The first scheme mentioned above which relies on selective epitaxial growth exhibits a disadvantageous loading effect. The chemical concentrations concerned depend heavily on the density of the active area and it is found that the growth rate may vary in response to circuit layout. Such problems do not generally arise with non-selective epitaxial growth since the growth is arranged to take place over the whole exposed surface area, i.e. on the field oxide and on the bare mono-silicon material in the transistor area.
Although the subject matter of U.S. Pat. No. 6,169,007 exhibits the above-mentioned advantages of smaller transistor size and lower parasitic capacitances it nevertheless exhibits disadvantages in relation to the fabrication technique disclosed.
In particular, in such a known process, to prevent the SiGe base layer from being oxidized, or otherwise damaged, by steps subsequent to its deposition, several sacrificial layers and protective spacers are used.
The present invention seeks to provide for a method of fabricating a semiconductor device comprising a non-selectively grown SiGe(C) heterojunction bipolar transistor, which method exhibits advantages over known such methods.
According to the present invention, there is provided a method of fabricating a semiconductor device comprising a non-selectively grown SiGe(C) heterojunction bipolar transistor as described above, wherein prior to the said filling of the transistor area opening, a nitride layer is formed as an inner layer of the transistor area opening.
The invention is advantageous in that, through the particular location of the nitride layer, the nitride in the transistor area opening remains after the insulator has been etched and can serve to prevent the SiGe base layer from being oxidized, or otherwise damaged, in subsequent fabrication steps.
Advantages include eliminating the need for several sacrificial layers, or protective nitride spacers, since the SiGe base layer can be simply and effectively isolated.
Further advantages include eliminating the need for a plurality of dummy layers deposited and subsequently etched, since the re-oxidation of the SiGeC overcomes the need for such repeated acts.
Other advantages include that a readily self-aligned selectively implanted collector can be provided which allows for the collector doping level just below the emitter to be increased for improved RF performance. Such improvements are advantageously achieved without necessarily increasing the collector doping levels in the extrinsic part of the device then formed. This further serves to advantageously limit extrinsic parasitic related problems.
Further advantages include providing for simplicity and accuracy of fabrication while limiting the number of depositions required.
Another advantage includes assisting with isolation of the base layer and the conductive layer.
It is another advantage that the structure then formed can exhibit narrow, but sufficiently filled, openings. Further, the etching of the nitride to form L-spacers can be adapted in relation to the act of the formation of the selectively-implanted-collector.
It should therefore be appreciated from the above that the present invention provides for a method of fabricating a non-selectively grown SiGe heterojunction bipolar transistor in which all contacts, emitter, base and collector are formed fully self-aligned to one single mask. In particular, the selectively-implanted-collector can also be provided self-aligned to this single mask. The structure can then exhibit a relatively small transistor area which can be fabricated in a particularly advantageous manner.
The invention is described further hereinafter, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Turning now to
It is an important feature of the invention that the transistor opening area 22 is formed entirely within the confines of the shallow trench isolation regions 20 so it is thus located in the transistor's active area. However, apart from initial alignment tolerances, no further overlay between the active area and the transistor area is required.
The substrate illustrated with reference to the enlarged detail of the active area of
A selective collector implant is preferably carried out prior to wet-etching of the thin oxide layer 12.
Subsequent to the formation of the transistor opening area 22 as illustrated in
As an important step of the present invention, the base layer 24 is then covered by means of a nitride layer 30 which, if thought appropriate, can be separated from the base layer 24 by means of a thin pad-oxide layer not shown in the illustrated embodiment.
Subsequent to the formation of the nitride layer 30 as illustrated in
Turning now to
The structure illustrated in
The nitride 30 is then employed as a mask for an oxidation step in which thermal oxide 34 is advantageously formed above the poly-SiGeC portions 26 of the base layer 24. Advantageously, rather than requiring the deposition and etching of multiple dummy layers, the invention provides re-oxidation of the top poly SiGeC region.
The provision of such protective thermal oxide in this manner serving to isolate the top of the base layer 24 proves a particularly advantageous step avoiding the provision of unnecessary sacrificial layers and nitride spacers as required in the prior-art. Such a structure is illustrated with reference to
During the emitter anneal, arsenic from, for example, the arsenic in-situ doped poly-silicon 36 is diffused so as to form the emitter 38 as illustrated in
At the same time, Boron from the Boron in-situ doped poly-silicon 14 is diffused across the boundary formed between the poly SiGeC base 26 and the epitaxial SiGeC 28, in order to form an extrinsic base-link 38a also illustrated with reference to
Turning now to
Turning first to
Turning now to
In this Figure, the SiGeC base layer 46 is illustrated together with an overlaying emitter capping layer grown in a non-selective epitaxial manner as illustrated in
A stack of nitride 50 and oxide 52 is then deposited over the entire structure but the upper regions thereof, as with the first embodiment illustrated hereinbefore, can be removed by means of chemical mechanical polishing.
Next, while using the remaining oxide as a masking layer, the nitride layer 50 is etched from regions above the poly-silicon 42 so as to arrive at the structure as illustrated in
At this stage, and as an option depending on the emitter capping layer thickness and the desired oxide thickness, the SiGeC base layer 46 and the silicon-emitter cap layer 48 can be etched using the oxide 52 and nitride 50 as a masking layer. It is preferred to retain the epitaxial silicon-emitter cap layer 48 over the SiGeC base layer 46 if the desired oxide thickness can be formed using only the silicon-emitter cap. If, however, the silicon-emitter cap layer 48 becomes to thin, it is generally then preferred that it be removed altogether along with the regions of the SiGeC base layer 46 overlaying the poly-silicon layer 42.
In any case, the HDP oxide can then be dipped away and, assuming both the silicon-emitter cap layer 48 and the SiGeC base layer 46 have been removed from above the poly-silicon layer 42, the structure then arrived at is illustrated with reference to
Depending upon the actual emitter-window and thus, the requirement for inside spacers, the nitride U-shaped cup 50 as illustrated in
In processing the structure further, as with the earlier embodiment, an n-doped layer 56 can be deposited and a rapid thermal anneal conducted so as to form the emitter region 58 as illustrated in
Standard processing of the structure illustrated in
This second embodiment of the present invention is particularly advantageous in allowing for yet further reduction of the required processing steps as compared with the prior art discussed previously.
The entire transistor, extrinsic base contact, SIC and emitter can then be formed self-aligned to a single mask and in a manner which limits damage to the layers formed within the transistor opening area in an advantageous manner.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02077112 | May 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/02034 | 5/27/2003 | WO | 00 | 11/24/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/100845 | 12/4/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5101256 | Harame et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
6169007 | Pinter | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6664574 | Azam et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
6806158 | Sukegawa et al. | Oct 2004 | B1 |
20020000664 | Cheng et al. | Jan 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050218399 A1 | Oct 2005 | US |