1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to MEMS inductors and, more particularly, to a MEMS inductor with very low resistance.
2. Description of the Related Art
A micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) inductor is a semiconductor structure that is fabricated using the same types of steps (e.g., the deposition of layers of material and the selective removal of the layers of material) that are used to fabricate conventional analog and digital CMOS circuits.
MEMS inductors are commonly formed as coil structures. When greater inductance is required, the coil structure is typically formed around a magnetic core structure. Core structures formed from laminated Ni—Fe have been shown to have low eddy current losses, high magnetic permeability, and high saturation flux density.
Although the MEMS inductors taught by Park et al., and others provide a solution to many applications, and thereby provide an easy process for providing an on-chip inductor, these MEMS inductors have an excessively high resistance for other applications, such as applications which require inductor resistance in the milliohm range. Thus, there is a need for a MEMS inductor that provides very low resistance.
As shown in
Further, MEMS inductor 100 includes a conductive sidewall 114 that has a bottom surface that contacts base conductive plate 110, and a top surface that contacts top conductive plate 112. MEMS inductor 100 also includes a conductive sidewall 116 that has a top surface that contacts top conductive plate 112.
In the
In addition, base conductive plate 110, top conductive plate 112, conductive sidewall 114, and conductive sidewall 116, which can be formed from materials including copper, define an enclosed region 120 that lies only between the base and top conductive plates 110 and 112, and sidewalls 114 and 116.
As further shown in
For example, magnetic core structure 122 can be implemented with a number of laminated Ni—Fe cores 124. The thickness of the laminations must be thin enough to minimize eddy currents. In addition, magnetic core structure 122 can have an easy axis and a hard axis.
In operation, a current I1 can flow into MEMS inductor 100 along the bottom side of sidewall 116, and out along the near end of bottom conductive plate 110 that lies away from sidewall 114. A current I2 can also flow in the opposite direction, flowing into MEMS inductor 100 along the end of bottom conductive plate 110 that lies away from sidewall 114, and flowing out along the bottom side of sidewall 116.
A current flowing through an inductor generates a magnetic field which, when the inductor surrounds a ferromagnetic core, produces a magnetic flux density. The magnetic flux density, in turn, is a measure of the total magnetic effect that is produced by the current flowing through the inductor.
In the
In other words, when the easy axis of magnetic core structure 122 coincides with the length LB of bottom conductive plate 224, the maximum current through the coil can be equal to the current required to produce the magnetic field H1. When the hard axis of magnetic core structure 122 coincides with the length LB of bottom conductive plate 224, the maximum current through the coil can be equal to the current required to produce the magnetic field H2. Thus, by adjusting the orientation of the easy and hard axes, two different maximum current values can be obtained.
Thus, an example of a single-loop MEMS inductor has been described in accordance with the present invention. One of the advantages of the inductor of the present invention is that the inductor provides very, very low resistance, satisfying resistance requirements of a few milliohm.
In addition, the inductor of the present invention can be formed to be quite large, e.g., having a footprint approximately the same size as the die, to enclose a large magnetic core structure to generate nano-Henry inductance levels. Further, the inductor of the present invention can have one of two saturation currents, depending on the easy-hard orientation of magnetic core structure 122.
Next, as shown in
Following this, as shown in
Next, as shown in
As taught by Park et al., to form a magnetic core structure, a mold is filled with sequential electrodeposition of Ni—Fe (80%-20%) and Cu layers. In accordance with the present invention, the mold is rectangular and the electrodeposition can occur in the presence of a magnetic field so that each laminated NiFe/Cu layer has an easy axis and a hard axis. The easy and hard axes are inherent properties of a magnetic material that is formed in the presence of a magnetic field.
After a number of layers have been formed, the mold is removed, and the Cu is then etched away from between the NiFe layers to form magnetic core structure 240. As a result of forming the laminated NiFe layers in the presence of a magnetic field, the laminated layers can have an easy axis that coincides with the length, or a hard axis that coincides with the length, depending on the orientation of the magnetic field during electrodeposition.
Following the formation of magnetic core structure 240, a layer of isolation material 242, such as photosensitive epoxy, is formed over magnetic core structure 240, and then planarized until a thickness A and a thickness B are substantially equal. After this, a mask 244 is formed on isolation layer 242 to define the sidewalls.
As shown in
Next, as shown in
Conductive sidewall 262 has a bottom surface that contacts the top surface of base conductive plate 224, and a top surface that contacts the bottom surface of top conductive plate 260. Conductive sidewall 264 has a top surface that contacts the bottom surface of top conductive plate 260, and a bottom surface that contacts the vias (252).
Base conductive plate 224 and top conductive plate 260 define an enclosed region 266 that lies only between the base and top conductive plates 224 and 260. In addition, enclosed region 266 can further be defined by conductive sidewall 262 and conductive sidewall 264, such that enclosed region 266 lies only between the base and top conductive plates 224 and 260, and between conductive sidewalls 262 and 266.
As shown in
It should be understood that the above descriptions are examples of the present invention, and that various alternatives of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. Thus, it is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that structures and methods within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.
This is a divisional application of application Ser. No. 11/200,384 filed on Aug. 9, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,250,842, issued on Jul. 31, 2007.
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3638156 | West | Jan 1972 | A |
3881244 | Kendall | May 1975 | A |
5372967 | Sundaram et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
6008102 | Alford et al. | Dec 1999 | A |
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6292084 | Choi et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6573818 | Klemmer et al. | Jun 2003 | B1 |
6990729 | Pleskach et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11200384 | Aug 2005 | US |
Child | 11820921 | US |