U.S. Pat. No. 5,767,001 discloses a semiconductor device for three-dimensional integration, which comprises contact pins penetrating a substrate and protruding from a rear surface.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,910,020 discloses a production method for semiconductor devices by forming a tungsten pillar on a wiring and applying an aluminum alloy to contact top and side surfaces of the tungsten pillar, which extend above a silicon oxide layer.
EP 2554980 A1 discloses an integrated circuit with sensor, which comprises a substrate with a stack of patterned metal layers insulated from each other by dielectric layers. An upper metal layer comprises a first electrode, a second electrode, a bond pad and a heating element.
U.S. 2009/0200664 A1 discloses a manufacturing method of semiconductor devices comprising a wafer, an SiN passivation film and a polyimide film. Metal layers include electrode pads of aluminum on the surface of the semiconductor wafer, especially a bonding pad, wiring layers, which extend above the polyimide film, and solder bumps. Some of the wiring layers are elongated in a substantially rectangular shape.
The publication of M.-S. Wang et al.: “Interface Dynamic Behavior Between a Carbon Nanotube and Metal Electrode,” in Advanced Materials 22 (2010), pages 93 to 98 describes a contact between individual carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and sharpened tungsten electrodes. The tip-end of the electrode absorbs the source CNT atoms, which then penetrate deep into its body, form a carbide, and finally precipitate as freshly formed graphitic tubular shells encapsulating the electrode.
The semiconductor device comprises a semiconductor substrate, a dielectric layer on or above the substrate, a wiring comprising electrical conductors arranged in the dielectric layer, and a contact pad formed by one of the conductors. A further conductor of electrically conductive material is arranged in the dielectric layer in contact with a further one of the conductors, separate from the contact pad. The further conductor protrudes from the dielectric layer on a far side of the dielectric layer with respect to the substrate.
The semiconductor device may further comprise a passivation layer on the far side of the dielectric layer, so that the further electrical conductor also protrudes from the passivation layer. The passivation layer and the dielectric layer may comprise different materials. In particular, the dielectric layer may be a silicon oxide like SiO2 and the passivation layer a silicon nitride like Si3N4, for instance.
In particular, the further conductor may have the shape of an elongate ridge with a longitudinal extension. The ridge may typically have a length along its longitudinal extension and a width transverse to its longitudinal extension, the length being at least three times the width. The further conductor may protrude by a height in the range from 20 nm to 100 nm. The further conductor may comprise a plurality of single conductors. Each of the single conductors may have the shape of an elongate ridge with a longitudinal extension, and the longitudinal extensions may especially be parallel to one another. The further conductor may comprise tungsten or copper.
A via hole may penetrate the semiconductor substrate, and a metallization may be arranged in the via hole in contact with one of the conductors, thus forming a through-substrate via.
The method comprises forming a wiring of electrical conductors in a dielectric layer on or above a semiconductor substrate, an opening in the dielectric layer to uncover a contact pad, which is formed by one of the conductors, and a further opening in the dielectric layer to uncover an area of a further one of the conductors, separate from the contact pad. The further opening is filled with an electrically conductive material, and the dielectric layer is thinned from a side opposite the substrate, so that the electrically conductive material protrudes from the dielectric layer.
In a variant of the method, the electrically conductive material is also filled in the opening uncovering the contact pad, and a portion of the electrically conductive material is removed such that a spacer is formed in the opening by a residual portion of the electrically conductive material while the further opening remains at least half filled.
In a further variant of the method, the further opening is formed by a trench.
In a further variant of the method, the further opening is formed by a plurality of parallel trenches.
In a further variant of the method, the electrically conductive material filling the further opening comprises a metal that is different from the electrical conductors.
The following is a detailed description of examples of the production method in conjunction with the appended figures.
A further one of the electrical conductors 5, which is separate from the contact pad 8, is provided with a further electrical conductor 9, which protrudes from the dielectric layer 2 on the far side with respect to the semiconductor substrate 1. A passivation layer 10, which can especially be formed from a material different from the material of the dielectric layer 2 and may comprise a silicon nitride like Si3N4, for instance, can be applied on the dielectric layer 2 as shown in
By the described method the semiconductor device can be produced within a standard CMOS process with only few additional method steps, which are furthermore fully compatible with the standard CMOS process. The protruding further conductor 9 facilitates an electrical connection to elements of a further device, especially to elements comprising a gas-sensitive material, like carbon nanotubes, for instance.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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14154132 | Feb 2014 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/050592 | 1/14/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/117800 | 8/13/2015 | WO | A |
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T. Helbling, et al., “Sensing NO2 with Individual Suspended Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes,” Elsevier—ScienceDirect, Sensors and Actuators B, 2008, pp. 491-497, 132. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160351515 A1 | Dec 2016 | US |