Claims
- 1. A closely-spaced, vertical NMOS and PMOS transistor pair comprising:a substrate comprising silicon implanted oxide wherein an oxide layer is sandwiched between underlying and overlying silicon layers; a vertical NMOS transistor in said overlying silicon layer, said vertical NMOS transistor comprising: a drain overlying said oxide layer; a channel region overlying a part of said drain; a source overlying said channel region; a gate trench that exposes a top surface of said drain and a vertical surface of said channel region; and a gate comprising a polysilicon sidewall spacer adjacent to said vertical surface of said channel region with a gate oxide layer therebetween; and a vertical PMOS transistor in said overlying silicon layer, said PMOS transistor comprising: a drain overlying said oxide layer wherein said drain contacts said vertical NMOS transistor drain; a channel region overlying a part of said drain; a source overlying said channel region; and a gate trench that exposes a top surface of said drain and a vertical surface of said channel region; a gate comprising a polysilicon sidewall spacer adjacent to said vertical surface of said channel region with a gate oxide layer therebetween; an interlevel dielectric layer overlying said closely spaced, vertical NMOS and PMOS transistor pair, wherein said interlevel dielectric layer has openings that expose said PMOS source and drain and said NMOS source and drain; a metal silicide layer in said PMOS source and drain and said NMOS source and drain; and a patterned metal layer overlying said interlevel dielectric layer and said metal silicide layer.
- 2. The method according to claim 1 wherein said closely-spaced, vertical NMOS and PMOS transistor pair form a CMOS inverter.
- 3. The device according to claim 1 wherein said metal silicide layer consists of one of the group of: titanium silicide and cobalt silicide.
- 4. The device according to claim 1 wherein said overlying silicon layer comprises a thickness of between about 2,000 Angstroms and 3,000 Angstroms.
- 5. The device according to claim 1 wherein said NMOS transistor drain comprises a thickness of its portion along its junction of between about 900 Angstroms and 1,000 Angstroms and a dopant concentration of between about 1×1020 ions/cm3 and 1×1021 ions/cm3.
- 6. The device according to claim 1 wherein said NMOS transistor channel region comprises a thickness of between about 500 Angstroms and 1,000 Angstroms and a dopant concentration of between about 1×1017 ions/cm3 and 5×1018 ions/cm3.
- 7. The device according to claim 1 wherein said NMOS transistor source comprises a thickness of between about 800 Angstroms and 1,000 Angstroms and a dopant concentration of between about 1×1020 ions/cm3 and 1×1021 ions/cm3.
- 8. The device according to claim 1 wherein said PMOS transistor drain comprises a thickness of its portion along its junction of between about 900 Angstroms and 1,000 Angstroms and a dopant concentration of between about 1×1020 ions/cm3 and 1×1021 ions/cm3.
- 9. The device according to claim 1 wherein said PMOS transistor channel region comprises a thickness of between about 500 Angstroms and 1,000 Angstroms and a dopant concentration of between about 1×1017 ions/cm3 and 5×1018 ions/cm3.
- 10. The device according to claim 1 wherein said PMOS transistor source comprises a thickness of between about 800 and 1,000 Angstroms and a dopant concentration of between about 1×1020 ions/cm3 and 1×1021 ions/cm3.
- 11. The device according to claim 1 further comprising shallow trench isolations in said overlying silicon layer to isolate said closely-spaced, vertical NMOS and PMOS transistor pair from the remaining substrate.
Parent Case Info
This is a division of patent application Ser. No. 09/981,438, filing date Oct. 18, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,461,900, Method To Form A Self-Aligned Cmos Inverter Using Vertical Divice Integration, assigned to the same assignee as the present invention.
US Referenced Citations (13)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
S. Wolf, “Silicon Processing for the VLSI Era”, vol. 2-13 “Process Integration”, 1990 (ISBN 0-961672-4-5), Lattice Press, Sunset Beach, California (USA), Chapter 6, pp. 368-370.* |
IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin, May 1985, pp. 7046-7048, “CMOS Inverter Structure”. |