The present invention relates in general to microelectromechanical devices, and in particular to a tunable inductor which can be electrostatically tuned to change its inductance.
In the radio frequency (RF) and microwave technology domain there is a need to integrate passive components including inductors, capacitors, switches and filters on an integrated circuit (IC) chip to lower device size and manufacturing cost and to improve performance and reliability. The integration of these passive devices into an RF IC will provide high value for such applications as voltage-controlled-oscillator (VCO), phase-locked-loop (PLL) and other RF functionality required for advanced telecom systems.
Efforts have been focused on improving the RF performance of silicon IC technology, in part due to its low cost, dielectric compatibility, and micromachining properties. The on-chip integration of relatively high-Q fixed and variable inductors with silicon IC technology, however, has been problematic due to the parasitic effects of low-conductivity metallization as well as lossy substrate interactions. As a result, the quality factor Q of inductors fabricated using silicon IC technology is less than about 10 at a frequency of 2 GHz. Therefore, to achieve high performance, most RF IC applications still require the use of off-chip inductors. However, drawbacks of the off-chip inductors include significant parasitic effects, prohibitive size, and large losses due to board-level flip-chip and/or surface-mount interconnections.
Inductors with disk-shaped coils wound about an axis which is substantially perpendicular to an underlying semiconductor substrate are lossy due to eddy currents induced in the closely underlying substrate, and also due skin effects which restrict an alternating current (AC) in the coil to a small skin depth at the edge of the coil thereby substantially increasing the AC resistance of the coil. Efforts to overcome the drawbacks of disk-shaped coil inductors with the above-cited alignment have sought to raise the inductors off the substrate (see e.g. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,184,755; 6,621,141; and 6,922,127).
The present invention provides an advance over the prior art by providing a tunable inductor having a pair of coils of substantially the same size which are arranged about a central axis which is substantially parallel to the substrate, and with the pair of coils being electrostatically unrolled in tandem to change the inductance.
The tunable inductor of the present invention comprises multi-turn coils which can be partially or completely unrolled to provide a wide variation in inductance.
The electrical power required to tune the inductor of the present invention is low since tuning is accomplished electrostatically, and not by resistive current heating.
The tunable inductor of the present invention can also be digitally tuned by shaping the coils and/or underlying electrodes, or alternately by using a segmented electrode beneath the pair of coils.
These and other advantages of the present invention will become evident to those skilled in the art.
The present invention relates to a tunable inductor which comprises a pair of coils of substantially the same size arranged side by side and coiled about a central axis which is oriented substantially parallel to a supporting substrate. Each coil comprises a plurality of turns and has a first end anchored to the supporting substrate, and a second end where the pair of coils are connected together by a bridge which is suspended above the substrate. A first electrode extends beneath each coil, and can be formed on the substrate, or from the substrate. A second electrode is located on each coil and forms at least a part of the bridge connecting the pair of coils together. The inductance of the tunable inductor can be changed by applying a voltage between the first and second electrodes. This partially or completely uncoils (i.e. unrolls) the pair of coils with the exact extent of uncoiling depending upon an applied voltage.
The coiling in the tunable inductor is due to a layer of a compressively-stressed material (e.g. silicon dioxide) and a layer of a tensile-stressed material (e.g. silicon nitride) which are laminated together to form the coils. In some embodiments of the present invention, each coil in the tunable inductor can have a shape which is tapered or stepped with distance from the first end to the second end. This is useful for forming the coils without tangling, and also to provide an inductance L which varies proportionately to an applied voltage V. In other embodiments of the present invention, the tunable inductor can have coils with a lattice structure, or with a density of etch-release holes that varies with distance from the first end to the second end.
The supporting substrate can comprise a semiconductor substrate (e.g. silicon or a silicon IC). The first electrode can be uniform in width, or tapered or stepped. In some embodiments of the present invention, the first electrode can have a zigzag shape. In other embodiments of the present invention, the first electrode can comprise a segmented electrode. The second electrode can comprise a metal selected from the group consisting of aluminum, copper and tungsten.
The present invention also relates to a tunable inductor which comprises a substrate, and a pair of elongate members formed side by side on the substrate and connected together at one end thereof and having an in-plane stress gradient which urges the connected end of the pair of elongate members to coil away from the substrate and to form a pair of substantially identically-sized multi-turn coils from the pair of elongate members, with each multi-turn coil being formed about a central axis which is substantially parallel to the substrate. The tunable inductor also comprises a first electrode which extends beneath the pair of elongate members, and a second electrode which is formed on the pair of elongate members. A voltage applied between the first and second electrodes can be used to partially or completely uncoil the pair of substantially identically-sized multi-turn coils, thereby changing the inductance of the tunable inductor.
The substrate can comprise a semiconductor substrate (e.g. silicon). Each elongate member can comprise a compressively-stressed layer (e.g. silicon dioxide), and a tensile-stressed layer (e.g. silicon nitride, or tungsten, or both). Each elongate member can also have a tapered or stepped shape, or alternately can have a plurality of etch-release holes therein which vary in density with distance towards the unanchored end of that elongate member.
The first electrode can comprise polycrystalline silicon or metal (e.g. aluminum, copper or tungsten), or can even be formed from the substrate. In some embodiments of the present invention, the first electrode can have a tapered, stepped or zigzag shape. In other embodiments of the present invention, the first electrode can comprise a segmented electrode which further comprises a plurality of electrodes which are addressable independently or in sets to digitally vary the inductance of the tunable inductor. The second electrode generally comprises metal (e.g. aluminum, copper or tungsten).
Additional advantages and novel features of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following detailed description thereof when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. The advantages of the invention can be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a part of the specification, illustrate several aspects of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. The drawings are only for the purpose of illustrating preferred embodiments of the invention and are not to be construed as limiting the invention. In the drawings:
A first electrode in this example of the present invention is formed by the substrate 14 extending beneath each coil 12 and 12′; and a second electrode 22 is located on each coil 12 and 12′ and can form at least a part of the bridge 18 to electrically connect the two coils 12 and 12′ together. The coils 12 and 12′ in
Electrical connections can be made to the pair of coils 12 and 12′ by contact pads 28 formed on the layer of the sacrificial material 26 which can comprise polycrystalline silicon (also termed polysilicon). This allows a variable inductance L provided by the tunable inductor 10 to be connected to an electronic circuit with which the tunable inductor 10 is to be used. The contact pads 28 are electrically insulated from the polysilicon sacrificial material by a silicon dioxide layer 30 (see
The tunable inductor 10 can be operated to vary the inductance L therein by applying a direct-current (DC) voltage V from a voltage source 100 between the first electrode 20 (i.e. the substrate 14 in this example) and the second electrode 22 as shown in
The spring force is due to an in-plane stress gradient arising from a layered structure of the coils 12 and 12′ which includes a compressively-stressed layer 30, which can be silicon dioxide, and a tensile-stressed layer 36, which can be silicon nitride. The term “in-plane stress gradient” as used herein refers to a variation in stress across the thickness of the coils 12 and 12′ which is due to a difference in the magnitude or sign of the stress built into two or more stressed layers that are laminated together to form the coils 12 and 12′, with the stress in each stressed layer being directed substantially in the plane of that layer.
A metal layer 38, which can comprise aluminum, copper or tungsten is located above the tensile-stressed silicon nitride layer 36 as shown in
When tungsten is used for the metal layer 38, the tungsten layer 38 will be tensile stressed. This additional tensile stress in the tungsten layer 38 can aid in rolling up the coils 12 and 12′. In some cases, the tensile stress provided by the tungsten layer 38 can allow the silicon nitride layer 36 to be omitted. The tungsten layer 38 can be deposited by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at a temperature of about 400° C. When the tungsten layer 38 is to be deposited directly on the compressively-stressed silicon dioxide layer 30 (i.e. without the silicon nitride layer 36), a 20-50 nm thick layer of titanium nitride, which is also compressively stressed, can be initially sputter deposited over the silicon dioxide layer 30 to serve as an adhesion layer since tungsten does not stick or nucleate well on silicon dioxide.
In
As the coils 12 and 12′ begin to unroll in
In
Those skilled in the art will understand that the inductance L of the pair of coils 12 and 12′ comprises a self inductance due to each coil 12 and 12′, and a mutual inductance due to a coupling between the two coils 12 and 12′. The self inductance depends upon the number of turns in each coil 12 and 12′ while the mutual inductance depends upon the spacing between the coils 12 and 12′, and the direction of current flow therein.
Further increasing the voltage V beyond that in
In the tunable inductor 10 of the present invention, the inductance L can be changed electrostatically over a relatively large range which can be up to ten nanoHenries (nH) or more by using a DC voltage V applied between the electrodes 20 and 22 without the need for flowing a relatively large DC current through the tunable inductor 10 as in other types of tunable inductors known to the art.
Fabrication of the tunable inductor 10 of
To fabricate the tunable inductor 10 of
After formation of the thermal oxide layer on the substrate 14, the sacrificial layer 26 comprising polysilicon about 0.4 μm thick can be blanket deposited over the substrate 14 by low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) at a temperature of 580° C. The compressively-stressed silicon dioxide layer 30 can then be blanket deposited over the silicon substrate 14 by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). This layer 30 can be, for example, about 0.4 μm.
After deposition of the compressively-stressed silicon dioxide layer 30, the tensile-stressed silicon nitride layer 36 can be blanket deposited over the silicon substrate 14 to a thickness of, for example, 20 nanometers. The silicon dioxide layer 30 and the silicon nitride layer 36 can also be used to form a part of the bridge 18 together with a subsequently deposited metal layer 38. The bridge 18, which connects the unanchored ends of the coils 12 and 12′ together, can have a width which is less than or equal to the width of the coils 12 and 12′.
The metal layer 38, which can comprise aluminum about 0.4 μm thick, can then be deposited over the substrate 14 by evaporation or sputtering. The aluminum layer 38 has relatively low stress compared to the underlying silicon nitride and silicon dioxide layers 36 and 30, respectively. The metal layer 38 forms the second electrode 22 on the coils 12 and 12′ and also forms a part of the bridge 18. Additionally, the metal layer 38 forms the contact pads 28 and can also be deposited overtop the contact pad 34 when the opening 32 has been formed prior to depositing the metal layer 38.
After deposition of the plurality of material layers as described above, reactive ion etching using a photolithographically-defined etch mask (not shown) can be used to etch down to the sacrificial material 26 and define the shape of the various elements of the tunable inductor 10, including the coils 12 and 12′, the bridge 18, and the contact pads 28. At this point in the fabrication process, the coils 12 and 12′ will be in a flattened state since they are still attached to the underlying sacrificial material 26.
A plurality of micron-sized or larger etch-release holes 40 can be etched through the various material layers (i.e. the layers 30, 36 and 38) forming the coils 12 and 12′ in the reactive ion etching step used to define the shape of the coils 12 and 12′. These etch-release holes 40 are useful to expose the underlying sacrificial material 26 so that a subsequent selective etching step can remove the sacrificial material 26 faster and more thoroughly. The etch-release holes 40 can be circular, square, rectangular, or of any arbitrary shape.
To control the extent of unrolling of the coils 12 and 12′, the density (i.e. number per unit area) of the etch-release holes 40 can be varied along the length of the coils 12 and 12′. This is schematically illustrated in
The density of the etch-release holes 40 in
Other ways are possible to make the extent of unrolling of the coils 12 and 12′ proportional to the applied voltage V for control of the inductance L of the tunable inductor 10. For example, the coils 12 and 12′ can have a tapered shape as shown in the schematic plan view of
The length of the flattened coils 12 and 12′ in
After patterning the various elements of the tunable inductor 10 by reactive ion etching, the polysilicon sacrificial material 26 can be removed using a selective etchant which can be a dry fluorine-based etchant (e.g. gaseous xenon difluoride vapor, or sulfur hexafluoride in a downstream plasma etching system). The use of a dry selective etchant reduces the possibility of stiction (i.e. adhesion) of the flattened coils 12 and 12′ to the thermal oxide layer 24, or to the underlying substrate 14. The use of a dry selective etchant also prevents exposure the coils 12 and 12′ to fluid forces which are present with a wet etchant and the possibility of deforming or tangling the coils 12 and 12′ due to such fluid forces.
The dry fluorine-based etchant removes exposed portions of the polysilicon sacrificial material 26 while not substantially chemically attacking the other material layers including the thermal oxide layer 24, the silicon dioxide layer 30, the silicon nitride layer 36, and the metal layer 38. As the sacrificial material 26 is removed from beneath the flattened coils 12 and 12′, the coils will begin to roll up beginning at the unanchored end of the coils 12 and 12′ until the coils 12 and 12′ are completely rolled up as shown in
In some embodiments of the present invention, the tunable inductor 10 can be fabricated on a semiconductor substrate 14 (e.g. comprising silicon, germanium, gallium arsenide, etc.) which also includes an IC comprising a plurality of interconnected circuit elements such as transistors, resistors, capacitors, or a combination thereof. These embodiments of the present invention can be formed by first fabricating the IC on the substrate 14 using a series of well-known semiconductor IC processing steps. One or more tunable inductors 10 can then be fabricated on the semiconductor substrate 14 alongside the IC, or above the IC and subsequently packaged together with the IC in a hermetically-sealed package.
To prevent any damage to the IC, the process steps used to fabricate one or more tunable inductors 10 on the same substrate 14 as the IC can be carried out at a relatively low temperature of about 400° C. or less. This can entail the use of plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) to deposit the polysilicon sacrificial material 26, the silicon dioxide layer 30 and the silicon nitride layer 36 rather than the use of LPCVD and CVD as described previously. Additionally, when one or more tunable inductors 10 are to be fabricated above the IC, in some cases, a layer of an interconnect metallization for the IC can be used to form the first electrode 20. The interconnect metallization can comprise, for example, aluminum, copper or tungsten.
A schematic perspective view of a second example of the tunable inductor 10 of the present invention is shown in
In the example of
In the example of
Fabrication of this example of the present invention can proceed substantially the same as that described previously except that the first electrode 20 can be patterned using the same reactive ion etching step used to pattern the of the coils 12 and 12′, or in some cases the first electrode 20 can be patterned using a separate reactive ion etching step when the shape of the first electrode 20 is different from the shape of the coils 12 and 12′. Although not shown in FIGS. 6 and 7A-7C, the electrode 20 can also comprise a region which is initially beneath the bridge 18 when the coils 12 and 12′ are in a flattened state when a single reactive ion etching step is used to form both the first electrode 20 and the coils 12 and 12′. Alternately, the metal or polysilicon used to form the first electrode 20 can be deposited and patterned separately by reactive ion etching prior to depositing and patterning the remaining layers. This will generally be the case if the first electrode 20 comprises polysilicon since the polysilicon first electrode 20 will need to be overcoated with a thin (e.g. 0.1-0.5 μm) layer of silicon dioxide or silicon nitride to protect them from being etched away during removal of the overlying polysilicon sacrificial material 26.
Those skilled in the art will understand that the first electrode 20 and the coils 12 and 12′ can, in some instances, have different lengths. As an example, the length of the elongate portions of the first electrode 20 can be less than the length of the coils 12 and 12′. This can be useful to limit a minimum value of the inductance L, or to prevent the coils 12 and 12′ from unrolling completely.
The first electrode 20 can have a uniform width as shown in
Another way of forming the first electrode 20 is shown in the schematic plan view of
With the first electrode 20 being formed of metal or polysilicon and patterned as described above, the polysilicon sacrificial material 26 after deposition will generally not be planar over the first electrode 20. A chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP) step can be used after deposition of the polysilicon sacrificial material 26 to provide a planar surface for the deposition of the remaining layers used to form the tunable inductor 10 in
After the various layers have been deposited and patterned, the polysilicon sacrificial material can be removed as described previously to release the flattened coils 12 and 12′ to roll up due to the in-plane stress gradient. Operation of this device 10 is similar to that described previously with reference to FIGS. 1 and 2A-2C.
Addressing of the segmented first electrode 20 in
When different DC programming voltages are used to address the individual electrodes 44 in the segmented first electrode 20, the DC programming voltages can be the same or different depending upon the exact shape of the coils 12 and 12′. The different DC programming voltages can be applied in a stepped sequence to unroll the coils 12 and 12′ as needed to select a particular value of the inductance L, and then removed in the same stepped sequence to smoothly roll up the coils 12 and 12′ when the inductance L is to be increased.
When a single DC programming voltage is used, the single DC programming voltage can be set to the maximum voltage VMax that is required to unroll the coils 12 and 12′ to an extent needed to provide a predetermined variation in the inductance L. This maximum voltage VMax can be up to a few tens of volts or more, and will depend upon the exact thickness of the layers 30 and 36 between the electrodes 20 and 22, and will also depend upon the thickness of any electrically-insulating layer that may be provided overtop the segmented first electrode 20. The single DC programming voltage can be applied to and removed from the individual electrodes 44 with a predetermined time constant so that the coils 12 and 12′ will smoothly unroll or roll up to change the inductance L of the tunable inductor 10.
Fabrication of the tunable inductor 10 of
A second reactive ion etch step can then be used to pattern the layers 30, 36 and 38 to define the shapes of the flattened coils 12 and 12′ and the bridge 18. In this case, the reactive ion etching step needs only to etch down to expose the polysilicon sacrificial material 26 beneath the coils 12 and 12′. The coils 12 and 12′ and bridge 18 can then be released using the dry selective etchant to selectively remove the polysilicon sacrificial material 26 and allow the coils 12 and 12′ to roll up in tandem beginning at the unanchored end thereof.
In other embodiments of the present invention, the bridge 18 can extend between the coils 12 and 12′ along a portion or the entire length thereof. In these embodiments, a metal portion of the bridge 18 formed from the metal layer 38 will generally have a width that is less than or equal to the width of each coil 12 or 12′. The remainder of the bridge 18, which can be formed from the silicon dioxide and silicon nitride layers 30 and 36, can extend outward from the bridge 18 toward the anchored end of the coils 12 and 12′ for a predetermined distance which, in some cases, can be up to the entire length of the coils 12 and 12′. A plurality of etch-release holes 40 can be formed through the layers 30 and 36 in the bridge 18 as needed to aid in removing the underlying polysilicon sacrificial material 26 using the selective etchant. In these embodiments of the present invention where the bridge 18 extends between the coils 12 and 12′ up to the entire length thereof, a spacing between the coils 12 and 12′ will generally be smaller than the length of the coils 12 and 12′ so that the in-plane stress gradient will cause the coils 12 and 12′ to roll up while the bridge 18 remains substantially flat in a direction parallel to the central axis 16 about which the coils 12 and 12′ wind. As an example, the coils can be spaced apart by a distance of 0.5-1 millimeter while the length of the coils 12 and 12′ can be 4-5 millimeters or more.
In yet other embodiments of the present invention the first electrode 20 in
Although the metal layer 38 on the coils 12 and 12′, which is used for each second electrode 22, has been described herein as being located above the compressively-stressed silicon dioxide layer 30 and the tensile-stressed silicon nitride layer 36 (see
The matter set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings is offered by way of illustration only and not as a limitation. The actual scope of the invention is intended to be defined in the following claims when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.
This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. DE-AC04-94AL85000 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
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