The present invention relates to a micromechanical HF switching element, in which a freestanding movable element is situated above a metal surface on a substrate in such a way that it is drawn to the metal surface, to which a dielectric layer is applied, by application of an electrical voltage between the metal surface and the movable element. The present invention also relates to a method for producing micromechanical HF switching elements of this type, in which the dielectric layer is deposited on the metal surface.
High-frequency technology based on surface micromechanical components is becoming increasingly widespread. It is undisputed that MEMS switches (MEMS: micro electromechanical systems) have an array of decisive advantages in relation to typical systems which use PIN diodes or FET switches on silicon or gallium arsenide substrates. In particular at higher frequencies of greater than 20 GHz, the damping is much less and/or the insulation is much greater in MEMS components than, for example, in gallium arsenide components. Furthermore, MEMS switches typically display a very low power consumption and nearly ideal linear behavior.
In addition to the lack of cost-effective packaging concepts on the wafer level, the lack of long-term stability of many HF MEMS switches represents a central problem. MEMS switches are very complex components. Analogously to acceleration or speed sensors, they are based on freestanding movable structures whose mechanical and electrical properties must be sufficiently good and whose dimensional accuracy must be sufficiently high.
Furthermore, because of their function, surfaces repeatedly come into contact with one another in MEMS switches, so that adhesion and friction, as well as effects induced by strong electrical fields play a significant role. Since the signal frequencies are in the GHz range, the electrical resistance of polysilicon, the preferred material for acceleration or speed sensors, is much too high for HF MEMS switches. Therefore, metals are used for the freestanding structures of HF MEMS switches, predominantly gold, aluminum, or aluminum alloys. This restricts the possibilities of the production of switches of this type very strongly, since the processing temperatures must remain restricted to below 400° C. because of the low thermal stability of these materials.
In the simplest case, an HF MEMS switch comprises a freestanding metal diaphragm, which is held on a substrate by arbitrarily shaped metal suspensions over a metal signal line. A thin dielectric layer is located on the signal line below the diaphragm. The distance between the diaphragm and the signal line is very small and may be 2-3 μm in the rest state, for example. In this state, the capacitance is very low and HF signals running via the signal line may pass the switch nearly uninfluenced. By applying an electrical voltage between diaphragm and signal line, the diaphragm may be drawn to the signal line. If the capacitance change thus induced is large enough, the signal line is blocked and the HF signals are nearly completely reflected. The most important parameter of the switch is the ratio of the capacitances in the on and off states, respectively, the on-off ratio. For the mobile radio range (0.8-2.4 GHz), it must be at least 100 to keep the signal losses in the on state low. At transmission frequencies from approximately 10 GHz, an on-off ratio of 30-40 is typically sufficient. The on-off ratio is determined above all by the thickness and the dielectric constant ∈r of the dielectric layer, as well as the roughness of the surfaces coming into contact, i.e., the top of the dielectric layer and the bottom of the diaphragm. The thinner the dielectric material and therefore the higher its ∈r, the greater the on-off ratio.
Since the signal line comprises a metal, not every dielectric layer available in IC technology may be applied thereto. As already noted, the deposition temperature of the dielectric material is limited to at most 400° C. In many cases, the part of the signal line located directly below the diaphragm is manufactured from a metal which does not conduct especially well but has a high melting point, such as tungsten, titanium, tantalum, or platinum, and is subsequently extended on both sides of the switch area using a highly conductive metal. In the temperature range up to 400° C., standard low temperature LPCVD processes for doped and undoped SiO2 layers such as LTO or PSG and PECVD processes for SiO2, Si3N4, or doped oxides such as PSG and BPSG are available in IC technology. Sputtering is also suitable for depositing dielectric layers, but has not been established for the cited materials. Furthermore, greatly varying layers may also be produced by sol-gel methods, laser-induced deposition, and other processes.
The dielectric material currently used most frequently for capacitive HF MEMS switches is PECVD Si3N4. It is commonly available in every IC factory, may be produced in high quality in layer thicknesses from 100 nm, has an ∈r of 6-7 and is distinguished by a relatively high chemical resistance. An example of a capacitive HF MEMS switch and the method for its production may be inferred from the publication of Z. J. Yao et al., “Micromachined low-loss microwave switches”, IEEE Journal of Microelectromech. Sys., Vol. 8, No. 2, 1999, pages 129-134.
However, if this dielectric material is selected, so-called charging occurs, i.e., the injection of charge carriers under the influence of high electric fields and/or their permanent trapping in the volume of the dielectric layer. The charges cause a drift of the voltage required for switching and, in addition, result in sticking of the diaphragm to the dielectric material after a certain time, i.e., the breakdown of the switch. The recombination of the charges may take days. Reversing the polarity of the switching voltage during each switching procedure reduces the charging significantly, but does not suppress it completely, since injection and recombination mechanisms are not equal. Sooner or later breakdown of the switch therefore nonetheless occurs.
In addition to PECVD Si3N4, until now PECVD SiO2 and Ta2O5 have also been used as dielectric layers in HF MEMS switches, the latter having been applied electrochemically. Furthermore, the applicants are aware of HF MEMS switches having PECVD Al2O3 and BST, which was applied using laser deposition, as dielectric layers. However, up to this point there have either been no investigations of the charging and the long-term stability of these dielectric layers or the dielectric layers must be applied having a very low layer thickness to achieve the required on-off ratio as in the case of PECVD SiO2. Significant charging has been established in electrochemically produced Ta2O5.
The object of the present invention is to specify a method for producing micromechanical HF switching elements and a micromechanical HF switching element producible using the method, in which the dielectric layer has high long-term stability and low charging.
The object is achieved by the method and the micromechanical HF switching element according to claims 1 and 6. Advantageous embodiments of the method and the switching element are the subject matter of the subclaims or may be inferred from the following description and the exemplary embodiments.
The method according to the present invention is based on the use of a specially deposited, piezoelectric AlN layer as a dielectric material on the metal surface, such as a signal line, of the substrate. The AlN is deposited in such a way that a layer having a columnar, polycrystalline structure and a texture forms on the metal surface. The dielectric layer is preferably sputtered on for this purpose. The layer thickness of this specially deposited dielectric AlN layer is preferably in the range between 100 and 500 nm.
Significantly reduced charging and a significantly higher long-term stability in relation to PECVD Si3N4 may be achieved using a dielectric layer built up and/or deposited in this way. It was recognized for this purpose that the presence of a certain crystal order in the dielectric material plays an essential role in the reduction of the charging effect. Typical features of a crystal order of this type for thin layers are a columnar, polycrystalline structure and the presence of a texture, i.e., a preferred orientation of the crystals. However, this layer structure is typically only achieved using materials which are deposited at higher temperatures, which are incompatible with micromechanical HF switches, such as polysilicon. However, the inventor of the present method and of the associated HF MEMS switching element have found a material in AlN that may be deposited on a metal structure having a layer structure of this type even at lower processing temperatures. Thus, processes for producing high-quality piezoelectric AlN layers have already been described in another technical area for producing BAW resonators (BAW: bulk acoustic wave) (see, for example, R. Jakkaru et al., “Electrode and AlN depositions of bulk acoustic wave (BAW) devices” Proc. MEMSWAVE 2003, Toulouse, France, pages E-13 et seq.), which may also be used for the present application. The thin AlN layers obtained in this case additionally have high homogeneity of the properties, the layer thickness, and the intrinsic tensions.
Especially good results were achieved with deposition on metal surfaces made of platinum in the production of micromechanical HF switching elements using the piezoelectric AlN layers produced in this way. With this preferred combination, an especially smooth surface of the dielectric layer results, which also contributes to increasing the long-term stability of the switching element.
The present micromechanical HF switching element has a freestanding movable element in a known way, such as a diaphragm or a flexing boom configuration, which is attached to suitable suspensions over a metal surface on the substrate. The dimensions and the material of the suspensions and of the movable element are selected in such way that this element is drawn by electrostatic attraction to the metal surface by applying an electrical voltage between the metal surface and the movable element. In the present HF switching element, a piezoelectric AlN layer having a columnar, polycrystalline structure and a texture is applied as a dielectric layer to the metal surface. The metal surface itself is a component of an HF signal line or may also merely be connected to a control line for controlled movement of the freestanding element, depending on the function of the switching element. In principle, the present switching element may be implemented as a capacitive HF switch or also as another electrostatically actuated HF switch, as are known from the prior art.
The present HF switching element will be explained once again briefly in the following on the basis of an exemplary embodiment in connection with the drawing.
The substrate 1, to which a signal line 2 for transmitting the HF signals is applied as a metal layer, is shown in the schematic illustration of a capacitive HF MEMS switch of
By applying an electrical voltage between the signal line 2 and the diaphragm 5, the diaphragm 5 is drawn down to the dielectric material 3, by which HF signals transmitted on the signal line 2 are reflected and thus blocked at this point. When the voltage is turned off, the diaphragm 5 detaches again from the dielectric material because of the intrinsic mechanical tension, so that the HF signals may pass again. To support the switching procedure, additional switch electrodes 6 may be implemented on the substrate 1 below the diaphragm 5, which are also provided with a dielectric layer.
Two switching electrodes 6 are located below the diaphragm 5, which are used for switching down the diaphragm 5 and may be contacted via terminal pads 8. The switching electrodes 6 are also provided with a dielectric material, which is composed of the dielectric AlN layer and an additional 250 nm thick PECVD nitride. By using the switching electrodes 6, high switching voltages do not have to be applied between the signal line 2 and the diaphragm 5, but rather only comparatively low retention voltages.
The switching procedure is performed in the following way. Firstly, the retention voltage is applied to the signal line 2. This retention voltage may be a DC voltage, an AC voltage, or a combination of both voltages. The diaphragm 5 of the switch still remains in the upper position (up position). The diaphragm 5 is drawn downward (down position) by a brief DC voltage pulse at the switching electrodes 6. It remains in this down position until the retention voltage is turned off. It then returns to the up position.
During a comparison of an HF switch of this type with the present suggested AlN switch using an identically constructed HF switch having a 110 nm thick PECVD Si3N4 layer as a dielectric material, significantly improved switching behavior and significantly lower charging of the present switch were able to be detected. In particular, in contrast to the PE nitride, with the present selected dielectric material, the polarity of the DC voltage component of the retention voltage did not have to be changed upon each switching procedure. A capacitance drop does not occur as the diaphragm is retained. The diaphragm remains down as long as the retention voltage is applied. After turning off the retention voltage, the diaphragm immediately jumps back up, even after a retention time of more than 1 hour. In contrast to this, the diaphragm already detaches again independently after a few seconds if a dielectric material made of PE nitride is used. This behavior is attributed to the significant charging of the PE nitride.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 026 654 | Jun 2004 | DE | national |
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PCT/DE2005/000966 | 5/27/2005 | WO | 00 | 9/7/2007 |
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WO2005/119831 | 12/15/2005 | WO | A |
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