The present invention relates to the fabrication of MOS transistors. In particular, the invention relates to a method for fabricating high-voltage NMOS transistors with improved characteristics.
High voltage power integrated circuits (IC) devices are growing in demand, such as in flat panel display drivers, power regulators, motor controllers, and so on. These power IC are often integrated with low voltage circuitry on a single chip, for example, using the standard metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) technology.
A typical MOS transistor 10 consists of a gate 20, a drain 30 and a source 40. The drain 30 and the source 40 can be n-type or p-type material.
The HV NMOS transistor 10 shown in
The MOS fabrication techniques rely heavily on masking and etching of materials on a semiconductor wafer. Inherently, the walls of a well or recess created by etching are not entirely vertical.
In operation, the double-hump NMOS characteristic results in a small drain leakage current. With power ICs using high voltage NMOS transistors integrated with low-voltage MOS devices, drain leakage current poses a problem, especially for portable electronic equipment running on batteries, which have finite battery power.
The double-hump phenomenon also appears to be caused by other IC fabrication techniques. For example, Cho, et al. in “The Effect of Corner Transistors in STI-isolated SOI MOSFETs”, Seoul National University Journal, vol. 28, 2005, discusses the effect of parasitic transistor created at the corners of the gate TEOS sidewalls. A similar subject of discussion is also made by Haneder, et al., “Optimization of Ultra High Density MOS Arrays in 3D”, Proceeding of the 27th European, Solid-State Device Research Conference, 22-24 Sep. 1997, pp 268-271.
It can thus be seen that there exists a need for a method for fabricating MOS devices with improved transistor characteristic and lower drain current leakage. In the corollary, the threshold voltage Vt of the edge transistor needs to be increased to suppress the double hump phenomenon.
The following presents a simplified summary to provide a basic understanding of the present invention. This summary is not an extensive overview of the invention, and is not intended to identify key features of the invention. Rather, it is to present some of the inventive concepts of this invention in a simplified form as a prelude to the detailed description that is to follow.
The present invention provides a method for fabricating a transistor with suppressed edge transistor effect. The method comprises: forming an elongate limb to extend from each of two sidewalls of an implanted well in which the transistor is fabricated such that said elongate limb partially wraps around a respective end of a gate and overlies a portion thereof so that the transistor does not exhibit a double-hump transfer characteristic at relatively high gate voltages. Thus, a transistor fabricated according to the present invention has reduced drain leakage current.
In one embodiment of the elongate limb, each limb extends into the transistor's active drift implant regions by a dimension Y. In one embodiment, the dimension Y ranges from about 0 to about 1 μm. In another embodiment, the width T of the limb ranges from about 0.3 μm to about 5 μm. In yet another embodiment, the limb is formed by doping with a concentration that ranges from about 1×1012 to about 4×1015 atoms/cm2.
In one embodiment of the transistor, the transistor is an NMOS and the well is doped with a p-type material. The concentration of the p-type doping in the elongate limbs may be the same or different from that in the p-well.
In another embodiment of the transistor, the elongate limbs are parallel to and overlay a longitudinal axis of the gate. In another embodiment, the elongate limbs are offset from the longitudinal axis of the gate towards the drain side. In yet another embodiment, the elongate limbs are joined up with each other. In yet a further embodiment, each elongate limb further comprises a vertical limb portion extending from the respective sidewall of the p-well.
This invention will be described by way of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
One or more specific and alternative embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the attached drawings. It shall be apparent to one skilled in the art, however that this invention may be practised without such specific details. Some of the details may not be described at length so as not to obscure the invention. For ease of reference, common reference numerals or series of numerals will be used throughout the figures when referring to the same or similar features common to the figures.
The inventors have found that forming each p-field implanted limb 110 to partially wrap over and overlay each end of the gate 20 advantageously modifies the electric field around each longitudinal end of the gate 20. As a result, the p-field limbs 110 suppress the undesirable effect of the edge transistors and minimize the leakage current that causes the double-hump character.
The threshold voltage Vt can be analysed by the effective gate channel width W. The threshold voltage Vt of the edge or corner transistor corresponding to a wider channel width (W+ΔW) is given by the following equation:
wherein A is a process constant;
ΔW is the increase in channel width, W;
μ is the surface mobility of transistor;
Cox is the capacitance per unit area of gate oxide; and
Leff is the effective channel length.
From the above equation, it is noted that the drain current Id is a linear function of the channel width W. By measuring the drain currents Id and plotting them against different channel widths W, the negative x-axis intercept would give a measure of the increase ΔW in channel width. One way of reducing the double hump phenomenon is to reduce the channel width W and increase the channel concentration.
In an embodiment where the sidewalls 14a, 14b of the deep p-well 14 may not extend to a horizontal plane at the same level as the top of the gate 20, each elongate limb 110, 110a may include a vertical limb portion 114 extending from the sidewalls 14a, 14b. In one embodiment, the cross-section of the elongate limb 110, 11a and/or vertical limb portion 114 is/are quadrilateral or square; in another embodiment, the cross-section of the elongate limb 110, 11a and/or vertical limb portion 114 is/are formed in other shapes. In another embodiment, the cross-sectional area of the elongate limb 110, 110a and/or vertical limb portion 114 is/are non-uniform; the cross-sectional area may be variable, for example, is tapering. In yet another embodiment, the elongate limb 110, 110a and/or the vertical limb portion 114 is/are formed with two or more components.
As the source 30 and the body 50 are typically grounded in an NMOS transistor 100, the electric field in the active drain region is high. To modify the high electric filed in the gate 20 at the drain side, the elongate limb 110, 110a and/or the vertical limb portion 114 is offset from the longitudinal axis of the gate 20 towards the drain 30 side in a further embodiment of the present invention, such as for an asymmetric MOS device having only a drain drift region 32. In another embodiment of this NMOS transistor 100, the two elongate opposing limbs 110, 110a are joined up to form a single elongate limb overlying the entire longitudinal length of the gate 20 at the drain 30 side without interfering with the gate via structure 28.
As shown in
In the next process at step 212, low voltage (LV) (for example, 1.8 and 5 V) implants (such as, anti-punch through, corner transistor Vt adjustment, and so on) and wells are formed for low voltage transistor devices that are complementary to the HV NMOS transistors 100. At the same time, the p-field implantation process for forming the p-field implanted limb 110, 110a is formed with the same masks and implant conditions with such LV p-well implants. The p-field implantation process is common to both the HV and LV devices and there is no additional cost incurred in respect to additional masks and process time. Following this, LV gate oxides are then formed by a thermal oxidation process, in step 214, on the LV devices. Polysilicon 20 is then deposited, patterned and etched, in step 216, to form the gate electrodes for both the HV and LV devices. Asymmetry HV oxide etch is then performed in step 218, followed by a polysilicon re-oxidation process in step 220; partial fabrication of the HV NMOS transistor 100 is now shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In another embodiment of the HV NMOS fabrication process 200, an addition low doped polysilicon (LPP) implantation in step 232 is performed between the gate spacer 29 forming step 230 and the drain/source forming step 234. This LPP implantation provides an additional implant layer to give the polysilicon 20 high resistance.
In another embodiment of the HV NMOS fabrication process 200, the HV asymmetry source LDD implant is integrated with the 5V LDD implant, that is, process steps 226 is integrated into step 224.
While specific embodiments have been described and illustrated, it is understood that many changes, modifications, variations and combinations thereof could be made to the present invention without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, the elongate limb 110 may be formed with a higher concentration of p-type material than the sidewalls of the deep p-well such that the dimensions X, Y and Z can be varied, yet allowing the elongate limbs 110 to advantageously suppress the expression of the edge transistors at the longitudinal ends of the gate 20. Although a high-voltage NMOS structure 100 has been used in the description, a person skilled in the art would appreciate that the principle of this invention can also be applied to suppress leakage currents in PMOS transistors. For example, in fabricating a PMOS transistor, an additional process step 210 is carried after process step 208. In process step 210, the PMOS channel is implanted to adjust the PMOS threshold voltage towards the desired specification. The 5V PMOS LDD implant may then be carried out in process step 224. Whilst specific diffusion techniques have not been described, a skilled person would appreciate that different diffusion techniques, such as lateral double diffusion (LDD) or drift/extended drain (DD) can be incorporated into the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PI 20070840 | May 2007 | MY | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/MY2008/000044 | 5/15/2008 | WO | 00 | 5/11/2010 |