The present invention relates to a parallel-plate structure fabrication method. Especially the present invention relates to a parallel-plate structure fabrication method for ferroelectric and piezoelectric thin film structure and to fabrication method for integrated structures based on said structures and e.g. thick metal inductors.
The present invention also relates to parallel-plate structures, and especially to e.g. ferroelectric and piezoelectric thin film structures and integrated structures based on the said structures and e.g. thick metal inductors.
Perovskite metal-oxides, such as BaxSr1-xTiO3 (hereinafter called “BST”), show exceptional material properties including (i) switchable permanent polarization (ferroelectric phase), (ii) piezoelectricity (ferroelectric phase), (iii) field-dependent (tunable) polarization (paraelectric phase), (iv) low losses at high frequencies (paraelectric phase). Tunability and low losses, typically obtained in the paraelectric phase, make these materials of special interest for high-frequency applications. An example of a basic device realizable using these materials is a tunable capacitor (varactor).
For optimal tunability, parallel-plate device geometry is highly desirable: here the perovskite metal-oxide is sandwiched between two (top and bottom) metallic electrodes. Using planar device geometries based on metal electrodes deposited only on top of the perovskite metal-oxide, it is difficult to obtain sufficient tunability.
In the prior art parallel-plate capacitor fabrication process, the layers are deposited successively on a substrate, ie. the metallic bottom electrode is first deposited on the substrate, then the BST layer is deposited on the metallic bottom electrode and finally the metallic top electrode is deposited on the BST.
High processing temperatures are required for proper crystallization of perovskite oxides (e.g. for BST, Tmin˜650° C.). The high temperature and the presence of oxygen make the parallel-plate device processing problematic. The metallic bottom electrode is heavily attacked during BST growth. Typical problems encountered in the bottom electrode are (i) electrode destruction via oxidation, (ii) grain growth resulting in poor BST quality. On the other hand, the electrode material should be well conducting to prevent the critical losses at high frequencies. Of typical metals, Cu, Ag, Al, and Au are well conducting but either get easily oxidized and/or are unstable substrates for BST growth due to their low melting point. A typical state-of-the-art choice for the bottom electrode is Pt, which, however, (i) is a significantly worse conductor than the metals above, (ii) will easily exhibit grain growth if thick layers are employed to reduce conductor losses. Furthermore, Pt is permeable with respect to oxygen, and reactive with respect to other metals—both effects complicating the fabrication of multilayered electrode structures. The refractory metals (Mo,W) are more stable against grain growth and they are intermediate conductors but get easily oxidized. Protective layers (e.g. diffusion barriers) can in principle be employed to protect the bottom electrode from oxidation, but it is difficult to obtain a well-protecting layer with minimal parasitic effects (e.g. non-tunable capacitance).
It is therefore an object of the present invention to eliminate the disadvantages of the prior art parallel-plate structure fabrication methods and to provide an improved method for fabrication of parallel-plate structures.
It is further an object of the present invention to eliminate the disadvantages of the prior art parallel-plate structures and to provide an improved parallel-plate structure arrangement.
The present invention provides a solution to the disadvantages of the prior art with an improved fabrication method which is based on layer transfer fabrication techniques and utilizes an auxiliary substrate on which the BST or a corresponding middle layer is first deposited.
In the invented processing method BST or another suitable material is grown first and the top and bottom electrodes are essentially deposited second utilizing layer transfer. Characteristic features of the present invention are in detail presented in the enclosed claims.
Key advantages of the present invention are:
The foregoing, and additional objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more clearly understood from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the present invention, taken in conjunction with accompanying drawings, in which:
a to 1d present process schematics for ferroelectric or piezoelectric (e.g. BST) thin film capacitor fabrication via layer transfer method.
a and 3b present preferred embodiments, where the processed layers, in particular the middle (e.g. BST) layer and the electrode layers, are patterned to create desired capacitor structures.
a and 4b present a preferred embodiment where two ferroelectric capacitors are placed in series and a DC contact is created to the (bottom) electrode contacting the two capacitors.
a to 5c present a side view and top view as well as coupling schema of a preferred embodiment where electrodeposition is employed to realize low-loss inductor structures via the thick top electrode layer, thereby allowing integrated, high-performance tunable LC-structures.
a to 6c present a side view and top view as well as coupling schema of another preferred embodiment where the low-loss inductor structures and the ferroelectric capacitors are used to realize an integrated, tunable impedance matching circuit.
a to 1d present process schematics for thin film capacitor fabrication via layer transfer method. The middle ferroelectric or piezoelectric (e.g. BST) layer 102 is sandwiched between two (top and bottom) metallic electrodes 101, 103 (see e.g.
The method is in detail illustrated in the following with reference to the following process steps: (1-2) BST growth and bottom electrode deposition on the first substrate (
In the invented processing method, as outlined in
Additional layers serving as adhesion layers and/or diffusion barriers 107, 108 can be employed (e.g. TiW) between the BST and the top and the bottom electrodes as shown in
Patterning of the layers to obtain desired capacitor structures. As shown as an example in
The process sequence easily allows also processing to create an ohmic contact creation to the bottom electrode 123 from the top metal 121 as shown in
a shows a schematic structure where a DC contact 140 is realized to the bottom electrode 113 (see
Thick metal deposition methods, electrodeposition growth in particular, can be applied to obtain thick top metal conductors. As shown in
Another preferred embodiment based on integrated low-loss inductors and tunable, ferroelectric capacitors is shown in
It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that the integrated structure described in
It is also obvious to the person skilled in the art that different embodiments of the invention are not limited to the examples described above, but that they may be varied within the scope of the enclosed claims. The process sequence is illustrated using BST as an example, but the method is applicable to any perovskite metal-oxide, or similar material, such as ZnO, AlN, SiO2, Si3N4, CN, etc., that requires processing conditions destructive for the electrodes. It is also obvious that the capacitors may serve not only as lumped elements but also as part of distributed structures such as transmission lines. It is further obvious to the person skilled in the art that the present invention may be applied to the parallel plate structures that exhibit acoustic resonances which are transduced via piezoelectric or electrostrictive middle layer. Such structures can thus be operated as a FBAR (Thin Film Bulk Acoustic Resonator) or as a TFBAR (Tunable Thin Film Bulk Acoustic Resonator). Further, the structure may contain additional layers acting as acoustic mirrors.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20060832 | Sep 2006 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2007/000232 | 9/14/2007 | WO | 00 | 3/11/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/034940 | 3/27/2008 | WO | A |
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