The invention relates to electrically tunable ferroelectric thin film planar microwave devices, such as varactors, resonators, phase shifters, and filters, with particular reference to methods to manufacture such devices.
Use of ferroelectric material for the tuning element is one way of achieving electrically tunable microwave devices such as varactors, resonators, filters and phase shifters, whose operating characteristic can be altered by applying an electric field. Ferroelectric thin film based tunable microwave devices have the advantages of high switching speed, compactness, light weight, low power consumption, and high reliability relative to competing technologies.
Tunable planar ferroelectric devices are usually implemented on a substrate whose entire surface is covered by a ferroelectric thin film. High temperature super-conductors are often used for the conductive layers to obtain better performances such as very low insertion loss. Ideally the ferroelectric thin film should be patterned so that it is present only on selected areas of a substrate 11 (
In
One approach to achieving ferroelectric thin films on only selected regions has been to use “drop-in” pieces of ferroelectric thin film that were grown on a separate substrate and subsequently attached to another substrate with the patterned conductive layer circuit. However this approach usually requires an unacceptably large fabrication error tolerance and greatly complicates the fabrication process.
Another approach that has been used in the prior art to achieve a patterned ferroelectric thin film on a substrate has been to use chemical etching or ion beam milling. However, patterning a ferroelectric layer by chemical etching presents problems as ferroelectric thin film materials are very inert and chemicals capable of etching them will also etch the substrate or/and the conductive layers.
Thus, conventional chemical etching processes or ion beam milling will lead to a damaged substrate surface and/or conductive layer, resulting in a fabricated device that has poor performance. This problem of damaging the substrate surface and/or the conductive layer is especially severe in cases where a high temperature super-conductor is used for the conducting layer(s).
Conventional lift-off processes for patterning the ferroelectric thin film using an organic photoresist masking layer are also unsuitable due to the high temperature required for the deposition of the ferroelectric thin film.
A routine search of the prior art was performed with the following references of interest being found:
It has been an object of at least one embodiment of the present invention to provide a process for patterning a thin film that is highly resistant to conventional etching processes and that is to be deposited at a high substrate temperature.
Another object of at least one embodiment of the present invention has been to develop a fabrication process for electrically tunable microwave devices having patterned ferroelectric thin film tuning elements.
Still another object of at least one embodiment of the present invention has been to develop a fabrication process for a ferroelectric based memory element for use in a random access array.
These objects have been achieved by means of a method for fabricating patterned ferroelectric thin film based electrically tunable microwave devices without the problem of damaging either the substrate surface or conductive layers during the fabrication process of the device. The method involves deposition of a thermally stable masking material on a substrate; etching the masking material to reveal the required negative pattern for the ferroelectric thin film, deposition of the ferroelectric thin film, and removal of the masking material with accompanying liftoff of the unwanted regions of the ferroelectric thin film to produce the required ferroelectric thin film pattern.
A conductive layer, such as high temperature superconductor, can then be deposited on one or both sides of the substrate and patterned as required by the device design. The invention has the advantage of enabling the fabrication of a patterned ferroelectric thin film without degradation of either the substrate or conductive circuit layers, thereby improving the performance of the fabricated microwave devices. The invention also has the advantage of been readily incorporated into most fabrication processes used to fabricate ferroelectric thin films.
Possible applications of the invention are in the area of fabricating high performance tunable microwave devices required in modern microwave systems such as phase shifters used in phased array antennae (for radar tracking systems, multi-point communication systems and satellite broadcasting), tunable filters (for cellular base stations and relay satellites), tunable matching networks etc. The invention may also be applied to the manufacture of ferroelectric memory elements for use in random access arrays.
A layer of masking material, such as, but not limited to, YBa2Cu3O7-δ (Yttrium barium cuprate or YBCO) is deposited on a substrate suitable for the epitaxial deposition of the ferroelectric and conductive thin films, such as LaAlO3 (lanthanum aluminate or LAO) single crystal. The masking material should be thermally stable and able to be etched with an etchant that will not react with the substrate material. The thickness of the masking should be thicker than the required thickness of the ferroelectric thin film for better edge definition. The masking layer can be fabricated using thin film deposition technique such as pulsed laser deposition, sputtering, sol-gel process, chemical vapor deposition or any other thin film deposition method. In some cases, it may be necessary to deposit a masking layer on both faces of a substrate.
The masking layer, is then patterned by conventional photolithographic technique using an etchant that will not damage the substrate surface, for example diluted phosphoric (H3PO4) acid for YBCO thin film on LAO substrate. The pattern of the etched masking layer is a negative image of the required ferroelectric thin film pattern.
The required ferroelectric thin film, such as BaxSr1-xTiO3 (barium strontium titanate or BST) is deposited on the substrate with the patterned masking layer. Deposition of the ferroelectric can be carry out using thin film deposition technique such as pulsed laser deposition, sputtering, sol-gel process, chemical vapor deposition or any other thin film deposition method.
A key feature of the invention is that it enables the substrate to be processed at high deposition or annealing temperatures in the range required for producing ferroelectric thin film with optimum properties (temperatures of at least 650° C.). This becomes possible since the masking layer is thermally stable at these temperatures.
Upon completion of the deposition of the ferroelectric thin film, the remaining masking material is removed by etching with a chemical that will not damage the substrate surface, for example diluted acid such as phosphoric acid or nitric acid for a YBCO thin film on a LAO substrate with a BST ferroelectric thin film. Consequently, unwanted regions of the ferroelectric thin film are also removed, thereby leaving behind the required ferroelectric thin film pattern. This process may be supplemented by performing the etching in an ultrasonic bath.
A conductive layer (such as YBCO superconductor for example) can then be deposited on one or both sides of the substrate, as required by the particular device design. Deposition of the conductive layers can be implemented using standard thin film deposition technique such as pulsed laser deposition, sputtering, sol-gel processes, chemical vapor deposition, etc. and patterned as required by the design.
In the description of the invention above, while the fabrication process for making a tunable planar microwave device with patterned ferroelectric thin film is illustrated using YBCO superconducting thin film, barium strontium titanate ferroelectric thin film and LAO single crystal substrate, the invention is not restricted to these materials. The invention is also applicable to other materials (such as perovskite ferroelectrics) that required high deposition and annealing temperatures. Examples include, but not limited to, strontium titanate, barium titanate, potassium tantalate, potassium tantalate niobate etc., as well as their doped derivatives. Substrate can also be materials suitable for the epitaxial deposition of ferroelectric and conductive thin films such as (LaAlO3)0.3(Sr2AlTaO8)0.7, Al2O3, NdGO3, SrTiO3, MgAl2O4, YSZ, MgO, Si or GaAs with suitable buffer layers. Conductive layers can be materials such as copper perovskites high temperature superconductors or metals such as gold, silver or copper.
We detail below three process embodiments of the invention:
Referring now to
Next, as shown in
The process concludes with the deposition and patterning of conductive layer 71 as seen in
This embodiment, and the one that follows, teaches the formation of a ferroelectric memory element for use in a random access memory.
The process of the second embodiment is illustrated in
This is followed by the deposition and then patterning of insulating layer 37 so as to form access holes to said source, gate and drain areas as well as to fully uncover capacitor dielectric 36.
Next, coplanar capacitor electrodes 38 and 39 are formed on the top surface of capacitor dielectric 36. Although shown here as single plates, the coplanar electrodes 38 and 39 could have been be implemented in the form of interlacing fingers.
Finally, conductive layer 72 is deposited and then patterned to form connection 72c between source 31 and bit line 108 (see
The starting point for this embodiment is an FET device, generally part 125 of a silicon chip, as seen in
At this point, ferroelectric capacitor dielectric layer 126 is formed by using a refractory mask after the manner described above for the first embodiment. Although epitaxial growth of the ferroelectric layer to form a single crystal is now no longer possible, by depositing it at a substrate temperature of at least 350° C., followed by a suitable anneal, adequate permittivity for the purposes of a memory storage element can be achieved.
The process concludes with the deposition and patterning of a conductive layer to form upper capacitor electrode 68 as well as connections between source contact 61 and bit line 108 (se
As an application example of the first embodiment, a three-stage super-conducting YBCO thin film microstrip tunable filter, with patterned BST ferroelectric thin film, was fabricated and is illustrated in
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060201415 A1 | Sep 2006 | US |