The present invention relates to semiconductor circuits, and particularly to phase change material based temperature sensor circuits and methods of operating and manufacturing the same.
A phase change material typically refers to a chalcogenide material that has multiple crystalline states. Depending on a cooling rate from a liquid state, the chalcogenide material may form an amorphous chalcogenide glass or a chalcogenide crystal. The difference between the two states is physically characterized by presence or absence of a long range order. Further, the crystalline and amorphous states of the chalcogenide material have drastically different resistivity values. By manipulating the phase of the chalcogenide material, a binary data bit may be written into a phase change memory (PCM) device. By detecting the phase of the chalcogenide material, typically in the form of a resistivity measurement, the binary data bit stored in the PCM device may be read. Many types of PCM devices employing these methods are known in the art.
A typical chalcogenide material used in PCM devices is a germanium, antimony and tellurium compound commonly called GST (Ge2Se2Te5). Along with oxygen, sulfur, selenium, and polonium, tellurium belongs to the chalcogen group, hence the name chalcogenide material.
Referring to
In a prior art PCM device as shown in
A crystalline phase change material having a low resistivity value may be formed by raising the temperature of the phase change material to a crystallization temperature, which is typically around 300° C. and is below the melting temperature. Upon heating of the phase changing portion 32 above a recrystallization temperature but below the melting temperature, the phase changing portion 32 becomes a crystallized phase change material portion 32c as shown in
As the power density of semiconductor devices increases in successive semiconductor technology generations with continued scaling of dimensions, the operational temperature of semiconductor devices increases. Precise characterization of local operational temperature of semiconductor devices becomes important in modeling the performance of semiconductor circuits. Further, real time monitoring of the temperature of semiconductor devices during operation allows controlled modulation of the operational frequency of semiconductor devices to help reduce heat-related performance degradation. For example, if a portion of a chip becomes excessively hot enough to cause a degradation of overall chip performance, a controller may instruct the portion of the circuit around the hot spot to operate at a lower frequency until the local temperature returns to a normal level.
In addition, some reliability test conditions subject a semiconductor chip to an elevated ambient temperature while operating the chip under the assumption that the combination of the internal heating from the chip operation and the ambient bias would provide a stress condition that accelerates degradation of the chip at a calculated pace. Such a reliability testing often assumes that the physical temperature within the chip under stress would be at an estimated temperature. However, the true temperature of the chip may vary locally depending on the power density during the chip operation, which is hard to estimate accurately, rendering an estimated local internal temperature subject to error. Thus, temperature profiling of a chip during chip operation provides valuable information that may be advantageously used to improve chip performance or to improve validity of chip testing under stress.
Precise measurement of internal local temperature of a chip is in general difficult to achieve. While temperature profiling circuits utilizing temperature dependence of the band gap width in semiconductor materials are known, the magnitude of change in the band gap is small, thus requiring a rather complicated and bulky sensing circuit. Other mechanisms for detecting local chip temperature are known, but most of them require a complex signal amplification circuitry and are prone to noise due to small magnitude of the signal from temperature detection elements.
Therefore, there exists a need for a structure and circuit that provides a strong temperature dependent signal and reliable temperature sensing, and methods of operating and manufacturing the same.
The present invention addresses the needs described above by providing a phase change material based temperature sensor, a circuit that employs such a temperature sensor, and methods of operating and manufacturing the same.
Specifically, a block of the phase change material is formed on a semiconductor device with at least two contacts thereupon. The block of phase change material may be connected through metal wiring to input/output pads. The block of phase change material may also be connected to a resetting transistor that is capable of passing sufficient current to reset the phase of the phase change material to an amorphous state. Further, the block of phase change material may be connected to an internal resistance measurement circuit that can transmit measured resistance data to input/output pads either in an analog output format or in a digital output format. Depending on the ambient temperature, the resistance of the block of phase change material changes. By measuring a fractional resistance change compared to the resistance of the phase change material at a calibration temperature, the temperature of the region around the phase change material can be accurately measured. A logic decoder and an input/output circuit may be employed between the internal resistance measurement circuit and the input/output pads. A plurality of temperature sensing circuits containing phase change material blocks may be employed in a semiconductor chip to enable an accurate temperature profiling during chip operation.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, a semiconductor circuit comprises:
The block of phase change material may abut a semiconductor component selected from the group consisting of source and drain regions, an emitter, a collector, a gate, a diode, and a resistor.
The block of phase change material may abut a semiconductor substrate such as a single crystalline silicon substrate.
A bottom surface of the block of phase change material may be located within in close proximity, e.g., 20 nm in one embodiment from a top surface of a semiconductor substrate.
According to anther embodiment of the present invention, a semiconductor circuit comprises:
According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, a semiconductor circuit comprises:
The semiconductor circuit may comprise a programming transistor connected to the block and the metal wiring, wherein the programming transistor is capable of resetting the block of phase change material to an amorphous state by passing current through the resistor.
The semiconductor circuit may further comprise an amorphous state resetting circuit, wherein the amorphous state resetting circuit incorporates the programming transistor and controls current through the block.
The semiconductor circuit may further comprise a logic decoder and input/output circuit connected to the amorphous state resetting circuit, the resistance measurement circuit, and the at least two input/output pads.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a method of measuring an operating temperature of a semiconductor chip comprises:
The method may further comprise modifying the fitting function by matching the fitting function with a measured value of resistivity of the phase change material at a standard condition prior to calculating the temperature.
The measured value of resistivity at the standard condition may be derived from a standard condition current measurement through the block.
The fitting function may be a polynomial of temperature having at least one segment and defined below a crystallization temperature.
According to yet another aspect of the present invention, a method of forming a semiconductor structure comprises:
The block of the phase change material may abut the at least one semiconductor component.
The method may further comprise forming an insulator layer such as a gate dielectric that is less than 20 nm thick, wherein the insulator layer abuts the at least one semiconductor component and the block of the phase change material.
A bottom surface of the block of phase change material may be located in close proximity, e.g., within about 20 nm from a top surface of a semiconductor substrate.
The method may further comprise forming at least another semiconductor circuit component which is capable of providing a programming current through the block of the phase change material, wherein the programming current melts the block and resets the state of the block to an amorphous state upon cooling.
The method may further comprise forming at least another semiconductor circuit component which is capable of providing a measurement current through the block of the phase change material, wherein the temperature of the block upon passing the measurement current increases by less than 10 degrees Celsius, and preferably by less than 3 degrees.
a)-2(c) are prior art phase change memory (PCM) element structures with different states of a phase changing portion.
a) shows quadratic fitting curve 200 for the resistivity of an exemplary amorphous phase change material.
b) shows a bi-sectional linear fitting curve 212 for the resistivity of an exemplary amorphous phase change material.
As stated above, the present invention relates to phase change material based temperature sensor circuits and methods of operating and manufacturing the same, which are now described in detail with accompanying figures. It is noted that like and corresponding elements are referred to by like reference numerals.
Referring to
Referring to a first part of step 610 of the flowchart in
Referring to
Typical phase change memory devices change the state of a phase change material between an amorphous state and a crystalline state and employ a sensing circuit that determines the state of the phase change material with a binary logic by comparing a measured value of the resistivity of the phase change material with a reference value which is set between a crystalline state value and an amorphous state value. In contrast, the present invention maintains the state of a phase change material in an amorphous state. A sensing circuitry measures the values of the resistivity of the phase change material to determine the temperature of the ambient of the phase change material.
Referring to a second part of the step 610 in
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to step 620 of the flowchart in
Referring to
A layer of phase change material (not shown) is deposited on the at least one semiconductor component. The layer of the phase change material may comprise any of the phase change material described above. In the process of forming the first exemplary structure, the layer of the phase change material may be deposited prior to or after the formation of source and drain silicide 80 and the gate silicide 82. A block 88 of the phase change material is formed on the at least one semiconductor component, e.g., on the drain 54 of the MOSFET, by lithographic patterning and etching of the layer of the phase change material. The block 88 may abut the at least one semiconductor component, e.g., the drain 54 of the MOSFET. A middle-of-line (MOL) dielectric layer 90 is formed over the semiconductor substrate 8 and over the block 88 of the phase change material. Contact via holes are formed within the MOL dielectric layer 90 and filled with metal to form at least two metal contacts 92 connected to the block 88 of the phase change material. Other metal contacts 93 may be formed to the at least one semiconductor component, e.g., the various components of the MOSFET. A metal wiring 94 is formed over the MOL dielectric and within back-end-of-line (BEOL) dielectric layers.
The size of the block 88 of the phase change material may be limited by the features of the block 88, i.e., the number of metal contacts 92 to be formed thereupon. The smallest dimension of the block 88 may be limited by the critical dimension of lithography tools, i.e., the minimum size of a printable image. The lateral dimensions, e.g., a length and a width, of the block 88 of the phase change material may be in the range from about 50 nm to about 200 nm. The thickness of the block 88 of the phase change material may be in the range from about 20 nm to about 200 nm.
At least two input/output pads (not shown in
Referring to
It is noted herein that the block 88 of the phase change material is located either directly on a front-end-of-line (FEOL) semiconductor component such as source and drain regions, an emitter, a collector, a gate, a diode, and a resistor, or located within a close proximity of the FEOL semiconductor component, e.g., within 20 nm therefrom. Typical middle-of-line dielectric layer 90, within which metal contacts (92, 93) are formed, has a thickness in the range from about 200 nm to about 500 nm Therefore, the block 88 of the phase change material is located beneath a top surface of the MOL dielectric, or beneath a bottom surface of the lowest level metal wiring, i.e., metal wiring closest to the semiconductor substrate 8.
The block 88 of the phase change material contacts at least two metal contacts 92 to enable current measurement capability. The number of contacts to the block 88 may be increased as needed to enable the level of accuracy in the resistance measurement of the block 88 of the phase change material.
Referring to
Referring to step 630 of the flowchart in
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The control circuit 110 comprises at least a resistance measurement circuit that enables resistance measurement through the block 88 of the phase change material. A first subset 108A of the first metal wiring 108 supplies current or voltage across the block 88 of the phase change material and carries output current or voltage from the block 88 of the phase change material to the resistance measurement circuit. The output current or voltage is converted into the resistance of the phase change material. Resistivity of the phase change material in the block 88 is calculated from the known geometry of the block 88.
A programming transistor may also be provided in the control circuit 110. The programming transistor is connected to the block 88 of the phase change material and the second subset 108B of the first metal wiring 108. The programming transistor is capable of passing sufficient current through the block 88 of the phase change material to reset the block 88 to an amorphous state.
Preferably, an amorphous state resetting circuit is also provided within the control circuit 110. The amorphous state resetting circuit incorporates the programming transistor and controls current through the block 88 during the resetting of the block 88 into an amorphous state.
A logic decoder and input/output circuit may also be provided within the control circuit 110. The logic decoder and input/output circuit is connected to the resistance measurement circuit through a first internal metal wiring 109A, to the amorphous state resetting circuit through a second internal wiring 109B, and to the at least two input/output pads 99 through the second metal wiring 118.
Referring to step 640 of the flowchart in
The variations in the resistance of the blocks 88 of the phase change material as measured at the standard measurement temperature may be caused by process variations, such as variations in the composition of the phase change material and/or variations in the dimensions of the phase change material. Referring to
Referring to step 650 of the flowchart in
Referring to step 660 of the flowchart in
While the invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments, it is evident in view of the foregoing description that numerous alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the invention is intended to encompass all such alternatives, modifications and variations which fall within the scope and spirit of the invention and the following claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/771,033, filed Jun. 29, 2007 the entire content and disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Child | 12819721 | US |