This application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2009-164859 filed on Jul. 13, 2009, the disclosure of which including the specification, the drawings, and the claims is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present disclosure relates to a solid-state imaging device including a light-receiving portion such as a photoelectric transducer.
Typically, in a metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) sensor, for example, a photodiode is provided for each of pixels arranged in a two-dimensional matrix pattern on the light-receiving surface. A signal charge generated and accumulated in each photodiode when light is received is transferred to a floating diffusion by driving a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) circuit, and read after being converted to a signal voltage.
In a solid-state imaging device such as a CMOS sensor described above, for example, a photodiode is formed on the surface of a semiconductor substrate, and an insulating film made of silicon oxide, or the like, is formed so as to cover the upper surface thereof. In an area of the insulating film excluding the photodiode area, a wiring layer is formed so as not to prevent light from entering the photodiode.
However, the area of the light-receiving surface of such a solid-state imaging device as described above has been decreased due to device miniaturization, which has led to a decrease in the light incidence efficiency and the deterioration in the sensitivity characteristic.
As a countermeasure against this, structures have been developed for condensing light by using on-chip lens or an inner-layer lens. Solid-state imaging devices have been developed where an optical waveguide for guiding incident light from outside onto the photodiode is provided in a portion of an insulting film over the photodiode.
Patent Document 1 discloses a solid-state imaging device in which a depressed portion is formed in a portion of an insulating film over the photodiode and filling the depressed portion with silicon nitride which is a material having a higher refractive index than silicon oxide (hereinafter, referred to as a high-refractive-index material), thus forming an optical waveguide for guiding the incident light onto the photodiode.
Patent Document 2 discloses a solid-state imaging device in which a depressed portion formed in a portion of an insulating film over the photodiode is filled with a silicon nitride film and a polyimide film in this order, thus forming an optical waveguide.
Patent Document 3 discloses a solid-state imaging device in which a depressed portion having a regular tapered shape is formed in a portion of an insulating film over the photodiode, and the depressed portion is filled with silicon nitride, thus forming an optical waveguide.
PATENT DOCUMENT 1: Japanese Patent No. 4117672
PATENT DOCUMENT 2: Japanese Published Patent Application No. 2004-207433
PATENT DOCUMENT 3: Japanese Patent No. 4120543
Now, when a solid-state imaging device is downsized, the cell size decreases, and the opening width of the waveguide depressed portion also decreases, thus increasing the aspect ratio of the waveguide depressed portion. In such a case, when the waveguide depressed portion is filled with a high-refractive-index insulating film as disclosed in Patent Document 1, a void is formed in the waveguide depressed portion after the filling process. This is a phenomenon which occurs because the growth rate in the high-refractive-index insulating film formation on the side surface of the waveguide depressed portion is smaller than the growth rate in the high-refractive-index insulating film formation in the entrance portion of the waveguide depressed portion. In the presence of such a void, light entering the waveguide is scattered by the void, and therefore the light condensing efficiency onto the photodiode is significantly lowered from that when no waveguide is formed.
Also in the solid-state imaging device disclosed in Patent Document 2 or Patent Document 3, a void is formed when filling the waveguide depressed portion with the high-refractive-index insulating film, therefore it is not possible to avoid the problem described above.
In view of the above, an object of the present disclosure is to provide a solid-state imaging device capable of realizing a higher light condensing efficiency than when no waveguide is formed by filling a waveguide depressed portion with a high-refractive-index material without forming a void.
In order to achieve the object above, a solid-state imaging device according to the present disclosure includes: a semiconductor substrate having, on a side of a light-receiving surface thereof, an image sensing region in which a plurality of pixels are formed; a photodiode formed for each of the pixels of the semiconductor substrate; a signal reading portion formed for each of the pixels of the semiconductor substrate for reading a signal charge produced by the photodiode; an insulating film formed on the semiconductor substrate; a depressed portion formed in a portion of the insulating film over the photodiode; a first buried film covering a side surface and a bottom surface of the depressed portion and having a higher refractive index than the insulating film; and a second buried film formed on the first buried film so as to fill up the depressed portion and having a higher refractive index than the insulating film, wherein a cross sectional area of the depressed portion along a plane parallel to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate gradually increases at positions further away from the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate.
In the solid-state imaging device according to the present disclosure, an area of the photodiode along a plane parallel to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate may be larger than an area of the bottom surface of the depressed portion and smaller than an opening area of an uppermost portion of the depressed portion.
In the solid-state imaging device according to the present disclosure, the insulating film may include a plurality of insulating layers each having a wire buried therein and having an anti-diffusion layer on an upper surface side thereof, and the bottom surface of the depressed portion may be formed at a position that is closer to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate than the anti-diffusion layer closest to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate. In this case, the solid-state imaging device may further include an etch-stop layer formed at a position that is closer to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate than the anti-diffusion layer closest to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate, wherein a distance from the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate to the bottom surface of the depressed portion may be substantially equal to a distance from the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate to an upper surface of the etch-stop layer. That is, the etch-stop layer may be formed in advance at a predetermined depth in the insulating film, and the insulating film may be etched by using the etch-stop layer, thereby forming the depressed portion reaching the etch-stop layer.
In the solid-state imaging device according to the present disclosure, the insulating film may be formed also in a pad region outside the image sensing region of the semiconductor substrate, a pad electrode may be formed on a portion of the insulating film in the pad region, the first buried film may be a passivation film formed on the insulating film so as to cover a portion of the pad electrode, and a distance from the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate to an upper surface of the second buried film may be substantially equal to a distance from the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate to an upper surface of a portion of the passivation film over the pad electrode. In this case, the second buried film may not be formed on a portion of the passivation film over the pad electrode.
In the solid-state imaging device according to the present disclosure, the first buried film may be a silicon nitride film.
In the solid-state imaging device according to the present disclosure, the second buried film is a resin layer. In this case, the resin layer may contain a siloxane-based resin or a polyimide-based resin.
According to the present disclosure, the cross sectional area of the waveguide depressed portion gradually increases at positions further away from the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate. Therefore, even if the waveguide depressed portion has a large aspect ratio, by covering the side surface and the bottom surface of the waveguide depressed portion with a relatively thin first buried film, e.g., a silicon nitride film, it is possible to prevent the first buried film from blocking the entrance of the waveguide depressed portion to form a void in the waveguide depressed portion. Therefore, the second buried film, e.g., a resin layer, can be formed on the first buried film so as to completely fill up the waveguide depressed portion. That is, it is possible to fill up the waveguide depressed portion with a high-refractive-index material without forming a void therein, and it is therefore possible to maintain a high light condensing efficiency as compared with a case where no waveguide is formed. Therefore, it is possible to maximize the condensation of light from the lens onto the photodiode, which is the basic function of a solid-state imaging device such as an image sensor, and it is therefore possible to realize a solid-state imaging device with a high sensitivity.
Thus, the present disclosure makes it possible to fill up a waveguide depressed portion with a high-refractive-index material without forming a void therein, and is useful as a solid-state imaging device.
A solid-state imaging device according to each embodiment of the present disclosure will now be described with reference to the drawings, with respect to a MOS image sensor (CMOS image sensor) as an example.
As shown in
In the present embodiment, a floating diffusion is formed for each pixel in a surface portion of the photodiode 101 under the gate electrode 105 as a signal reading portion for reading a signal charge produced and stored in the photodiode 101 or a voltage corresponding to the signal charge. Thus, a signal charge can be transferred by applying a voltage to the gate electrode 105.
As shown in
In the present embodiment, a barrier metal layer made of a layered structure of a tantalum film and a tantalum nitride film, for example, may be formed so as to cover the bottom surface and the side surface of each of the copper wires 107A-107C. Each of the copper wires 107A-107C may be a wire structure formed by a dual damascene process, for example, including as an integral unit a wire groove and a via hole extending from the bottom surface of the wire groove to reach to a wire of a lower layer, etc. The anti-diffusion films 108A-108C prevent the diffusion of copper of the copper wires 107A-107C, respectively.
As shown in
On the other hand, as shown in
In the present embodiment, in order to efficiently condense light even when the photodiode area is reduced following advancements in the miniaturization of pixel cells, it is preferred that the area of the bottom surface of the depressed portion 150 is smaller than the area of the photodiode 101 (accurately, the area on a plane parallel to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate 100; this applies throughout the present specification), and the opening area of the uppermost portion of the depressed portion 150 is larger than the area of the photodiode 101. The reason will now be described with reference to
In the present embodiment, it is preferred that the bottom surface of the depressed portion 150 is closer to the substrate surface than the bottom surface of the lowermost anti-diffusion film (i.e., the first anti-diffusion film 108A). The reason will be described below with reference to
In the present embodiment, the aspect ratio of the depressed portion 150 may be set to about 1-2 or more, and the depth of the depressed portion 150 may be set to about 1500 nm, for example.
As shown in
In the present embodiment, the buried layer 111 may be formed by a high-refractive-index resin such as, for example, a siloxane-based resin (refractive index: about 1.7-1.9) or a polyimide-based resin. The refractive index of the buried layer 111 can be increased to about 1.8-1.9 if such a high-refractive-index resin contains therein minute particles of a metal oxide such as titanium oxide, tantalum oxide, niobium oxide, tungsten oxide, zirconium oxide, zinc oxide, indium oxide, or hafnium oxide, for example.
In the present embodiment, the buried layer 111 is not formed on a portion of the passivation film 110 over the pad electrode 116. Alternatively, the buried layer 111 may be formed on the portion of the passivation film 110 over the pad electrode 116.
Moreover, as shown in
Note that no color filter is formed in the pad electrode region RB. The various layers (the passivation film 110, the buried layer 111, the flattening resin layer 112, the flattening layer 114, and a resin layer forming the microlens 115) formed on the fourth insulating film 109C in the pad electrode region RB are opened so that upper surface of the pad electrode 116 is exposed therethrough.
In the solid-state imaging device of the present embodiment described above, an optical waveguide is formed by burying a high-refractive-index material in the depressed portion (waveguide depressed portion) 150 formed in a portion of the insulating film layered structure over the photodiode 101, and the passivation film 110 formed on the pad electrode 116 is buried in the depressed portion 150 as the high-refractive-index material. Therefore, an optical waveguide having a high heat resistance and a high refractive index can be formed through a simpler process.
With the solid-state imaging device of the present embodiment, the cross sectional area of the depressed portion 150 taken along a plane parallel to the light-receiving surface of the semiconductor substrate 100 gradually increases at positions further away from the light-receiving surface. Therefore, even if the depressed portion 150 has a large aspect ratio, by covering the side surface and the bottom surface of the depressed portion 150 with the relatively thin passivation film 110, e.g., a silicon nitride film, it is possible to prevent the passivation film 110 from blocking the entrance of the depressed portion 150 to form a void in the depressed portion 150. Therefore, the buried layer 111, e.g., a resin layer, can be formed on the passivation film 110 so as to completely fill up the depressed portion 150. That is, it is possible to fill up the depressed portion 150 with a high-refractive-index material without forming a void therein, and it is therefore possible to maintain a high light condensing efficiency as compared with a case where no waveguide is formed. Therefore, it is possible to maximize the condensation of light from the lens onto the photodiode, which is the basic function of a solid-state imaging device such as an image sensor, and it is therefore possible to realize a solid-state imaging device with a high sensitivity.
Note that in the present embodiment, the passivation film 110 formed on the pad electrode 116 is buried in the depressed portion 150 as the high-refractive-index material. Alternatively, a film made of a high-refractive-index material different from the passivation film 110 may be formed in the depressed portion 150 as a base layer under the buried layer 111.
In the solid-state imaging device of the present embodiment, it is possible to employ a configuration where logic circuits, etc., are mixed together on the same chip, for example. In such a case, the passivation film forming the optical waveguide (the passivation film 110 buried in the depressed portion 150) may be used as a passivation film also in another region such as a logic circuit region.
This variation differs from the first embodiment in that, as shown in
According to this variation, when the depressed portion 150 is formed by using dry etching, the etching can be stopped at the etch-stop layer 118 by forming in advance the etch-stop layer 118. Therefore, pixel-to-pixel variations in the depth of the depressed portion 150 can be made very small, and it is therefore possible to reduce pixel-to-pixel variations in characteristics such as the light condensing efficiency (sensitivity). Therefore, it is possible to reduce variations in characteristics such as the sensitivity due to variations in the depth of the depressed portion 150 and to thereby improve the characteristics such as the sensitivity.
Note that in this variation, the etch-stop layer 118 is formed between the lower surface of the first anti-diffusion film 108A and the lower surface of the first copper wire 107A. Alternatively, the etch-stop layer 118 may be formed immediately under the first copper wire 107A or between the lower surface of the first copper wire 107A and the upper surface of the gate electrode 105.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-164859 | Jul 2009 | JP | national |