The field of the invention is that of integrated circuit processing, in particular DRAM cells having vertical pass transistors.
In the fabrication of vertical-transistor DRAM cells, both in DRAMs and in DRAM arrays in ASICs and other complex systems, the formation of the capacitor removes silicon from the trench walls in the upper part of the trench, producing an overhang of the pad nitride.
That overhang interferes with filling the upper part of the trench with the gate electrode, leaving voids in the gate electrode that are disadvantageous.
Further, for a given ground rule and inter-cell spacing, the space for bitline contacts to the upper electrode of the vertical transistor is limited. The removal of silicon from the upper trench walls further reduces the width of the bitline contacts, extending outward from the trench walls into the silicon well.
Expanding the width of the cell to accommodate a wider trench and a wider bitline contact is not an option, given the overwhelming need to reduce the transverse dimensions of the cells.
As the demand for higher performance devices increases steadily, one attractive option is the use of strained silicon to improve electron mobility.
A feature of the invention is compensation for the overhang of the pad nitride in a trench capacitor vertical-transistor DRAM cell by forming an epitaxial strained silicon layer on the trench walls that improves transistor mobility.
Another feature of the invention is that the added silicon removes voids from the poly trench fill.
Yet another feature of the invention is that the extra width of the added silicon reduces resistance on the bitline contact.
Yet another feature of the invention is that forming a vertical strained silicon channel improves the performance of the vertical device.
Layer 20 is formed on the surface of substrate 10 to accommodate the difference in atomic spacing of the two materials. There will be dislocations and other material defects in layer 20 that would be detrimental to transistor operation. As is known in the art, layer 30, a fully relaxed SiGe layer, is formed to hold the transistors, not only in the cell illustrated, but also, optionally, in logic circuits containing planar transistors that are formed elsewhere in an integrated circuit that contains the DRAM cell illustrated.
Aperture 110 is a deep trench, e.g. 8 microns deep, that will contain a DRAM cell having a vertical field effect transistor (FET) for an access device, as is known in the art.
The invention may be used with a DRAM integrated circuit, or with a circuit having other functions that contains a DRAM array. In contemporary practice, many composite systems that are fabricated in integrated circuit form, include memories that are formed from DRAMs.
A collar 107 (illustratively oxide) has been formed after the completion of the initial portion of the capacitor and before the extension of the central electrode. Oxide collars are conventional and are formed by oxidizing the vertical silicon (and/or the SiGe) exposed by the construction of the trench. Alternatively, the collar may be formed on the trench sidewall by conventional deposition techniques such as chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The deposited material is removed from the trench bottom by techniques such as reactive ion etching (RIE), leaving the collar material on the trench sidewall. Other insulating materials may also be used to form the collar.
After the collar has been formed, the central portion of the trench is filled with a conducting material such as polysilicon, or a combination of several conducting materials such as polysilicon and titanium nitride, that is then recessed to leave a portion of the collar exposed.
In this case, the collar extends below and above the defect-laden layer 20, thus also protecting the other parts of the structure from being affected by defects in layer 20.
An aperture 111 now remains above the top surface of poly electrode 107. The width of aperture 111 in this Figure, denoted by bracket 112, will be referred to as the original trench width. As can be seen in
At any convenient time, an annealing step drives dopant from the poly 105 and/or from the deposited buried strap into the SiGe device layer to form an extended buried strap 106′ that extends the dopant into the device layer, making contact with an area that will be part of the lower electrode of a vertical FET.
The process of depositing oxide in the aperture and etching any material that has adhered to the trench walls will increase the extent of overhang 122.
Epi layer 134 has been deposited to a nominal thickness equal to the length of overhang 122, so that the new vertical surface of the transistor body is substantially aligned with the original trench width defined by the vertical face of pad nitride 45.
Since the inter-atomic distance in SiGe is greater than the corresponding distance in crystalline silicon, the silicon in layer 134 is strained. That strain increases the mobility of the vertical transistor and therefore increases the performance of the transistor.
The transverse dimension of the trench is decreased by twice the thickness of layer 134. The performance of a transistor in a strained silicon layer is greater than the performance of a comparable transistor in a SiGe layer. In some cases, the extra performance may not be required and it may be preferable to put down a layer of SiGe on the vertical face of the SiGe layer and to use that layer as the body of the vertical transistor.
The transverse dimension of the trench is decreased by twice the thickness of layer 134. For a given ground rule, the dimension of the trench and the spacing between the gate electrode and the passing wordline (shown in
The cell is not complete until a contact has been formed to the bitline of the DRAM array (at the upper electrode of the vertical transistor) and a gate contact has been formed to the wordline of the DRAM array (at the gate of the access transistor).
The wordline structures are formed by deposition of a layer 172 of wordline material and a nitride cap. Gate contact lithography defines a stack of conductive member 172 capped with nitride 176.
Sidewalls 174 are formed on the sides of the gate stack by depositing a nitride layer or other suitable materials by a conventional process such as CVD and etching the flat portions in a directional etching process such as RIE.
Three structures are shown in FIG. 9—the wordline structure in the center, denoted by numeral 175 and two passing wordline structures 177 that are wordlines for rows of cells in front of and behind the cell illustrated, using a conventional folded wordline layout. Alternatively (not shown), the wordline may be offset from the center of element 155.
The spacing 183 between the gate contact for the illustrated cell and the passing wordline on the right is set by the groundrules. For a given groundrule, therefore, the increase in trench width caused by the consumption of silicon reduced the space available for the bitline contact for the trench, which has to be outside the trench and not contacting the passing wordline 177.
The region of the top of the cell denoted with bracket 190 is enlarged in
Above the right bitline contact 185 a bracket labeled 185 indicates the width of the bitline contact according to the invention. Arrow 186 indicates the width in a prior art arrangement in which the layer 134 of strained silicon is not deposited, so that the distance 186 is the width available for the bitline contact—extending from the recessed trench wall on the right to the left edge of arrow 185, which is at the location of the vertical edge of pad nitride 45.
In the past, the distance between the trench walls as they were recessed into the layer 30 set the width of the trench and therefore by subtraction the width available for the bitline contact.
In a cell according to the invention, the added width of the strained silicon 134 narrows the trench aperture and therefore increases the space available for the bitline contact. With a wider contact, the resistance of the electron path in and out of the capacitor is reduced.
The bottom of bitline contact 185 is in electrical contact with the top of layer 134 and with drain or source 157.
While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced in various versions within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
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