This disclosure relates generally to electrical components for semiconductor devices and related systems and methods. More specifically, disclosed embodiments relate to techniques for configuring and making integrated inductors of semiconductor devices that may increase the quality of the integrated inductors and reduce the quantity of dedicated processing acts to make the integrated inductors.
Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce revolutionized the semiconductor industry by pioneering Integrated Circuits (ICs). In conventional ICs, a fully functional device with multiple, interconnected transistors is formed using usually aluminum or copper wire, and the transistors are built monolithically on a silicon substrate, instead of building individual transistors. In addition to the transistors, other components that would conventionally be provided on a Printed Circuit Board (PCB) may be built monolithically onto the same silicon substrate. This configuration is sometimes referred to in the art as a “System-On-Chip” (SoC). Integrated inductors, sometime called on-chip inductors, or thin-film inductors are among the components that may be formed using SoC integration.
According to conventional methods known to the inventors, integrated inductors may be built at the end of the IC formation process, with dedicated process steps. For example, a single-layer inductor may be built using 4 μm-thick aluminum wire, which may involve aluminum deposition and metal etch processes. A two-layer inductor may be built with two layers of 2 μm-thick aluminum wire, with the bottom layer planarized by Chemical Mechanical Polishing (CMP). In such situations, thick (up to 4 or 5 μm) dielectric deposition, and long polishing (up to 5 minutes) may be required. All these dedicated process steps add additional cost to the manufacture processes.
While this disclosure concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming specific embodiments, various features and advantages of embodiments within the scope of this disclosure may be more readily ascertained from the following description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The illustrations presented in this disclosure are not meant to be actual views of any particular electronic system, substrate, bond pad, integrated inductor, or component thereof, but are merely idealized representations employed to describe illustrative embodiments. Thus, the drawings are not necessarily to scale. Throughout this description, like reference numerals refer to the same or similar elements, regardless of whether those elements are expressly highlighted or discussed in connection with a given figure.
Disclosed embodiments relate generally to techniques for configuring and making integrated inductors of semiconductor devices that may increase the quality of the integrated inductors and reduce the quantity of dedicated processing steps to make the integrated inductors. For example, integrated inductors in accordance with certain embodiments of this disclosure may include two quantities of electrically conductive material directly shunted together to form the wiring coils of the integrated inductors: copper wiring in the uppermost layer of those portions (e.g., layers) of an interconnect formed using Damascene processes and aluminum material located over the copper wiring. This direct shunting approach may enable integrated inductors to be formed from the same materials, and utilizing the same processes, as those used to form bond pads of the interconnect. In addition, the direct shunting approach and the use of a dual-layer-material in certain embodiments may enable new techniques and structures for overpass/underpass regions of spiral inductors. As a result of these and other aspects of the following disclosure, integrated inductors in accordance with this disclosure may reduce (e.g., eliminate) reliance on passive electronic components provided separately from a semiconductor chip (e.g., on a printed circuit board), enable greater flexibility in designing wholly integrated circuits (e.g., systems on a chip), reduce the number of dedicated process steps required to form integrated inductors (e.g., may be free from a process point of view), and produce higher-inductance, lower-resistance, and lower-capacitance integrated inductors.
As used herein, the terms “substantially” and “about” in reference to a given parameter, property, or condition means and includes to a degree that one of ordinary skill in the art would understand that the given parameter, property, or condition is met with a degree of variance, such as within acceptable manufacturing tolerances. For example, a parameter that is substantially or about a specified value may be at least about 90% the specified value, at least about 95% the specified value, at least about 99% the specified value, or even at least about 99.9% the specified value.
A passivation material 112 may be located over the dielectric material 108, the thin barrier material 109, and the electrically conductive material 110. For example, the passivation material 112 may be in direct contact with the uppermost layer of an interconnect 111 formed utilizing a Damascene process. The passivation material 112 may include one or more dielectric materials, such as, for example, oxides, nitrides, glasses, polymers, or combinations or subcombinations of these (e.g., SiON, SiO, SiN, silicon-rich nitride, phosphosilicate glass). More specifically, the passivation material 112 may include, for example, a layer of SiN located proximate to the dielectric material 108, a layer of silicon-rich oxide located on the SiN, a layer of phosphosilicate glass located on the silicon-rich oxide, and a layer of SiON located on the phosphosilicate glass. The passivation material 112 may cover, for example, at least a portion of the dielectric material 108, the barrier material 109, and portions of the electrically conductive material 110.
Openings 114 in the passivation material 112 may grant access to the remainder of the electrically conductive material 110. For example, the bond pad 102 may include another, different electrically conductive material 116 located within an associated opening 114. The other electrically conductive material 116 may include, for example, a metal or metal alloy material (e.g., copper, aluminum, copper alloy, aluminum alloy), however the constituent material of the other electrically conductive material 116 may be different from the constituent material of the electrically conductive material 110. As a specific, nonlimiting example, the other electrically conductive material 116 may include aluminum alloyed with 0.5% by weight copper. The opening 114 may be in the shape of, for example, a rectangular cylinder. The other electrically conductive material 116 may be in direct contact with, and electrically connected to, an associated portion of the electrically conductive material 110, and may extend from the associated portion of the electrically conductive material 110, through the passivation material 112, to at least an exposed surface 118 of the passivation material 112 (e.g., at least flush with the exposed surface 118 of the passivation material 112). More specifically, the other electrically conductive material 116 may extend from direct contact with the electrically conductive material 110, through the passivation material 112, and beyond the passivation material 112, the protruding portion of the other electrically conductive material 116 extending laterally beyond sidewalls 120 of the passivation material 112 defining the opening 114 to form the bond pad 102.
To interconnect radially adjacent coils 124, forming a spiral of the integrated inductor 122, the integrated inductor 122 may include, for example, one or more overpass/underpass regions 126. The overpass/underpass region(s) 126 may include an electrically isolated portion 110A (e.g., an underpass portion) of one coil 124 under another electrically isolated portion 116A (e.g., an overpass portion) of another coil 124, the passivation material 112 being located between the electrically isolated portion 110A of the one coil and the other electrically isolated portion 116A of the other coil 124. More specifically, each overpass/underpass region 126 may include an electrically isolated portion 110A or 116A of a radially outer coil 124 extending toward a radially inner coil 124 over or under an electrically isolated portion 110A or 116A of another radially inner coil 124 extending toward another radially outer coil 124. The integrated inductor 122 may include, for example, one overpass/underpass region 126 fewer than the number of coils 124 (e.g., turns) included in the integrated inductor 122. For example, the integrated inductor 122 shown in
In some instances, the quality factor of an integrated inductor 122 may be evaluated utilizing the following equation:
where Q is quality factor, ω is the angular frequency of a signal propagating along the integrated inductor 122, L is the inductance of the integrated inductor 122, and R is the series resistance of the integrated inductor 122. Utilizing such an equation, the higher values for the quality factor Q may indicate a better-performing integrated inductor 122 than lower values for the quality factor Q. Integrated inductors 122 configured in accordance with this disclosure, including the electrically conductive material 110 in direct contact with the other electrically conductive material 116, may have a higher quality factor Q at least partially because the cross-sectional area of the coils 124 resulting from the direct shunting together of two masses of electrically conductive materials 110 and 116 may reduce the resistance R of the coils 124. A combined thickness T of the electrically conductive material 110 and the other electrically conductive material 116, as measured in a direction perpendicular to the major surface 106, may be, for example, at least about 1 μm. More specifically, the combined thickness T of the electrically conductive material 110 and the other electrically conductive material 116 may be, for example, between about 1 μm and about 6 μm. As a specific, nonlimiting example, the combined thickness T of the electrically conductive material 110 and the other electrically conductive material 116 may be, for example, between about 2 μm and about 5 μm (e.g., about 4 μm).
In contrast to conventional stacked integrated inductors known to the inventor of the subject matter of this disclosure, which may form connections between upper and lower quantities of electrically conductive materials utilizing resistive vias (e.g., tungsten contacts) extending through passivation materials, integrated inductors 122 in accordance with this disclosure may form connections between upper and lower quantities of electrically conductive materials 110 and 116 utilizing direct contact to electrically connect one electrically conductive material 110 to another electrically conductive material 116. Such integrated inductors 122 may be free of vias in direct contact with the integrated inductors 122, though vias may be included in other portions of semiconductor devices 100 supporting the integrated inductors 122, which vias may be indirectly connected to the integrated inductors 122. For example, the overpass/underpass region(s) 126 may be free of vias extending through the passivation material 112. For example, the integrated inductors 122 may be free of vias extending between the electrically conductive material 110 and the other electrically conductive material 116 of the integrated inductor 122. Utilizing direct contact, rather than vias, may enable the coils 124 to utilize the combined cross-sectional areas of both electrically conductive materials 110 and 116 to reduce resistance R and capacitance along greater lengths of the coils 124 than conventionally possible with vias, further increasing the quality factor Q.
The integrated inductors 122 in accordance with this disclosure may be made from the same materials as bond pads 102 (see
In other words, the electrically conductive material 110A of the one coil 124 passing under the other coil 124 may extend continuously from before the overpass/underpass region 126, through the overpass/underpass region 126, and beyond the overpass/underpass region 126. The other electrically conductive material 116 of the one coil 124 may be discontinuous, extending toward the overpass/underpass region 126 to a location abutting the overpass/underpass region 126 on one lateral side of the overpass/underpass region, being entirely omitted within the overpass/underpass region 126, and extending away from the overpass/underpass region 126 from a location abutting the overpass/underpass region 126 on another, opposite lateral side of the overpass/underpass region 126. A portion of the other electrically conductive material 116A of the other coil 124 passing over the one coil 124 may extend at least substantially continuously from before the overpass/underpass region 126, through the overpass/underpass region 126, and beyond the overpass/underpass region 126. Another portion of the other electrically conductive material 116 of the other coil 124 corresponding to a location where passivation material 112 is interposed between the electrically conductive material 110A of the one coil 124 and the other electrically conductive material 116A of the other coil 124 in the overpass/underpass region 126 may be omitted within the overpass/underpass region 126. That portion of the other electrically conductive material 116 of the other coil 124 may be discontinuous, extending toward the overpass/underpass region 126 to a location abutting the overpass/underpass region 126 on one lateral side of the overpass/underpass region, being omitted within the overpass/underpass region 126, and extending away from the overpass/underpass region 126 from a location abutting the overpass/underpass region 126 on another, opposite lateral side of the overpass/underpass region 126. The electrically conductive material 110 of the other coil 124 may also be discontinuous, extending toward the overpass/underpass region 126 to a location abutting the overpass/underpass region 126 on one lateral side of the overpass/underpass region, being entirely omitted within the overpass/underpass region 126, and extending away from the overpass/underpass region 126 from a location abutting the overpass/underpass region 126 on another, opposite lateral side of the overpass/underpass region 126. Separation of one electrically conductive material 110A from the other electrically conductive material 116A in an overpass/underpass fashion within the overpass/underpass region 126 may increase resistance of the coils 124 in the overpass/underpass region 126. However, the increase in resistance may not significantly affect the quality factor of the integrated inductor 122 (e.g., may have a negligible effect on the quality factor of the integrated inductor 122) because the overpass/underpass region 126 is relatively small compared to the entire lengths of the coils 124 of the integrated inductor 122.
Semiconductor devices having integrated inductors in accordance with this disclosure may be particularly useful when implemented in devices employing radio frequency, millimeter wave, power supply (e.g., power supply on chip) circuits, such as, for example, low-noise amplifiers, resonant loads, matching networks, radio frequency filters, integrated voltage regulators, switch mode power supplies, and/or buck-boost converters. The low-cost, high-quality constructions for integrated inductors 122 in accordance with this disclosure may render such electronic systems 132 less costly to produce and more reliable in operation.
The method 146 may further involve forming openings 114 in the passivation material 112, as shown at act 150. The openings 114 may be formed utilizing, for example, mask and etch processes. In those portions of the integrated inductor(s) 122 not forming the overpass/underpass regions 126 and in the locations of the bond pad(s) 102, the openings 114 may expose the electrically conductive material 110, substantially completely removing the passivation material 112 previously located in the openings (e.g., save for trace amounts resulting from limitations of manufacturing capabilities). In the overpass/underpass regions 126, openings 114 may not be formed in the passivation material 112, leaving the passivation material 112 intact in the overpass/underpass regions 126 in some embodiments. In some embodiments, openings 114 for the bond pad(s) 102 may be formed concurrently while forming openings 114 for the coils 124 of the integrated inductor(s) 122. For example, the openings 114 for the bond pad(s) 102 and the openings 114 for the coils 124 of the integrated inductor(s) 122 may be formed using the mask and etching processes, with no separate processes being required to make the openings 114.
The method 146 may also involve placing (e.g., depositing) the other electrically conductive material 116 at least partially within the openings 114 and, in some sections, in direct contact with the electrically conductive material 110 exposed within the openings 114, as indicated at act 152. The electrically conductive material 116 may be placed utilizing for example, physical vapor deposition processes (PVD). In some embodiments, a mask may be placed or remain on the passivation material 112 to impart a desired size and shape to the other electrically conductive material 116 extending above the passivation material 112.
When compared to conventional configurations of, and techniques for forming, integrated inductors, configurations of, and techniques for forming, integrated inductors in accordance with this disclosure may involve performing fewer process acts, have greater synergy with process acts used for forming other structures (e.g., bond pads), reduce reliance on dedicated process acts and interconnection structures (e.g., vias and those acts for forming vias), and produce higher-quality integrated inductors. For example, techniques for forming integrated inductors in accordance with this disclosure may enable integrated inductors to be formed concurrently with, and using the same materials as, bond pads of the same semiconductor device. As another example, integrated inductors having configurations in accordance with this disclosure may have higher inductance, lower resistance, and lower capacitance as a result, producing higher-quality integrated inductors.
While certain illustrative embodiments have been described in connection with the figures, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize and appreciate that the scope of this disclosure is not limited to those embodiments explicitly shown and described in this disclosure. Rather, many additions, deletions, and modifications to the embodiments described in this disclosure may be made to produce embodiments within the scope of this disclosure, such as those specifically claimed, including legal equivalents. In addition, features from one disclosed embodiment may be combined with features of another disclosed embodiment while still being within the scope of this disclosure, as contemplated by the inventor.
This application claims the benefit of the priority date of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/875,917, filed Jul. 18, 2019, and titled “Techniques for Making Integrated Inductors and Related Semiconductor Devices, Electronic Systems, and Methods,” the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
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20210020568 A1 | Jan 2021 | US |
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62875917 | Jul 2019 | US |