This invention relates generally to thermoelectric devices and specifically to a subclass of those devices with thermal diodic characteristics. This character is defined by the ability of the device under electrical influence to transport heat in a particular direction and then to significantly resist the natural thermal diffusion back across the device in the opposite direction. In particular, the present invention provides methods of manufacture and specific unique devices that have thermal diodic character.
As semiconductor integrated circuit speeds and transistor density increases, the need for high efficiency cooling of these devices increases. Furthermore, it is beneficial from a space standpoint to have direct, point of use cooling on these devices to minimize the size and cost of the computer system using these devices. Thermoelectric devices, utilizing the Peltier effect, have been used in this application, but their poor cooling efficiency has prevented their widespread adoption. Parasitic conduction of heat through present thermoelectric materials causes the poor cooling efficiency of current thermoelectric devices. If there were a means of reducing this parasitic thermal conduction, then the Peltier effect can be used with utility to remove heat from high-density semiconductor integrated circuits. The present invention addresses the reduction of this parasitic thermal conduction through the use of novel “thermal diodes” that may be used as thermionic cooling devices on their own, or may be used in conjunction with a Peltier effect thermoelectric device or another type of thermionic emission device to provide point of use cooling to semiconductor integrated circuits.
FIGS. 6A,B illustrate examples of how embodiments of the two types of devices might look when processed into a finished module.
Overview
The present invention provides thermoelectric/thermionic emission devices with thermal diodic characteristics thereby providing an efficient means of transferring thermal energy from a first area to a second area. As referred to herein, a thermoelectric device includes any device that can controllably transfer thermal energy from one portion of the device to another portion of the device in response to the application of a DC voltage. In addition, some thermoelectric devices include the ability to generate a current in response to a temperature differential applied across different portions of the device. Some examples of thermoelectric devices include Peltier Crystals, which are made up of dissimilar materials. As used herein, a thermal diode includes a device capable of controllably transferring thermal energy in one direction from one portion of the device to another portion of the device and to resist the transfer of thermal energy in the opposing direction.
As presented herein, various embodiments of the present invention will be described followed by some specific examples of various components of the devices presented herein and examples of how the various components may be combined.
Referring now to
In some exemplary embodiments, thickness of the metallic coated substrate 101 can include a substrate greater than, or approximately equal to 100 microns. Generally, embodiments can include any metallic or metallic coated substrate comprising sufficient electrical, mechanical and thermal characteristics. The layer of Ag 102 can be deposited on the metallic coated substrate 101, for example via sputter deposition or plating. In other embodiments, an Au plate can take the place of the metallic coated substrate with an Au coating.
At 1B, the Ag layer 102 can be reacted to form a conductive ionic layer 103, such as for example, silver sulfide (AgS). The ionic conductive layer 103 can be formed, for example by reacting the Ag 102 in a sulfide inducing environment, such as, for example, exposure to H2S at 80° C. In some embodiments, the thickness of the AgS layer 103 may be self limiting by the environment in which it is created. Some embodiments may include an AgS layer 103 of 80 Ang to 120 Ang.
At 1C, a second metallic layer 104, such as a second layer of Ag 104 can be applied on top of the conductive ionic layer 103, such as, the layer of Ag2S layer 103. The second metallic layer 104 can be applied by any method known in the arts. In some embodiments, for example, the second layer of Ag 104 can be deposited via sputtering or applied via evaporator plating.
For generality, it should be apparent to those skilled in the arts that the combinate of 102, 103 and 104, which has been described as Ag, Ag2S, and Ag, can be formed by an equivalent combination of layers that would constitute a layer formation with an ionic conductor in the middle. Said middle layer, 103, can be chemically formed, as was the case with Ag2S, or it can be separately deposited.
At ID, a third metallic layer 105, different than the second metallic layer 104 can also be deposited. In some embodiments, the third metallic layer 105 can include gold (Au). The Au layer 105 can be deposited by any known means, such as, for example, via sputter or evaporator plating.
Although this embodiment would describe layer 105, as different from the constituents of layer 104, for generality it should be noted that the presence of an interface layer between like metal layers 104 and 105 (if 104 and 105 were the same metals) can provide a sufficient formation for the device processing flow described in this invention.
Referring now to
In some preferred embodiments, the photoresist mask will define multiple discrete devices. A gap 107, shown in its initial stages of formation in Fig. IF, can separate each device. For example, the gap 107 may be between 1,000 Ang to 10,000 Ang, but in general, the gap is only limited by the physical dimensions of the materials being used, such as, for example, the physical size of the metallic substrate 101, the design of the pattern and the number of devices defined.
At 1F, etching can be used to remove portions of the third metallic layer 105 left exposed by the photoresist mask 106. In the example illustrated, the third metallic layer 105 includes Au. Etching can be accomplished using any method known in the art, such as, for example, reactive ion etching or sputter/physical bombardment etching. In some embodiments, anisotropic etching can be utilized to etch one or more layers 102-105 in a pattern closely defined to the pattern defined by the photoresist mask 106. In other, less preferred, embodiments the etching can be performed by isotropic chemical etching techniques.
At 1G, etching can be additionally used to remove portions of layer 104 based on the pattern of the photomask. In the preferred embodiment shown, as found in
In some other embodiments, isotropic etching can be used to remove portions of one or more of: the second metallic layer 104; the conductive ionic layer 103; and the first metallic layer 102; thereby defining an undercut region 108 beneath the third metallic layer 105. Therefore, following the examples above, some embodiments can include use of an etching technique, such as selective wet chemistry etching, to remove portions of the second layer of silver 104, the silver sulfide 103 and the first layer of silver 102 underneath layer of gold 105, thereby creating an optional undercut 108 under the gold 105.
In addition, it should be understood that embodiments can include undercut regions 108 or not include the undercut regions 108.
Referring again to
At 1L an insulator 109 can be applied into the etched out areas 107. In some embodiments, in which the etching created an undercut 108 under the gold 105, the insulator layer 109 can be applied into the etched out areas 107, but leave a void 111 in the undercut region. Other embodiments can include the insulator 109 filling the undercut region 108. In still other embodiments, no undercut region 108 will be formed by the etching and the insulator layer 109 only fills the etched out areas 107.
In some other embodiments, the undercut region 108 is evacuated and encapsulated with deposited insulator layers. A common deposition process for insulators, PECVD, can carry out this effect since the process is inherently a vacuum based process. Therefore, the ambient in the encapsulated void region, 111, reflects the pressure in the deposition process and any gas materials present in that deposition ambient. For example, in some embodiments, the undercut region 108 can be filled with nitrogen and sealed in with an insulator layer 109 such as Silicon Oxide. In other embodiments, the undercut region 108 can contain other gasses. In the preferred embodiment, the nature of the ambient of the undercut region 108, may be less critical than for other embodiments, where the undercut 108 occurs along all layers 102-104.
The layer thickness of insulator layer 109 can be made thick enough to entirely fill the gap 107. However in the preferred embodiment, its thickness would be less than that to fill the gap. Such a strategy can allow for the gap to be completed with a material composition that would have lower thermal transfer capabilities than the material of the insulator 109, since such thermal transfer would be a parasitic aspect of the device thus formed. Nevertheless, the layer formed in etched out areas 107, can be formed in such a manner to ensure mechanical rigidness of the formed layer structure. It can also provide significant sealing ability of the layer structure from the ambient.
At 1L, a PECVD process used to form layer 109 would result in deposition filling along the sides of the gap 107 as well as at the bottom of the gap 107. Furthermore, the top metal structure 105, would also be coated with the deposited insulator 109 as illustrated. In some embodiments this coating 109 can be removed with an etching step that would etch the flat surfaces of the insulator 109-110, and, in some embodiments, also etch the tops of metal structures 105 and the bottom of the gaps 107, leaving vertical structure along the sidewall of the gap 107.
In some embodiments, including a preferred embodiment, an additional layer of insulator 110 can include a low density oxide or a low thermal conducting material. For example, a layer of low density SiO2 can be processed by spinning the material onto the substrate. Such a spin on glass (SOG) material would fill the portion of the gap 107 that was not filled in initially with the insulator 109. This SOG would preferentially fill this gap, but can end up with some additional deposit on top of the gold. An etching process, either dry or wet can once again be used to remove the insulator from the top of the Au layer 105. Alternatively, if the initial insulator layer 109 was not etched as described above, some embodiments can include composite insulator layers 109 and 110 being etched by reactive ion etching. Embodiments can therefore result in a structure 100 that is generally equivalent to that shown in
Referring now to
In
Referring now to the close up diagram shown in
With the formation of a gap 220 in the silver layer 102, the structure of the device 200 in other ways remains the same. The Au 105 and the AgS layer 103 continue to be held in place by the other layers of the resulting device, such as, for example, the layers of insulator 109 and SOG 110. In addition, with the layer of Ag 102 removed, the resulting gap 211 acts as a thermal insulator.
In some embodiments, solid state conduction of electrons across the Ag layer 102 ceases with the formation of the gap 211. Any current which flows with the gap 211 comes from different forms of conduction, such as, for example, tunneling of electrons across the gap 211. This structure 200 provides a desired form which enables control of thermionic effects across the gap 211 and also has insulating properties due to the gap 211. Some embodiments of the present invention can include further processing of the environment of the gap 211, however
Although the present invention has been presented in several embodiments in this description and the drawings, several other options are also within the scope of the present invention. For example, referring now to
In another aspect, the above embodiments can additionally include a PECVD step to form item 109 which is performed in a manner that it will “neck off” at the top forming void 330. In these embodiments, the gap 310-311, in the shape of a channel, would be filled with a vacuum space and have low thermal conductivity.
Referring now to
A further refinement of the device type is illustrated in
Referring now to
At 4A, a metallic layer, such as, for example, a layer of Ag whose surface has been altered to lower its work function, identified as low work function treatment layer 402, can be applied to a metallic or metallic coated substrate 401. Examples of low work function materials include Silver-Oxide-Cesium Φ˜0.8 eV, Cesium, Cs Φ=1.96 eV, Copper-Lithium, CU—Li Φ=2 eV, Calcium Nitride Ca2N Φ=2.35 eV. The metallic or metallic coated substrate 401 can include, for example, flat quartz with an Au coating or a planarized copper substrate.
In some exemplary embodiments, the thickness of the metallic coated substrate 401 can include a substrate greater than, or approximately equal to 100 microns. Generally, embodiments can include any metallic or metallic coated substrate comprising sufficient electrical, mechanical and thermal characteristics. The layer of Ag 402 can be deposited on the metallic coated substrate 401, for example, via sputter deposition or plating. The Ag is applied in a manner that its top surface can be altered in a manner to make a low work function surface region 402.
At 4B, metallic layer 402 can be coated with a film layer 403 that can be selectively removed at a later step. The options for such a layer can be diverse, including, for example, organic films, and inorganic films. More specifically the coating 403 can include insulators, such as, for example, silicon oxide. In some embodiments, this layer 403 will need to be on the order of the gap dimension, therefore, in such embodiments the film layer 403 must be able to be applied with controllable thicknesses in the regime of 10-100 angstroms, and in some embodiments be applied in a manner that does not change the characteristics of the low work function surface of layer metallic layer 402. For the embodiment illustrated, the film layer 403 has been described as Titanium Nitride (TiN). TiN can be applied by established atomic layer deposition techniques in the desired thickness range. Furthermore, TiN can be etched in a manner that can be selective to the other films described with acidic solutions with dissolved hydrogen peroxide.
At
At
Although the embodiments generally described herein indicate that the material of layer 405 is different from the material of layer 404, it should be noted that precise control of the thickness of metal layers 404 and 405 can provide a sufficient formation for some subsequent steps in the device processing flow described in this invention, even if 404 and 405 are the same metal.
Referring now to
In some preferred embodiments, the photoresist mask will define multiple discrete devices. A gap 407, shown in its initial stages of formation in
At 4F, etching can be used to remove portions of the third metallic layer 405 left exposed by the photoresist mask 406. In the example illustrated, the third metallic layer 405 includes Au. Etching can be accomplished using any method known in the art, such as, for example, reactive ion etching or sputter/physical bombardment etching. In some embodiments, anisotropic etching can be utilized to etch one or more (
At 4H, following the etching steps, the photo resist pattern 406 is removed. Removal may be performed by standard chemical processes used in the art to strip photoresist or a chemical plasma etching tool, typically referred to as an asher. In some embodiments, additional wet cleaning processing can also be applied to result in a clean structure consisting primarily of the materials of layers 401-405.
At 4H, a PECVD process used to form layer 409 can result in deposition filling along the sides of the gap 407 as well as at the bottom of the gap 407. Furthermore, the top metal structure (as illustrated, gold) 405, would also be coated with the deposited insulator 409. In some embodiments, the insulator layer 409 can be removed with an etching step that would etch the flat surfaces of the insulator 409, including the tops of gold features 405 and the bottom of the gaps 407, leaving vertical structure along the sidewall of the gap 407.
In some embodiments, including the preferred embodiment, an additional layer of insulator 410, such as a low density oxide or a low thermal conducting material, can be applied over the insulator 409. For example, a layer of low density SiO2 can be processed by spinning the material onto the substrate. In some embodiments, the spin on glass (SOG) material 410 can fill the portion of the gap 407 that was not filled in initially with the insulator 409. Embodiments can also include application of the SOG 410 which results with additional deposit on top of the gold. An etching process, either dry or wet can once again be used to remove the SOG insulator 410 from the top of layer 405. Alternatively, if the initial layer 409 was not etched as described above, some embodiments can include the composite of layers 409 and 410 being etched by reactive ion etching.
At 4J, a device according to the present invention is illustrated following the application of the insulation layers 409 and 410 and etching steps.
At 4K a via hole 420 (or pore) is etched into the top structure 405. The access via 420 can be formed by another photomask step which allows a reactive ion etch process to etch a hole into the gold 405. The depth of the via hole 420 can be at least as deep as the sulfide layer 403. and allow for access to the selectively etchable layer 403. In the present embodiment, the via 420 is shown to stop at or on the TiN layer 403. In practicality the via 420 can be etched even deeper, so long as it contacts the TiN layer 403.
At 4L, the etchable layer 403 is removed and replaced with a gap 413. For example, by introducing mixtures of sulphuric acid and hydrogen peroxide, among other etchant solution possibilities, the TiN layer 403 can be dissolved. Removal of the TiN layer 403 will create a gap 413 with dimensions defined by the original 403 structure. Treatments can also be applied to evacuate the gap 413 through the via 420, thereby leaving a gap 413 with low work function coated surfaces on either side of the gap 413.
At 4M, the structure is shown after a vacuum treatment evacuates the gap region 413 and the via 420. A PECVD Insulator deposition process can next be employed at low vacuum to seal the via near the top of the opening, 430. In any of the CVD processes where a gap portion of a device is sealed up, the actual ambient of the PECVD process may be controlled to contain a predominance of alternative (to the PECVD reactants) non reactive gasses that at the low pressures of the device would have minimal thermal transport characteristics.
Referring now to
In
The presence of a vacuum in the region of the created gap, 413, can be important to various embodiments of the device type. In addition, the presence of a PECVD Film, 430 can form the environment of the gap 413 in a low vacuum state. However, further processing of the device can allow for molecules to penetrate the PECVD film subverting the vacuum state. At SD, this issue can be resolved by deposition of a metallic film on the outside of all the PECVD insulator films, as shown by items 570 and 571. Films 570-571 can be include, for example deposited Au.
Referring now to
The present invention can also include application of a DC voltage across the layer of 620 and the layer of 101 or 401 thereby causing the transfer of thermal energy between theses layers. In addition, a temperature differential can be applied across the layer of 620 and the layer of 101 or 401 thereby causing a DC voltage to be generated across these layers.
It is also within the scope of the invention to form a low work function layer, such as, for example: 402, 404 through the processing of a layer of another material. For example, it is within the scope of the invention to apply a layer of metal and expose the metal to a gas to form a low work function layer 402, 404.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Accordingly, it is within the scope of some embodiments of this invention to fashion thermal transferring devices that can identify areas that need to be heated or cooled on an adjacent device. For example, a device can be designed that correlates with hot areas on an integrated circuit chip. Some embodiments therefore, can include, a thermal transfer device that can be used to limit temperature deltas across an integrated circuit, or conversely to drive a temperature delta across an integrated circuit. In addition, a thermal transfer device can be designed, or controlled by a microprocessor, to respond to an upper or lower threshold of temperature across multiple areas and heat or cool individual areas according to a desired result.
It is also within the scope of this invention to fashion composite devices that are formed from combinations of the devices that have been described, or others which fall within the scope of this invention, with each other or with other devices. In particular, for example, a composite device can be formed by the stacking of numerous devices of the type shown in
A number of embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, various methods or equipment may be used to implement the process steps described herein or to create a device according to the inventive concepts provided above and further described in the claims. In addition, various casings and packaging can also be included in order to better adapt a thermoelectric or thermodiodic device according to a specific application. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims priority to the Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/751,712, filed Dec. 19, 2005 and entitled: “Thermal Diodic Devices and Methods for Manufacturing Same.” The contents of each are relied upon and incorporated herein by reference.