The present invention relates to semiconductor devices, and more particularly to a novel trench Schottky diode and process for fabricating a trench Schottky diode.
Schottky diodes are very well known and are made with different topologies. The most common is a planar topology. A trench topology is also known as typically shown in Baliga patent 5,612,567. The process of manufacture of a trench type Schottky diode requires a large number of mask layers and manufacturing steps. It would be desirable to produce a trench type Schottky diode with a reduced number of process steps and fewer mask layers and to improve its termination structure.
In accordance with the present invention, a novel LOCOS type process is employed for the manufacture of a trench type Schottky device in which a normally expected oxidation for a LOCOS process is eliminated, and in which the normally expected sacrificial oxidation of the trench walls prior to the growth of a gate oxide on the walls is eliminated. The elimination of these steps saves a mask layer and related critical process steps, and, unexpectedly avoids the creation of a disadvantageous “birds beak” oxide at the edge of the trench, thus improving device characteristics of reverse leakage distribution and improving yield.
More specifically, in the manufacture of a rectifier rated at about 20 volts for the output rectifier market, a silicon nitride layer is directly grown on the surface of a silicon wafer, without an intervening silicon dioxide pad. A trench mask process step then opens a pattern of windows in the nitride layer, and a trenches etch, including the etch of a termination trench, is carried out. The walls of the trench are then oxidized, without a prior sacrificial oxidation and PR strip step. Following Trench refill and planarization, the nitride is striped in a wet etch to prepare the surface for subsequent metallization. Thus, the benefits of the LOCOS process are employed, but they are modified to reduce the number of process steps, some critical, and to improve manufactureability and device characteristics.
In accordance with the invention, it has been found that the pad oxide and sacrificial oxide steps can be eliminated without degrading device characteristics, and simplifying the manufacturing process.
The layout patterns to be formed are transferred from photomasks to the surface of a silicon wafer using the conventional photolithography process which uses a plurality of masking layers, each of which must be carefully aligned with respect to the previous pattern on the wafer layer. Typically, to provide such an alignment, a so-called zero or foundation layer is formed atop the wafer. The zero layer is an initial layer (which is typically the pad oxide layer of
Applicants have realized that it is possible to avoid forming this zero mask and to directly deposit a removable nitride layer at a thickness of approximately 600 Å, as by a low-pressure chemical vapor deposition technique (LPCVD), directly atop the surface 22 of the epi layer 26, as illustrated in FIG. 5. Accordingly, by avoiding the formation of the oxide zero mask, the overall production cost of the inventive structure is reduced.
To form the trenches, a mask layer (not shown) is formed on the surface of the Si3Ni4 layer 26 and patterned by a suitable photolithographic process, wherein the mask contains a desired trench pattern.
As shown in
Once the trenches are formed, the remaining portion of the photoresist mask is stripped, and the exposed surfaces of the trenches undergo a pre-diffusion cleaning step.
Summarizing the above-disclosed sequence of steps, the inventive process successfully avoids forming a pad oxidation layer.
A further critical distinction of the inventive process over the known fabrication processes is the elimination of the sacrificial oxide layer of FIG. 3. As mentioned above, the Applicants have found that these two steps conventional can be eliminated and, in fact, are detrimental to the quality of trench Schottky barrier structures.
Accordingly, the inventive process next provides a gate oxidation step, as shown in
Next, a layer of an un-doped polysilicon 48 is deposited above the previously prepared structure to a thickness of approximately 7500 Å to fill the trenches, as shown in FIG. 7.
A boron implant, for example, 1E14/cm2 at 80 kev is applied to the surface of the device. Any implant species that acts as a P-type dopant can be used. Among these dopants, Boron or BF2, are most common.
Then, after yet another pre-diffusion clean, the implanted species are activated and driven at 1050° C. for one hour to make the polysilicon P type conductive within the trenches. As a result of the P type polysilicon 48, a plurality of electrodes are formed between trenches 28 and mesas 30 which deplete the charge in the N− mesas between trenches under reverse bias to block reverse voltage.
A blanket poly etch is next carried out as shown in
Bird beaks are not eliminated with an additional mask as in conventional LOCOS process. The benefit from elimination of bird beaks is reduced leakage, yield increase and thus cost reduction.
Next, referring to
The layer of titanium is then annealed at a high temperature in an inert atmosphere. As a consequence, the thin titanium layer reacts with the active-device region to form a titanium suicide layer over the active region, forming Schottky contacts 52 which extend over the tops of mesa regions 54. The non-reacted titanium layer extending along the termination region 21 may then be removed by etching the inventive structure with any known Ammonium Hydroxide and Hydrogen Peroxide-based solution. Etch time can vary, but etch temperature should not exceed 80° C. to avoid excessively fast decomposition of the H2O2.
A contact metal layer 56 (
Finally, the entire wafer is attached to a frame of a grinding device (not shown) via an adhesive tape and a back-grind is carried out, thinning the wafer to 8 mils, after which the work piece is detaped and etched to smooth out roughened surfaces as a result of grinding. A backside metal such as a trimetal Ti/Ni/Ag is sputtered on the bottom of the wafer to form a cathode electrode on the bottom surface of the inventive Schottky rectifier. The wafer may then be diced along scribe lines to separate a plurality of identical diodes.
In the embodiment of
Although the present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments thereof, many other variations and modifications and other uses will become apparent to those skilled in the art. It is preferred, therefore, that the present invention be limited not by the specific disclosure herein, but only by the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040007723 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |