Shallow-trench isolation (STI) is currently the most popular isolation scheme for advanced CMOS (e.g. 0.25 μm and beyond) due to its superior capability for minimum isolation pitch, better planar surface, and enhanced latch-up immunity. However, as CMOS technology continuously advances to 0.13 μm and beyond, the STI isolation spacing is small (e.g. ˜0.1 μm, where μ=10−6) enough for significant field penetration into the transistor channel (or body) area from adjacent poly gates as well as drain/source junctions. As a result of such electrical field penetration, there is a depletion region formed along the channel side-wall of the STI causing transistor narrow width effect and transistor Vt fluctuations. Please refer to the following publications:
Bryant, W. Hnsch, and T. Mii, “Characteristics of CMOS Device Isolation for the ULSI Age”, International Electron Device Meetings, p. 671, 1994.
C. Wang, P. Zhang, “Three-Dimensional DIBL for Shallow-Trench Isolation MOSFET's”, IEEE Trans. on Electron Device, V. 46, No. 1, p. 139, 1999.
J. H. Sim, J. K. Lee, and K. Kim, “The Impact of Isolation Pitch Scaling on VTH Fluctuation in DRAM Cell Transistors due to Neighboring Drain/Source Electric Field Penetration”, Symposium of VLSI technology, p. 32-33, 1992.
In one way to eliminate such field penetration effect, a shielded STI, is proposed by J. H. Sim, j. K. Lee, and K. Kim, in “High-performance cell transistor design using metallic shield embedded shallow trench isolation 9MSE-STI) for Gbit generation DRAM's”, IEEE Transaction on Electron Devices, Vol. 46, No. 6, p. 1212-1217, 1999 by filling a layer of conducting material (e.g. doped poly) after liner oxidation of the isolation trench. The grounded conducting material in the trench can provide good shielding and therefore eliminate the transistor narrow-width effect and Vt fluctuations.
As illustrated in
STI field penetration effect is considered undesirable in advanced CMOS (especially in DRAM, or SPAM arrays), a metallic-shielded STI was proposed by J. H. Sim, J. K. Lee, and K. Kim in “High-performance cell transistor design using metallic shield embedded shallow trench isolation (MSE-STI) for Gbit generation DRAM's”, IEEE Transaction on Electron Devices, Vol. 46, No. 6, p. 1212-1217, 1999, by filling a layer of conducting material (e.g. doped poly) after liner oxidation of the trench. The grounded conducting material in the trench can provide a good shielding and therefore can eliminate Vt fluctuations by the field penetration effect.
A well-known circuit configuration of a voltage reference is described by Gray and Meyer, “Analog VLSI Circuit Analysis”, chapter 12, Wiley, 1984, and is illustrated in
Related U.S. patents pertinent to the invention are:
U.S. Pat. No. 6,078,094 (Poplevine et al.) shows a variable width vertical resist and STI process.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,051,474 (Beasom) teaches a method to bias the isolation trench fill.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,899,724 (Dobuzinsky et al.) describes a TIN vertical resistor. However, this reference differs from the invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,234,861 (Roisen et al.) discloses a method to form an isolation structure and to optionally bias it.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,933,739 (Harari) describes a vertical trench resistor.
The undesirable field penetration effect through STI in advanced CMOS can be utilized for a class of new vertical (variable) resistor and FET structures by biasing adjacent junctions for depletion layer or accumulation layer formation in the resistor region along the side-wall of an STI. This new family of devices (vertical resistor and FET) can be formed by CMOS compatible technology.
Also disclosed is a new voltage reference provided by utilizing such vertical FET with n+ and p+ control junctions. The difference in Fermi-levels of n+ and p+ doping (i.e. band-gap) in the control junction is used in the Vt-difference circuit configuration and the output is simply one silicon band-gap. Compared with conventional MOS transistor Vt-difference voltage reference, the proposed voltage reference has smaller layout (due to the vertical nature of FET) with less contact and connections, and smaller temperature coefficient.
Vertical resistors are provided. An embodiment of a vertical resistor comprises: a substrate comprising a trench; an isolation layer filling the trench; and a first doped-type region and a second doped-type region formed on both sides of the trench, wherein the first doped-type region receives a control bias, the second doped-type region receives a reference bias, and a resistance between the second doped-type region and the substrate is adjusted in response to a voltage difference between the control bias and the reference bias.
An embodiment of a band-gap voltage reference circuit comprises: a substrate comprising a well coupled to a first voltage level, a first trench formed in the well, a second trench formed in the well, and a third trench formed in the well; an isolation layer filling the first trench, the second trench, and the third trench; a first doped region formed adjacent one side of the first trench and coupled to a second voltage level; a second doped region formed between another side of the first trench, and the second trench; a third doped region formed between the second trench and one side of the third trench; a fourth doped region formed adjacent to another side of the third trench; a fifth doped region formed under the first doped region; an amplifier comprising a first input terminal coupled to the second doped region, a second input terminal coupled to the third doped region, and an output terminal coupled to the fourth doped region; a first current source coupled between a third voltage level and the first input terminal; and a second current source coupled between the third voltage level and the second input terminal.
Another embodiment of a band-gap voltage reference circuit comprises: a substrate coupled to a first voltage level, comprising a first trench, a second trench, and a third trench; an isolation layer filling the first trench, the second trench, and the third trench; a first doped region formed adjacent to one side of the first trench and coupled to a second voltage level; a second doped region formed between another side of the first trench, and the second trench; a third doped region formed between the second trench and one side of the third trench; a fourth doped region formed adjacent to another side of the third trench; a fifth doped region formed under the first doped region; an amplifier comprising a first input terminal coupled to the second doped region, a second input terminal coupled to the third doped region, and an output terminal coupled to the fourth doped region; a first current source coupled between a third voltage level and the first input terminal; and a second current source coupled between the third voltage level and the second input terminal.
The invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description, given hereinbelow, and the accompanying drawings. The drawings and description are provided for purposes of illustration only and, thus, are not intended to be limiting of the present invention.
a and 3b are cross-sections of proposed vertical resistor (p-type and n-type) (not to scale) of the present invention.
a and 5b show a simple model with notations for illustration of the doping effect on the vertical resistor.
a shows in a sketch how the p-type resistor with the “control junction” as p+ in n-base can serve as a switch or FET. The p-doped region in n-base is biased to +Vcc for inducing a depletion layer for turn-off.
b is like
a shows in a sketch how the n-type resistor with the “control junction” as n+ in p-base can serve as a switch or FET. The n-doped region in p-base is biased to −Vcc for inducing a depletion layer for turn-off.
b is like
a and 9b illustrate a general cross-section of a new band-gap voltage reference circuit with two vertical p-FETs and the associated I-V curves, respectively.
a illustrates a preferred embodiment of the present invention of a new band-gap voltage reference circuit by using two n-channel vertical FETs (in an n-well) with “complementary” control junctions.
b is the equivalent circuit of
a illustrates a preferred embodiment of the present invention of a new band-gap voltage reference circuit by using two p-channel vertical FETs (in a p-substrate) with “complementary” control junctions.
b is the equivalent circuit of
a illustrates that the band-gap reference can also be formed by utilizing two vertical n-FETs in the saturation region.
b is the equivalent circuit of
a illustrates that the band-gap reference can also be formed by utilizing two vertical p-FETs in the saturation region.
b is the equivalent circuit of
a and 3b show vertical variable resistors controlled by the field penetration effect from adjacent junctions through the STI structure. The “channel region” in
a is a cross-section of the proposed vertical p-type resistor (not to scale).
b is a cross-section of the proposed vertical n-type resistor (not to scale). The structure is similar to
The optional n-base and p-base implants will be described later.
a and 5b are a simple model of a vertical resistor with notations for illustrating the doping effect on a vertical resistor 15a, where label “ab” represents the resistor cross-section area, label “a” is the minimum active area (OD) width, label “b” is the dimension for the depth of resistor, label “t” is the depletion layer thickness, label “d” is the STI depth, label “w” is the STI spacing (or width of the oxide inside the shallow trench 46).
In
Esi=εox(Vn−Vfb)/(εsiw) (1)
where w denotes the STI spacing (or STI oxide thickness viewed from side-wall of vertical silicon region). Vn is the n-doped region bias (e.g. 0 v to Vcc, with Vcc of 3.5 v or 2.5 v typically used on 0.35 μm or 0.25 μm CMOS chip, respectively). The flat-band voltage (Vfb) of the silicon surface along STI side-wall is about −0.6 v (i.e. mainly the differences in the electron Fermi level differences between the n-doped region and p-silicon region). The relative dielectric constants are γsi (˜11.9) and .γox(˜3.9)-. Notice that even if Vn is biased to 0 v, there is already a field on the silicon surface along the side-wall for depleting holes and forming depletion region (due to the built-in field established by the Fermi level difference). Additional Vn will further increase the surface field and increase the thickness of depletion layer. The depletion layer thickness (t) along STI side-wall is then easily calculated by:
t=(εsiEsi)/(q·Np)=εox(Vn−Vfb)/(w·q·Np) (2)
where, Np is the p-type doping concentration; q is the electron charge 1.602.times.10−19 coulomb. The above expression relates the depletion layer thickness to STI width, n-doped region bias, and p-substrate doping. The resistivity (ρ) of the p-type resistor region is simply:
ρ=(Npg·μh)−1 (3)
The resistance of the vertical resistor is then related to the effective area (a−2t)·b of cross-section and length (d) (or the depth of trench) of the resistor:
R=ρ·d/(b·(a−2·t)) (4)
where a is the minimum width of active area, and is becomes narrower by the depletion layer. The minimum resistance (Rmin) occurs with Vn biased to 0 v (i.e. smallest depletion layer), and the maximum resistance (Rmax) occurs with Vn biased at +Vcc. The ratio of Rmax/Rmin is of interest as follows:
Rmax/Rmin=(a−2tmin)/(a−2tmax) (5)
The critical doping level below which the entire silicon region is depleted can be calculated by setting (a=2tmax) and using eq. (2).
Np, min=2·εox(Vn−Vfb)/(a·w·q) (6)
The above described variable resistor may be utilized as a switch or FET if the silicon surface along STI side-wall can be accumulated by the bias from adjacent “control junction” 40 as shown in
This type of vertical resistor, which serves as a switch or FET as controlled by the adjacent junction bias, utilizes the accumulation layer for “turn-on” and the depletion layer for “turn-off”. This type of FET with turn-on by accumulation and turn-off by bulk depletion is a unique feature for such vertical switch or FETs. A corresponding a vertical switch or FET, based on n-type resistor, can be similarly formed with n-doped region in p-base as “control junction” as shown in
The I-V curve across a vertical p-FET of
In an embodiment, to further enhance the field penetration effect, the trench for resistor area may be filled by high dielectric materials (e.g. Ta2O5, Al2O3, or silicon nitride, etc.) instead of silicon oxide by various CVD methods. Certainly, the trench for CMOS area should be filled with lower dielectric constant material (e.g. CVD oxide or FSG, etc.). Therefore, this leads to a need of dual trench scheme, i.e. one deeper trench with high-k material filling (for enhancement of field penetration) on vertical resistor area, and shallower trench with low-k material filling (for isolation) on CMOS areas.
An embodiment of a band-gap voltage reference circuit is based on two vertical n-FETs with n-type and p-type control junctions respectively. The difference in the “threshold voltage” to form an accumulation layer along the vertical side-wall provides a reference voltage close to the silicon band-gap through the Vt-difference reference circuit.
In
The threshold voltage for forming an accumulation layer (referred to as Vtac) on a side-wall may be defined as: Vtac=Vfb+2Nd, where Nn is the bulk Fermi level of the n-channel area. Note that Nn=(kT/q)·ln(Nd/ni), where k is the Boltzmann constant, T the absolute temperature, q the electron charge, Nd the doping of n-channel area, and ni is the intrinsic carrier concentration of Silicon. Vfb is the flat band voltage viewed from the control junction. It is easily seen that the difference of Vt of accumulation viewed from the p+ control junction and n+ control junction is simply the difference of their flat-band voltage Vfb, i.e. Vtacp−Vtacn=Vfnp−Vfbn, which is in turn simply one band-gap Eg. Due to the heavy doping of p+ and n+ on the control gate, the Vfbp is more positive than Vfbn by one full band-gap (Eg˜1.2 v). Note that if the connection of the two vertical n-FETs to the op-amp inputs is swapped (or equivalently, the polarity of control junctions is swapped), the output will be reversed to −1.2 v.
a shows an embodiment of a band-gap reference using p-FET in linear region. Two p-channel vertical FETs can also be used to form a “band-gap” reference circuit as shown in
P-type substrate 12 is coupled to Vss and comprises STI structures 42a-42e. P-type doped region 40 is formed adjacent to one side of STI structure 42b and is coupled to ground voltage Vp. P-type doped region 39a is formed between another side of STI structure 42b, and STI structure 42c. P-type doped region 39b is formed between one side of STI structure 42d, and STI structure 42c. N-type doped region 38 is formed between another side of STI structure 42d, and STI structure 42e. N-type doped region (n-base) 48 is formed under p-type doped region 40. Amplifier OA comprises an input terminal Va coupled to p-type doped region 39a, an input terminal Vb coupled to the p-type doped region 39b, and an output terminal coupled to n-type doped region 38. Current source I1 is coupled between Vcc and input terminal Va, and current source I2 is coupled between Vcc and input terminal Vb.
The vertical FETs are connected to current sources I and op-amp OA in
a shows an embodiment of a band-gap reference using vertical n-FETs in saturation region. The band-gap reference can be formed using two vertical n-FETs 122a, 124a operating in saturation as shown in
a shows an embodiment of a band-gap reference using vertical p-FETs in saturation region.
The band-gap reference can also be formed by using two vertical p-FET operating in saturation as shown in
The foregoing description of several embodiments have been presented for the purpose of illustration and description. Obvious modifications or variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described to provide the best illustration of the principles of this invention and its practical application to thereby enable those skilled in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. All such modifications and variations are within the scope of the present invention as determined by the appended claims when interpreted in accordance with the breadth to which they are fairly, legally, and equitably entitled.
This application is a division of pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/102,340, filed Apr. 8, 2005 and entitled “VERTICAL RESISTORS AND BAND-GAP VOLTAGE REFERENCE CIRCUITS”, which is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/268,585, filed Oct. 10, 2002, now abandoned.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4933739 | Harari | Jun 1990 | A |
5229710 | Kraus et al. | Jul 1993 | A |
5234861 | Roisen et al. | Aug 1993 | A |
5453953 | Dhong et al. | Sep 1995 | A |
5899724 | Dobuzinsky et al. | May 1999 | A |
6051474 | Beasom | Apr 2000 | A |
6078094 | Poplevine et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0188984 | Nov 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090160024 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11102340 | Apr 2005 | US |
Child | 12358347 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10268585 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 11102340 | US |