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Silicon on insulator SOItechniques

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To separate a thin device layer from the bulk of the wafer. by inserting an electrically insulating layer. Insulator, 0.1 10 um ... Source: Ibis, www.ibis.com ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Silicon on insulator SOItechniques


1
Silicon on insulator (SOI)-techniques
  • FYS4310
  • Lars Løvlie
  • 07.06.06

2
Introduction to SOI
  • Goal
  • To separate a thin device layer from the bulk of
    the wafer
  • by inserting an electrically insulating layer.

3
  • Motivation
  • SOI decreases the charge to be moved for
    transistor switching
  • Smaller region to deplete for carriers
  • Faster switching
  • Complete isolation between devicesand substrate
  • Fabrication in isolated regions of single crystal
    Si, no need for wells
  • Removes parasitic MOS to substrate and no
    latchup

Source SiGen, www.sigen.com
4
Advantages and disadvantages
5
  • Two main strategies of SOI
  • gt Implantation
  • SIMOX and SIMNI
  • Bonding and etchback, BE-SOI
  • Direct, high temperature or plasma treatment
  • Anodic, moderate temperature and high voltage
  • First implantation and bonding, then cleaving
  • Smart CutTM (Soitec)
  • NanocleaveTM (SiGen)

6
SIMOX
  • Implantation of an extreme dose of O-ions
    creating amorphous layer around Rp
  • Dose 1018 cm-2
  • Rp usually 1 um
  • Temp. 4-600 oC to partially heal surface
    (maintain crystal)
  • High temp. anneal to grow SiO2 grains into a
    continuous SiO2 layer... and to avoid
    OSFTemp. 13-1400 oC
  • Dislocation concentration around 103 cm-2, high
    cost

BOX Buried OXide
Source Ibis, www.ibis.com
7
SIMNI
  • Implant N-ions instead of O-ions
  • Need smaller dose, since stochiometric Si3N4
    (43) requires less implant species per Si than
    SiO2 (21)

For all techniques it is common to implant in the
direction where you have maximum channeling to
reduce surface damage due to electronic stopping.
8
  • Two main strategies of SOI
  • Implantation
  • SIMOX and SIMNI
  • gt Bond and etchback, BE-SOI
  • Direct, high temperature or plasma treatment
  • Anodic, moderate temperature and high voltage
  • First implantation and bonding, then cleaving
  • Smart CutTM (Soitec)
  • NanocleaveTM (SiGen)

9
  • Direct bonding
  • Fusion bonding
  • Grow thermal oxide on one wafer.
  • Wet surfaces in DI water
  • Prebonding Apply pressure at RT.Hydrogen (OH)
    and Van der Waals bonds
  • Bonding Anneal at 1000 oC

10
Direct bonding
  • ...OR, Plasma Activated Bonding (PAB)
  • Grow thermal oxide on one wafer.
  • React surface with O-plasma
  • Prebonding Apply pressure at RT.
  • Bonding Anneal at only 400 oCAvoids problems
    when bonding materials with differing thermal
    expansion coeff.

Sources Senturia, Microsystem Design and
Campbell, The Science and Engineering of ...
11
Contact strengths
Source SiGen (paper presented at 2001 MRS
Spring Meeting, www.sigen.com
12
Anodic/Field assisted bonding
  • Grow thermal oxide on surface of one wafer.
  • Bonding Anneal at only 400 oC but with voltage
    1000 V.
  • Anions in oxide (or glass) flows to cathode
    setting up E-field and attractive electrostatic
    forces.Low T avoids problems when bonding
    materials with different thermal expansion
    coefficients.

Silicon with no oxide
-
E and current of anions

Silicon with surface oxide
-
Heater
13
  • Two main strategies of SOI
  • Implantation
  • SIMOX and SIMNI
  • Bonding and Etchback, BE-SOI
  • Direct, high temperature or plasma treatment
  • Anodic, moderate temperature and high voltage
  • gt First implantation and bonding, then cleaving
  • Smart CutTM (Soitec)
  • NanocleaveTM (SiGen)

14
Implant, bond and cleave-methods
  • Grow thermal oxide on surface of a wafer, this
    will be the HANDLE (bottom) wafer
  • On the DONOR wafer, either (Smart CutTM)Implant
    a dose of 5E16 cm-2 H creating voids and strain
    after anneal.
  • OR (NanocleaveTM)Grow (by epitaxy) strained,
    single crystalline Si ontop of a SiGe
    layer.Implant a smaller dose of H in the
    Ge-rich region.
  • Use an intense water or gas jet to cleave in the
    region with voids.
  • Surface treatment by CMP, etch or CVD

15
State-of-the-art
  • sSOI strained SOI
  • Strained Si ontop of SiGe
  • Higher mobility gives larger drive current in
    MOS-channels
  • Already being used
  • SOD Si-On-Diamond
  • Diamond has larger heat conduction
  • Better heat dissipation through substrate will be
    increasingly important
  • SOD might never by used for IC-production, but
    very cool

Sources physicsorg.com and Memc Inc.,
www.memc.com
16
Sources www.compoundsemiconductor.net and Sarah
Olsen et. al, IEEE Transactions on Electron
Devices, Vol. 50, No. 9
17
Sources
  • Web
  • www.sigen.com
  • www.soitec.com
  • www.compoundsemiconductor.net
  • www.ibis.com
  • (The almighty) www.wikipedia.org
  • Litterature
  • S. Campbell, The Science and Engineering of
    Microelectronic Fabrication
  • S. Senturia, Microsystem Design
  • B. Streetman, Solid State Electronic Devices
  • Maaike M. V. Taklo, Wafer bonding for MEMS
  • Articles
  • Various (Mainly through ISI Web and Elsevier)

18
  • Motivation for MEMS
  • Bonding makes possible structures in real 3D by
    bonding patterned/etched wafers together
  • Si to Si
  • Glass to Si
  • Si (device layer) SiO2 Si (Bulk)

Source Taklo, Maaike M. Visser (edited)
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