An electrostatic discharge (esd) protection circuit connected to an integrated circuit pad for protecting an internal circuit from esd damage. The esd protection circuit includes an nmos/pmos transistor, a capacitor, and a load The nmos/pmos is configured with a drain connected to the IC pad and a source for connection to the circuit VSS/VDD. Agate of the nmos/pmos transistor is tied to the source. The capacitor is connected between the IC pad and the bulk of the nmos/pmos transistor The load, which is either another nmos/pmos transistor or a resistor, is to be connected between the VSS/VDD and the bulk of the nmos/pmos transistor. In accordance with the invention, the nmos/pmos transistor is fabricated in a P-well/N-well region of a semiconductor substrate. The capacitor includes an IC pad and a polysilicon layer therebelow, with an intervening dielectric layer.
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0. 18. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for an integrated circuit, comprising:
a first mos transistor having a source terminal, a drain terminal, a gate terminal, and a bulk terminal; a capacitor coupled between the bulk terminal and a first node; and a load coupled between the bulk terminal and a second node wherein said load is a second mos transistor.
0. 20. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for an integrated circuit, comprising:
an mos transistor having a source terminal, a drain terminal, a gate terminal, and a bulk terminal; a capacitor coupled between the bulk terminal and a first node; and a load coupled between the bulk terminal and a second node, wherein said gate terminal is coupled to said second node.
0. 16. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for an integrated circuit, comprising:
an nmos transistor having a source terminal, a drain terminal, a gate terminal electrically coupled to a circuit ground, and a bulk terminal; a capacitor coupled between the bulk terminal and a first node; and a load coupled between the bulk terminal and a second node, wherein said second node is a power rail and said power rail is VSS bus.
0. 17. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for an integrated circuit, comprising:
an nmos transistor having a source terminal a drain terminal a gate terminal electrically coupled to a circuit ground, and a bulk terminal; a capacitor coupled between the bulk terminal and a fast node; and a load coupled between the bulk terminal and a second node, wherein said second node is a power rail and said power rail is the circuit ground.
0. 19. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for an integrated circuit, comprising:
a first mos transistor having a source terminal, a drain terminal, a gate terminal, and a bulk terminal; a capacitor coupled between the bulk terminal and a first node; and a load coupled between the bulk terminal and a second node, wherein said load is a second mos transistor having a gate, and the gate of said second mos transistor is coupled to a power rail.
0. 21. A method of fabricating an integrated circuit with an esd protection device for protection against esd stress at a first node by, the method comprising
forming said esd protection device of a bulk terminal of a first conductivity type, and first and second diffusion regions of a second conductivity type, wherein said first diffusion region is coupled to the first node and said second diffusion region is coupled to a power rail; and coupling said bulk terminal to said first node; wherein the potential of said bulk terminal changes and a forward bias forms between said bulk terminal and said second diffusion region when esd stress develops at the first node, further comprising coupling said bulk terminal to said power rail; wherein a potential of the bulk terminal is brought to substantially the same as a potential level of said power rail after a time delay when esd stress develops at the first node, wherein said coupling of the bulk terminal to the power rail is made through a load, and wherein said load is a transistor.
9. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for coupling to a power rail, comprising:
a P-type semiconductor substrate; an N-well region in the substrate; a contact region in the N-well region; an isolating someone on the substrate; a conducing layer on the isolating structure, coupled to the contact region; a dielectric layer overlying the conducting layer; a metal pad on the dielectric layer, wherein the metal pad the dielectric layer, and the conducting layer form a capacitor for coupling esd voltage to the N-well region when an esd stress is present at the pad; a first P-type heavily-doped region is the N-well region, coupled to the pad; a second P-type heavily-doped region in the N-web region, spaced apart from and electrically isolated from the first P-type heavily-doped region, for coupling to the power rail: a gate structure, formed on the N-well region between the first P-type heavily-doped region and the second P-type heavily-doped region, for correction to the power rail, wherein the first P-type heavily-doped region, the second P-type heavily-doped region, the gate structure, and the N-well region form a pmos transistor which bypasses esd stress when an esd voltage is coupled to the N-well region through the capacitor; and a load connected between the contact region and the power rail when the gate structure is connected to the power rail, for coupling the N-well region of the pmos transistor to the power rail.
1. An electrostatic discharge protection circuit for protecting an internal circuit, comprising:
an N-type semiconductor substrate; a P-well region in the substrate; a contact region in the P-well region; an isolating structure on the substrate; a conducting layer on the isolating structure, coupled to the contact region; a dielectric lays overlying the conducting layer; a metal pad on the dielectric layer, wherein the metal pad, the dielectric layer, and the conducting layer form a capacitor for coupling esd voltage to the P-well region when an esd stress is present at the pad; a first N-type heavily-doped region in the P-well region, coupled to the pad; a second N-type heavily-doped region for coupling to a circuit ground of the internal circuit, the second N-type heavily doped region being disposed in the P-well region, spaced apart from and electrically isolated from the first N-type heavily-doped region; a gate structure, disposed on the P-well region between the first N-type heavily-doped region and the second N-type heavily-doped region, for connection to the circuit ground, wherein the first N-type heavily-doped region, the second N-type heavily-doped region, the gate structure, and the P-well region form an nmos transistor which bypasses esd stress when an esd voltage is coupled to the P-well region through the capacitor; and a load connected between the contact region and the circuit ground when the gate structure and the second N-type heavily doped region are connected to the circuit ground, for coupling the P-well region of the nmos transistor to the circuit ground.
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0. 22. The method of
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1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to a technique for protection against electrostatic discharge damage of integrated circuits. More particularly, the invention relates to an electrostatic discharge protection circuit triggered by capacitive-coupling.
2. Description of the Related Art
Electrostatic discharge, hereinafter "ESD," is a common phenomenon the occurs during handling of semiconductor integrated circuit ("IC") devices. An electrostatic charge may accumulate for various reasons and produce potentially destructive effects on an IC device. Damage typically cm occur during a testing phase of IC fabrication or during assembly of the IC onto a circuit board, as well as during use of equipment into which the IC has bean installed. Damage to a single IC due to poor ESD protection in an electronic device can partially or sometimes completely hamper its functionality. EDS protection for semiconductor ICs is, therefore, a reliability issue.
ESD stress models are based on the reproduction of typical discharge pulses to which the IC may be exposed during manufacture or handling. Three standard models, known as the Human Body Model (HBM), Machine Model (MM), and Charged Device Model (CDM) have been developed. The human-body model is set forth in U.S. Military Standard MIL-SID-883, Method 3015.6. This Military Standard models the electrostatic stress produced on an IC device when a human carrying an electrostatic charge touches the lead pins of the IC device. The machine model is set forth in Industry Standard EIAJ-IC-121, which describes the electrostatic stress produced on an IC device when a machine carrying an electrostatic charge contacts the lead pins of the IC device. The charged device model describes the ESD current pulse generated when an IC device already carrying an electrostatic charge is grounded while being handled.
Referring to
However, in light of the trend toward submicron scale IC fabrication, MOS transistor vulnerability to ESD stress has been greatly reduced due to advanced bases, such as using lightly-doped drain (LDD) structures and clad silicide diffusions. In addition, the conventional ESD protection circuit design layout has a multi-finger structure. Therefore, during an ESD event, minority carriers will crowd within a local area and flow along the same direction and trigger meridian, finger to turn on, consequently resulting in local beating and degradation of the performance of EST) circuits configurated with finger-type NMOS
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an electrostatic discharge protection circuit triggered by capacitive-coupling which can be used at an input pad or an output pad to protect the internal circuit from ESD damage.
It is another object of the invention to provide an electrostatic protecting circuit triggered by capacitive-coupling, having a capacitor including a metal pad and a polysilicon layer therebelow and having an increased coupling into without consuming extra layout area.
The invention achieves the above-identified objects by providing an electrostatic discharge protection circuit for protecting an internal circuit which includes a semiconductor substrate and a P-well region formed in the substrate. At least one contact region is formed in the P-well region, as is an isolating structure. A conducting layer is formed on the isolating structure and is coupled to the contact region. A dielectric layer is formed overlying the conducting layer, and a metal pad is formed on the dielectric layer, such that the metal pad, the dielectric layer, and the conducting layer form a capacitor for coupling ESD voltage to the P-well region when an ESD voltage appears at the pad.
Further, a first N-type heavily-doped region is formed in the P-well region and is coupled to the pad. A second N-type heavily-doped region for coupling to a circuit ground of the internal circuit is formed in the P-well, spaced apart and electrically isolated from the first N-type heavily-doped region. A gate structure is formed on the P-well region, between the first N-type heavily-doped region and the second N-type heavily-doped region, for connection to the circuit ground, such that the first N-type heavily-doped region, the second N-type heavily-doped region, the gate structure, and the P-well region form an NMOS transistor which bypasses ESD stress when an ESD voltage is coupled to the P-well region through the capacitor. The NMOS transistor is coupled to the circuit ground by a load connected between the contact region and the circuit ground, when the gate structure and the second N-type heavily-doped region are connected to the circuit ground. The load may be either a resistor or a second NMOS transistor.
Moreover, the invention achieves the above-identified objects by providing an electrostatic discharge protection circuit coupled to a power rail. The circuit includes a semiconductor substrate and an N-well region formed on the substrate. At least one contact region is formed in the N-well region. An isolating structure is formed on the substrate, and a conducting layer is formed on the isolating structure and is coupled tothe contact region. A dielectric layer is formed overlying the conducting layer, and a metal pad is formed on the dielectric layer, such that the metal pad, the dielectric layer, and the conducting layer form a capacitor for coupling ESD stress to the N-well region when an ESD voltage appears at the pad.
A first P-type heavily-doped region is formed in the N-well region and is coupled to the pad. A second P-type heavily-doped region is formed in the N-well, spaced apart and electrically isolated from the first P-type heavily-doped region, for coupling to the power rail. A gate structure is formed on the N-well region between the first P-type heavily-doped region and the second P-type heavily-doped region, for connection to the power rail, such that the first P-type heavily-doped region, the second P-type heavily-doped region, the gate structure and the N-well region form a PMOS transistor which bypasses ESD stress when an ESD voltage is coupled to the one N-well region through the capacitor.
The PMOS transistor is coupled to the power end by a load connected between the contact region and the power rail, when the gate structure is connected to the power rail. The load may be either a resistor or mother PMOS transistor.
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent by way of the following detailed description of the preferred but non-limiting embodiments. The description is made with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to
Referring to
A polysilicon layer 117 doped with impurities is formed on one of the field oxide portions 102, preferably at one side of the substrate 100. A dielectric layer 118 is deposited to cover the overall surface and then is etched to shape several contact windows in order to expose the polysilicon layer 117, contact regions 116, first N-type heavily-doped region 114, second N-type heavily-doped regions 115, and the gate electrodes 112. A metal pad 119, which can be the IC pad 8 of
According to the ESD protection circuit depicted is
As shown in
Because the well region 110 is coupled by the resistor R1 to circuit ground VSS, the resistor R1 and the capacitor C1 provide a time delay to sustain the forward bias between the P-well region 110 and the second N-type heavily-doped regions 115 during the ESD event. As exemplified by the HBM model, the rise time of an ESD pulse is about 10 ns. Therefore, the RC time constant can be adjusted to within the range of about 10 as to sustain the forward bias during the ESD event. Accordingly, the capacitance of the capacitor C1 may be selected from within the range of about 0.5-2 pF, and the resistance of the register R may be selected from within the range of about 5 KΩ to about 20 KΩ. However, while the power rail VDD is powered in normal operation, the NMOS transistor M5 is turned off and the well region 110 is grounded via the resistor R and therefore will not float to induce a leakage current.
The diode D1 as depicted in
Referring to
Referring to
A first N-type heavily-doped region 214 is formed in the first P-well region 210 as the drain terminal of the first NMOS transacts M6. At least one second N-type heavily-doped region 215 (two second heavily-doped regions are exemplified in
The second NMOS transistor M7 is fabricated on the second P-well region 220. Accordingly, the drain terminal 223 and source terminal 224 are formed in second P-well region 220 by implanting N-type impurities therein. A gate dielectric layer 221 is formed to cover the portion of the second P-well region 220 between the drain terminal 223 and the source terminal 224, and a gate 222 is formed on the gate dielectric layer 221. Furthermore, there are contact regions 225 formed in the second P-well region 220 as bulk terminal of the second NMOS transistor M7.
A polysilicon layer 230 doped with impurities is formed on the field oxide portion 202. A dielectric layer 231 is deposited to cover the overall surface and then is etched to shape several contact windows in order to expose the polysilicon layer 230, contact regions 216, second N-type heavily-doped regions 215, first N-type heavily-doped region 214, and gate electrodes 212 of the first NMOS transistor M6. Also, the bulk 225, drain 223, source 224, and gate 222 of the second NMOS transistor M7 are exposed through corresponding contact windows. A metal pad 232, which can be the IC pad 8 of
According to the ESD protection circuit depicted in
As shown in
As shown in
The diode D2 depicted in
Referring to
Referring to
A polysilicon layer 317 doped with impurities is formed on one of the field oxide portions 302, preferably at one side of the substrate 300. A dielectric layer 318 is deposited to cover the overall surface and then is etched to shape several contact windows in order to expose the polysilicon layer 317, contact regions 316, first P-type heavily-doped region 314, second P-type heavily-doped regions 315, and gate electrode 312. A metal pad 319, which can be the IC pad 8 of
According to the ESD protection circuit depicted in
As shown in
Because the well region 310 is coupled by the resistor R3 to the power rail VDD, the resister R3 and the capacitor C3 provide a time delay to sustain the forward bias between the N-well region 310 and the second P-type heavily-doped regions 315 during the ESD event. As exemplified by the HBM model, the rise time of the ESD pulse is about 10 ns. Therefore, the RC time constant can be adjusted to the range of about 10 ns to sustain the forward bias during the ESD event. Accordingly, the capacitance of the capacitor C3 may be selected from the range of about 0.5-2 pF, and the resistance of the registers R may be selected from the range of about 5 KΩ to about 20 KΩ. However, while the power rail VDD is powered in normal operation (e.g., VDD=5V), the PMOS transistor M8 is turned off and the well region 310 is pumped up to the VDD potential via the resistor R3, and therefore will not floor, which would induce an leakage current.
The diode D3, as depicted in
Referring to
Referring to
A first P-type heavily-doped region 414 is formed in the first N-well region 410 as the drain terminal of the first PMOS transistor M9. At least one second P-type heavily-doped region 415 (two second heavily doped regions are exemplified in
The second PMOS transistor M10, is fabricated on the second N-well region 420. Accordingly, the drain terminal 423 and source terminal 424 are formed in the second N-well region 420 by implanting N-type impurities therein. A gate dielectric layer 421 is formed to cover the potion of the second N-well region 420 between the drain terminal 423 and the source terminal 424 and a gate 422 is formed on the gate dielectric layer 421. Furthermore, there are contact regions 425 formed in the second N-well region 429 as the bulk terminals of the second PMOS transistor M10.
A polysilicon layer 430 doped with impurities is formed on the field oxide portion 402. A dielectric layer 431 is deposited to cover the overall surface and then is etched to shape several contact windows in order to expose the polysilicon layer 430, contact regions 416, second P-type heavily-doped regions 415, first P-type heavily-doped region 414, and gate electrodes 412 of the first PMOS transistor M9. Also, the bulk 425 drain 423, source 424, and gate 422 of the second PMOS transistor M10 are exposed through corresponding contact windows. A metal pad 432, which can be the IC pad 8 of
According to the ESD protection circuit depicted in
As shown in
As shown in PIG. 10, the first well region 410 is coupled by the second PMOS transistor M10 to the power rail VDD THUS, with the potential of VSSbeing held at a grounded state, the second PMOS transistor M10 can sustain the forward bias between the N-well region 410 and the second P-type heavily-doped regions 415 during an ESD event However, when the power rail VDD is powered during normal operation (e.g., 5V), the first PMOS transistor M9 remains turned off and the first well region 220 is boosted to the VDD potential via the turned-on second PMOS transistor M10.
The diode D4 depicted in
In conclusion, the NMOS-based ESD protection circuits, in accordance with the invention, have a decreased triggering voltage approximately equal to their snapback voltage (∼5V). Moreover, applied to the multi-finger structure of the ESD protection circuit design layout, either PMOS-based or NMOS-based ESD protection circuits can be utilized for uniform ESD damage protection. Furthermore, the ESD current is conducted for away from the well/dielectric-layer junction, without causing damage of polysilicon filaments.
Alternative embodiments of the invention have now been described in detail. It is to be noted, however, that this description of these embodiments is illustrative of the principles underlying the inventive concept. It is therefore contemplated that various modifications of the disclosed embodiments will, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, be apparent to persons of ordinary skill in the art, and the scope of the invention is intended to be limited only by the appended claims.
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