A punch-through diode transient suppression device has a base region of varying doping concentration to improve leakage and clamping characteristics. The punch-through diode includes a first region comprising an n+ region, a second region comprising a p- region abutting the first region, a third region comprising a p+ region abutting the second region, and a fourth region comprising an n+ region abutting the third region. The peak dopant concentration of the n+ layers should be about 1.5E18 cm-3, the peak dopant concentration of the p+ layer should be between about 1 to about 5 times the peak concentration of the n+ layer, and the dopant concentration of the p- layer should be between about 0.5E14 cm-3 and about 1.OE17 cm-3. The junction depth of the fourth (n+) region should be greater than about 0.3 μm. The thickness of the third (p+) region should be between about 0.3 μm and about 2.0 μm, and the thickness of the second (p-) region should be between about 0.5 μm and about 5.0 μm.
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1. A punch-through diode transient suppression device comprising:
a first region comprising an n+ region; a second region comprising a p- region abutting said first region; a third region comprising a p+ region abutting said second region; a fourth region comprising an n+ region abutting said third region; a passivation layer disposed over an upper surface of said fourth region; and an isolation trench disposed at outer edges of said p- region, said p+ region, and said fourth n+ region, said isolation trench extending into said first n+ region.
4. A punch-through diode transient suppression device comprising:
a n+ substrate having an upper surface; a p- region disposed on said upper surface of said n+ substrate, said p- region having an upper surface, a side surface, and a first end; and a p+ region disposed on said upper surface of said p- region, said p+ region having an upper surface and a first end; an n+ region disposed on an upper surface of said p+ region, said n+ region having an upper surface; an isolation diffusion region disposed on said side of said p- region, said isolation diffusion region having an upper surface; and a passivation layer disposed over said upper surface of said n+ region, at said upper surface of said isolation diffusion region, at said first end of said p- region, and at said first end of said p+ region.
0. 12. A punch-through diode transient suppression device comprising:
a first region comprising a first dopant type and a first dopant concentration value; a second region comprising a second dopant concentration value that differs from said first dopant concentrative value, said second region abutting said first region; a third region comprising a third dopant type that differs from said first dopant type, said third region abutting said second region; a fourth region comprising said first dopant type, said fourth region abutting said third region; a passivation layer disposed over an upper surface of said fourth region, said passivation layer having an aperture allowing a metal contact to provide an electrical connection with said fourth region; an isolation trench disposed at outer edges of said second region, said third region, and said fourth region, said isolation trench extending into said first region.
0. 22. A punch-through diode transient suppression device comprising:
an n+ dopant type substrate having an n+ dopant concentration value; a first region for reducing a capacitive level of the suppression device, said first region abutting said n+ dopant type substrate and comprising a first dopant concentration value that differs from said n+ dopant concentration value; a second region abutting said first region, said second region comprising a second dopant type that differs from said n+ dopant type; an n+ dopant type region abutting said second region; a passivation layer disposed over an upper surface of said n+ dopant type region, said passivation layer having an aperture allowing a metal contact to provide an electrical connection with said n+ dopant type region; and an isolation region disposed at outer edges of said first region, said second region, and said fourth region, said isolation region extending into said n+ dopant type substrate.
0. 2. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said first and fourth regions have a peak dopant concentration of about 1.5E18 cm-3; said third region has a peak dopant concentration of between about 50 to about 2,000 times said peak dopant concentration of said second region; and said second region has a dopant concentration of between about 0.5E14 cm-3 and about 1.0E17 cm-3.
0. 3. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said fourth region has a junction depth of greater than about 0.3 um; said third region has a thickness of between about 0.3 um and about 2.0 um, and said second region has a thickness of between about 0.5 um and about 5.0 um.
5. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said substrate and said n+ region have a peak dopant concentration of about 1.5E18 cm-3; said p+ region has a peak dopant concentration of between about 50 to about 2,000 times said dopant concentration of said p- region; and said p- region has a dopant concentration of between about 0.5E14 cm-3 and about 1.0E17 cm-3.
6. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said n+ region has a junction depth of greater than about 0.3 um; said p+ region has a thickness of between about 0.3 um and about 2.0 um, and said p- region has a thickness of between about 0.5 um and about 5.0 um.
7. The punch-through diode in
8. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said first and fourth regions have a peak dopant concentration of about 1.5E18 cm-3; said third region has a peak dopant concentration of between about 50 to about 2,000 times said peak dopant concentration of said second region; and said second region has a dopant concentration of between about 0.5E14 cm-3 and about 1.0E17 cm-3.
9. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said fourth region has a junction depth of greater than about 0.3 μm; said third region has a thickness of between about 0.3 μm and about 2.0 μm, and said second region has a thickness of between about 0.5 μm and about 5.0 μm.
10. The punch-through diode in
11. The punch-through diode in
0. 13. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 14. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 15. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 16. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 17. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 18. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 19. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said fourth region has a junction depth of greater than about 0.3 μm; said third region has a thickness of between about 0.3 μm and 2.0 μm; and said second region has a thickness of between about 0.5 μm and about 5.0 μm.
0. 20. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 21. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 23. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 24. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 25. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 26. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
0. 27. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
said n+ dopant type region has a junction depth of greater than about 0.3 μm; said second region has a thickness of between about 0.3 μm and about 2.0 μm; and said first region has a thickness of between about 0.5 μm and about 5.0 μm.
0. 28. The punch-through diode transient suppression device of
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This is a continuation of patent application Ser. No. 08/497,079, filed Jun. 30, 1995.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to semiconductor devices. More particularly, the present invention relates to a low-voltage punch-through transient suppressor employing a dual base structure.
2. The Prior Art
Electronic circuitry which is designed to operate at supply voltages less than 5 volts are extremely susceptible to damage from overvoltage conditions caused by electrostatic discharge, inductively coupled spikes, or other transient conditions from its operating environment. The current trend of the reduction in circuit operating voltage dictates a corresponding reduction in the maximum voltage that the circuitry can withstand without incurring damage. As operating voltages drop below 5 volts to 3.3 volts and below it becomes necessary to clamp transient voltage excursions to below five volts.
The most widely used device currently in use for low voltage protection is the reversed biased p+n+ zener diode. See O. M. Clark, "Transient voltage suppressor types and application", IEEE Trans Power Electron., vol. 5, pp. 20-26, November 1990. These devices perform well at voltages of 5 volts and above but run into problems when scaled to clamp below 5 volts. The two major drawbacks incurred by using this device structure are very large leakage currents and high capacitance. These detrimental characteristics increase power consumption and restrict operating frequency.
A second device capable low clamping voltages is the n+pn+ uniform base punch through diode, such as disclosed in P. J. Kannam, "Design concepts of high energy punch-through structures" IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, ED-23, no. 8, pp. 879-882, 1976, and D. de Cogan, "The punch through diode", Microelectronics, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 20-23, 1977. These devices exhibit much improved leakage and capacitance characteristics over the conventional pn diode but suffer from poor clamping characteristics at high currents. If the designer tries to improve clamping to protect circuitry under industry standard surge conditions by increasing die area, the results are devices which are too large to produce economically.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a low-voltage transient suppressor which avoids some of the shortcomings of the prior art.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a low-voltage transient suppressor which has a low leakage current.
It is further object of the present invention to provide a low-voltage transient suppressor which has a lower capacitance than prior-art low-voltage transient suppressors.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a low-voltage transient suppressor which has improved high-current clamping characteristics compared to prior-art low-voltage transient suppressors.
The transient suppressor device of the present invention comprises a n+p-p+n+ punch-through diode. It is a device which can clamp at low voltages and have leakage and capacitance characteristics superior to those of prior-art transient suppressors. The punch-through diode of the present invention includes a first region comprising an n+ region, a second region comprising a p- region abutting the first region, a third region comprising a p+ region abutting the second region, and a fourth region comprising an n+ region abutting the third region.
The peak dopant concentration of the n+ layers should be about 1.5E18 cm-3, the peak dopant concentration of the p+ layer should be between about 50 to about 2,000 times the peak concentration of the p- layer, and the dopant concentration of the p- layer should be between about 0.5E14 cm-3 and about 1.0E17 cm-3. The junction depth of the fourth (n+) region should be between about 0.3 um and about 1.5 um. The thickness of the third (p+) region should be between about 0.3 um and about 2.0 um, and the thickness of the second (p-) region should be between about 0.5 um and about 5.0 um.
Those of ordinary skill in the art will realize that the following description of the present invention is illustrative only and not in any way limiting. Other embodiments of the invention will readily suggest themselves to such skilled persons.
Reversed biased p+n+ zener diodes are currently the most widely-used devices for low voltage protection. These devices perform satisfactorily at voltages of 5 volts and above but exhibit very large leakage currents and high capacitance, two major drawbacks, when designed to clamp below 5 volts. FIG. 1. depicts the impurity doping profile of a typical low voltage pn junction device.
The n+p+ uniform base punch-through diode is a second device capable of clamping low voltages. While the leakage and capacitance characteristics of the punch-through diode are superior to the conventional pn diode, the punch-through diode has poor clamping characteristics at high currents. The doping profile of a low voltage n+pn+ uniform base punch-through diode is shown in FIG. 2.
Referring now to
Table I gives the presently preferred minimum and maximum doping levels of the regions of the layers 12, 14, 16, and 18. The doping levels for the n+ layers 12 and 18 and p+ layer 16 are expressed in peak dopant concentration values (Cn+ and Cp+) and the doping level for the p- layer 14 is expressed as an average value (Cp-).
TABLE I | |||
Layer | Minimum | Maximum | |
Cn+ (Peak concentration of | 1.5E18 cm-3 | not critical | |
n layers) | |||
Cp+ (Peak concentration of | 5.0E1 × Cp- | 1.0E3 × Cp- | |
p+ layer) | |||
Cp- (concentration of the | 0.5E14 cm-3 | 1.0E17 cm-3 | |
p- layer | |||
Table II gives the range of thickness (expressed in um micrometer) for the junction depth of n+ region 18, p- p+ region 16, and p+ p- region 18 24. In Table II, the quantities xj1, xj2, and xj3 refer to linear positions along the thickness of the epitaxial layer after performance of the implant doping steps.
TABLE II | |||
Layer | Minimum | Maximum | |
xj1 (n+ junction depth) | 0.3 um | not critical | |
xj2 - xj1 (p+ layer | 0.3 um | 2.0 um | |
thickness) | |||
xj3 - xj2 (p layer | 0.5 um | 5.0 um | |
thickness) | |||
The electrical characteristics of the n+p-p+n+ punch-through diode of the present invention are determined by the peak concentrations and widths of each of the layers depicted in FIG. 3. It is possible to build suitable devices using a fairly wide range of junction widths and concentrations. It is necessary to optimize the structure to fit the fabrication process.
By constructing a punch-through diode according to the present invention having a p- region that has an optimized doping profile, a device can be manufactured which has superior performance to the prior art. Such an optimized doping profile for such a structure is depicted in FIG. 4.
It can be seen from
The n+p-p+n+ punch-through transient suppressor diode of the present invention can take several forms. Two illustrative forms of the device of the present invention are shown in
The trench/mesa isolation n+p-p+n+ punch-through transient suppressor diode 30 is shown fabricated on n+ substrate 32. N+ substrate 32 is n-type silicon having a maximum 0.01 ohm-cm resistivity. P- layer 34 is disposed on the upper surface of the n+ substrate 32. P+layer 36 is disposed on the upper surface of p- layer 34. Finally, n+ layer 38 is disposed on the upper surface of p+ layer 36. Trenches 40 are disposed at the periphery of layers 34, 36, and 38 and extend down into substrate 32. A passivation layer 42 is disposed over the upper surface of n+ layer 38 and extends into trenches 40 down to substrate 32 to cover the edges of layers 34, 36, and 38. Metal contact 44 is disposed in an aperture formed in passivation layer 42 and makes electrical contact with n+ layer 38.
The n+p-p+n+ punch-through diode of the present invention can be manufactured using standard silicon wafer fabrication techniques. A typical process flow with ranges that could accommodate most processing equipment for a mesa or trench isolated device such as that depicted in
Referring first to
Next, an oxide layer 46 comprising SiO2 having a thickness from between about 200 angstroms to about 500 angstroms thick is grown using, for example, standard thermal oxidation techniques.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Next, a metal mask 62 is formed over the surface of metal layer 60 using conventional photolithography techniques. The metal layer and barrier layer are then defined using conventional etching technology.
Referring now to
An alternative structure also suitable for manufacture of the device of the present invention is shown in FIG. 9. This embodiment could be manufactured by adding an n+ isolation mask and diffusion before the boron implant step and eliminating the trench mask/etch step. In the following drawing figures illustrating this embodiment, where structures are the same as corresponding structures in the embodiment of
Referring now to
The embodiment of the device depicted in
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Next, a metal mask 62 is formed over the surface of metal layer 60 using conventional photolithography techniques. The metal layer and barrier layer are then defined using conventional etching technology.
Referring now to
The following data in Table Ill is an example of the processing parameters used to fabricate an actual n+p-p+n+ punch-through diode transient suppressor device according to the present invention, and the resulting physical parameters (Table IV) and electrical parameters (Table V) exhibited by the device.
TABLE III | |||
Process parameters | |||
Boron implant (p+) | 1.5E18 cm-2 | 90 keV | |
Boron drive | 70 min. | 1040°C C. | |
Phos Implant | 1E 15 | 80 keV | |
n+ drive | 15 min | 900°C C. | |
TABLE IV | ||
Physical Measurements | ||
xj1 | 0.6 um | |
xj2 | 1.2 um | |
xj3 | 1.9 um | |
Cn+ | 2.0E19 cm-3 | |
Cp+ | 1.0E17 cm-3 | |
Cp | 1.8E15 cm-3 | |
TABLE V | ||
Electrical Characteristics | ||
BV at 0.1 A/cm2 | 3.9 V to 4.0 V | |
Ir at 80% of BV (standoff voltage) | 3E-3 A/cm2 | |
Vclamp at 1,500 A/cm2 | 4.3 V | |
Capacitance at 0 V | 400-450 pF | |
The characteristics shown in Tables III, IV, and V may be extrapolated to other processing conditions.
While embodiments and applications of this invention have been shown and described, it would be apparent to those skilled in the art that many more modifications than mentioned above are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The invention, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the appended claims.
King, Ya-Chin, Yu, Bin, Hu, Chenming, Pohlman, Jeffrey T., Trivedi, Rita
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