In accordance with the invention, there are various methods of making an integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor. According to an embodiment of the invention, the bipolar transistor can comprise a substrate, a collector comprising a plurality of alternating doped regions, wherein the plurality of alternating doped regions alternate in a lateral direction from a net first conductivity to a net second conductivity, and a collector contact in electrical contact with the collector. The bipolar transistor can also comprise a heavily doped buried layer below the collector, a base in electrical contact with a base contact, wherein the base is doped to a net second conductivity type and wherein the base spans a portion of the plurality of alternating doped regions, and an emitter disposed within the base, the emitter doped to a net first conductivity, wherein a portion of the alternating doped region under the emitter is doped to a concentration of less than about 3×1012 cm−2.
|
0. 25. A method of making a bipolar transistor, the method comprising:
forming a device layer of a first type conductivity over a substrate;
forming a patterned layer over the device layer, wherein the patterned layer comprises an opening that exposes a portion of the device layer;
providing dopants of a second conductivity type to the exposed portion of the device layer to form a column of second conductivity type dopants in the device layer;
providing dopants of the first conductivity type to the exposed portion of the device layer to form an intrinsic base in the device layer;
forming an emitter that contacts a portion of the exposed device layer; and
forming an emitter contact over the emitter.
0. 30. A method of making a bipolar transistor, the method comprising:
forming a device layer having a first conductivity type over a substrate;
forming first heavily doped buried regions of the first conductivity type in first portions of the device layer;
forming second heavily doped buried regions of a second conductivity type in second portions of the device layer;
forming an epitaxial layer having the first conductivity type over the device layer;
forming two regions of the second conductivity type over at least one of the first heavily doped buried regions of the first conductivity type; and
forming one region of the second conductivity type over at least one of the second heavily doped buried regions of the second conductivity type.
0. 36. A method of making a bipolar transistor with a base, an emitter, and a collector, which are self aligned to each other, the method comprising:
forming a device layer having a first conductivity type on a buried layer doped with a second conductivity type;
forming an oxide layer over a base contact layer overlaying the device layer so as to expose a portion of the device layer that will form a device region;
patterning a base contact in the device region;
exposing the device layer through a hole in the base contact;
implanting and diffusing ions having the second conductivity type so as to form a column in a first region of the device layer;
forming a base by implanting ions having the first conductivity type using the base contact as a mask; and
annealing the base implant so that the base is contacted by the base contact.
0. 27. A method of making a bipolar transistor, the method comprising:
forming a device layer over a substrate;
forming a patterned insulator over the device layer, wherein the patterned insulator comprises a first opening that exposes a first portion of the device layer;
providing dopants of a conductivity type to the exposed first portion of the device layer to form a base in the device layer;
forming a patterned base insulator over the exposed first portion of the device layer, wherein the patterned base insulator comprises a second opening that exposes an area of the first portion of the device layer;
providing dopants of a second conductivity type to the exposed area of the first portion of the device layer to form a column of second conductivity type dopants in the device layer; and
forming an emitter that contacts a portion of the exposed area of the first portion of the device layer.
0. 43. A method of making a bipolar transistor comprising:
forming an epitaxial layer having a first conductivity type on a buried layer having a doped second conductivity type;
growing an insulator over the epitaxial layer and implanted ions;
diffusing the implanted ions into the epitaxial layer to form a sinker that contacts the buried layer;
patterning the insulator layer to expose a portion of the epitaxial layer that will form a device region;
forming a base of the first conductivity type in the exposed portion;
growing a base oxide over the base of the first conductivity type;
forming an opening through the base oxide using a patterned photoresist so as to expose an area of a device layer;
forming a collector column of the second conductivity type using the patterned photoresist;
diffusing and activating the collector column;
forming an emitter heavily doped with the second conductivity type in the base wherein an emitter area is defined in the opening; and
forming an emitter positioned above the collector column in a surface of the base.
0. 1. An integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor comprising:
a substrate;
a collector comprising a plurality of alternating doped regions, wherein the plurality of alternating doped regions alternate in a lateral direction from a net first conductivity to a net second conductivity;
a collector contact in electrical contact with the collector;
a heavily doped buried layer below the collector;
a base in electrical contact with a base contact, wherein the base is doped to the net second conductivity type and wherein-the base spans a portion of the plurality of alternating doped regions; and
an emitter disposed totally within the base, the emitter doped to the net first conductivity, wherein a portion of the alternating doped region under the emitter is doped to a concentration of less than about 3×1012 cm−2 in the lateral direction.
0. 2. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 3. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 4. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 5. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 6. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 7. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
an electrical sinker in electrical contact with the collector contact and in electrical contact with the more heavily doped buried layer.
0. 8. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
at least one doped second region disposed adjacent to the doped region disposed under the emitter, wherein the at least one doped second region is doped to a net second conductivity type.
0. 9. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 10. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 11. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 12. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 13. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 14. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 15. An integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor comprising:
a substrate;
a base formed in the substrate;
a collector comprising a doped first region doped to a net first conductivity disposed under the base, to cover the base and doped second regions doped to a net second conductivity disposed on opposite sides of the doped first region; wherein the base is doped to the net second conductivity type;
a collector contact in electrical contact with the collector;
a more heavily doped layer buried below the doped first region and the doped second regions; and
an emitter doped to the net first conductivity disposed within the base, wherein the doped region disposed beneath the emitter depletes at a reverse bias collector base voltage of magnitude less than an absolute value of BVCEO.
0. 16. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 17. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 18. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 19. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 20. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 21. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 22. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 23. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
a PNP bipolar transistor comprising a BVCEO of at least 82 Volts.
0. 24. The integrated circuit comprising a bipolar transistor according to
0. 26. The method of claim 25, wherein forming the device layer of the first type conductivity over the substrate comprises forming the device layer of a first type conductivity over a heavily doped substrate.
0. 28. The method of claim 27, wherein the conductivity type is a first conductivity type wherein forming the device layer over the substrate comprises forming the device layer having a second conductivity type.
0. 29. The method of claim 27, wherein forming the device layer over the substrate comprises forming the device layer over a heavily doped substrate.
0. 31. The method of claim 30, wherein forming the epitaxial layer having the first conductivity type over the device layer comprises forming a first epitaxial layer having the first conductivity type over the device layer, the method further comprising:
forming a second epitaxial layer having the first conductivity type over the first epitaxial layer.
0. 32. The method of claim 30, further comprising:
masking the epitaxial layer with a mask layer to provide openings to allow ions of the second conductivity type to be implanted in the epitaxial layer.
0. 33. The method of claim 30, further comprising:
heating the formed layers to diffuse and form columns of the second conductivity type in the epitaxial layer.
0. 34. The method of claim 33, wherein the first conductivity type is N-type and the second conductivity type is P-type, wherein heating the formed layers comprises:
diffusing and forming at least one P-type column in an NPN collector over at last one of the first heavily doped buried regions of the first conductivity type in the first portions of the device layer; and
diffusing and forming at least one P-type column in a PNP collector over at last one of the second heavily doped buried regions of a second conductivity type in second portions of the device layer.
0. 35. The method of claim 33, wherein the first conductivity type is P-type and the second conductivity type is N-type, wherein heating the formed layers comprises:
diffusing and forming at least one N-type column in a PNP collector over at last one of the first heavily doped buried regions of the first conductivity type in the first portions of the device layer; and
diffusing and forming at least one N-type column in an NPN collector over at last one of the second heavily doped buried regions of the second conductivity type in second portions of the device layer.
0. 37. The method of claim 36, wherein forming a device layer having the first conductivity type comprises forming an epitaxial layer having the first conductivity type.
0. 38. The method of claim 37, wherein diffusing the ions having the second conductivity type so as to form the column in the epitaxial layer comprises forming the column to span a thickness of the epitaxial layer so as to contact the buried layer.
0. 39. The method of claim 36, further comprising:
implanting ions having the second conductivity type into a second region of the device layer having the first conductivity type.
0. 40. The method of claim 39, further comprising:
patterning a collector contact over the ions having the second conductivity type in the second region of the device layer while patterning the layer of conducting material to form the emitter contact.
0. 41. The method of claim 36, further comprising:
forming spacers on sidewalls of the hole in the base contact;
depositing a layer of conducting material over the device region; and
patterning the layer of conducting material to form an emitter contact disposed between the sidewall spacers, wherein the self-aligned emitter contacts the device layer.
0. 42. The method of claim 36, wherein forming the device layer having the first conductivity type on the buried layer having the doped second conductivity type comprises
forming the device layer having the first conductivity type on the buried layer heavily doped in the second conductivity type.
0. 44. The method of claim 43, further comprising
implanting ions having the second conductivity type into a first region of the epitaxial layer having the first conductivity type;
growing an insulator over the device layer and the implanted ions; and
diffusing the implanted ions into the device layer to form a sinker that contacts the buried layer.
0. 45. The method of claim 43, further comprising forming emitter poly heavily doped with the second conductivity type over the opening wherein the emitter area is defined in the opening where the emitter poly contacts the base.
0. 46. The method of claim 43, wherein forming an emitter positioned above the collector column comprises forming the emitter self-aligned above the collector column.
0. 47. The method of claim 43, further comprising
exposing a base contact region; and
depositing a metal layer to form base contact metal, emitter contact metal, and collector contact metal through patterned trenches, wherein the base, the emitter, and the collector column are self aligned.
0. 48. The method of claim 43, wherein the collector column spans the thickness of the epitaxial layer so as to contact the buried layer.
|
This application is
where tN=thickness of the N column, ND=doping of the N column, tP=thickness of the P column, and NA=doping of the N column; and
tmax=2Emax*ε/q*N [2]
where tmax=maximum thickness of the column, Emax=maximum electric field before breakdown occurs, ε=dielectric constant of the substrate, such as silicon, N=doping level of the column.
The doping of the depletable columns is disconnected from breakdown because once it depletes, a constant electric field extends the length of the column. Breakdown is approximated by:
BV=Ecrit*I [3]
where BV=breakdown voltage, Ecrit=critical electric field for breakdown, I=length of the column.
The depletable columns of a super junction can be used to form drain regions that have shorter and higher doped layers than in conventional DMOS structures of the same breakdown voltage. In particular, they provide reduced “on” resistance in a given area.
Super junctions can also be applied to reduce Res in bipolar transistor devices. Moreover, similar column structures can be used to improve both NPN and PNP bipolar transistor devices, such as when both devices are formed in the same wafer.
Turning to
In
As shown in
The steps used to form the N and P columns can be similar for the NPN bipolar transistor device as for the PNP bipolar transistor device. For example, the NPN can be formed over an N+ buried layer, such as N+ buried layer 204, and the PNP can be formed over a P+ buried layer, such as P+ buried layer 254. Further, the collector contact 214 can be formed in an N column, such as 203h. Alternatively an optional N+ sinker, such as sinker 208, can be formed through N and/or P columns, such as columns 203g and 203h, to connect the buried layer to the surface of the device. The PNP collector contact can be formed in a similar manner to that of the NPN but with the conductivity types inverted.
In prior art super junctions, the integrated doping of the P and N columns may require matching. According to various embodiments of the invention, there is provided a super junction structure that relaxes the matching requirements while at the same time, retaining the Res improvement, at least for bipolars designed to meet a required BVCEO.
According to various embodiments, a bipolar transistor device can be provided that comprises a super junction structure comprising at least one depletable column of a first conductivity type located under an emitter. The depletable column can be formed adjacent to at least one column doped to a second and opposite conductivity type. According to various embodiments, second conductivity type columns can be formed adjacent to each side of the depletable column. The adjacent columns can have doping high enough so that these columns do not totally deplete under reverse bias.
For example, the column under the emitter can be designed to deplete at a reverse bias voltage applied to the collector and the base with a magnitude that is less than the absolute value of BVCEO. Moreover, in contrast to conventional structures, structures described herein can comprise columns (such as P-type columns) of opposite conductivity adjacent to collector columns (such as an N-type column) located below the emitter. According to various embodiments, a depletion layer can spread out from the vertical junction between P-type an N-type columns when the collector base junction is reverse biased. The thickness and doping of the N-type column can be determined using equations 1 and 2 described herein to insure that the N-type column totally depletes. This is also in contrast to conventional structures that cannot provide similar depletion across the entire length of the collector from a vertical junction. Conventional structures can only deplete from the horizontal junction between the base and the collector. And in some embodiments, the depletable column can be designed to totally deplete before BVCEO occurs in the column.
According to various embodiments, the depletion characteristics of the columns can be achieved by controlling the doping of the column under the emitter. As discussed above, the depletable column under the emitter doped to the first conductivity and the columns of the second conductivity can be formed adjacent to the column under the emitter. According to various embodiments, the doping in a horizontal direction between the adjacent second conductivity type columns can be less than about 3E12 atoms/cm2. In some cases, this doping can be less than about 1E12 atoms/cm2. This doping can be derived using equation [2] for tmax shown above using a suitable Emax. It is to be noted that Emax can be a slowly decreasing function of breakdown voltage. As such, there may not be a single solution for all voltages.
According to various embodiments of the invention, the length of the columns can be controlled to provide a given breakdown voltage. For example, the general length of the depletable column under the emitter, between the base and the buried layer, can be determined by BVCEO. Thus, the length of column can be determined using equation [3] above. In an exemplary embodiment, Ecrit may be 2E5 V/cm. It is to be noted that Ecrit can decrease slowly as the voltage increases so the results obtained from equation [3] may slightly underestimate the minimum attainable voltage for low voltage (erg., about 30 V) devices. However, this calculation can be used as a general guide line to determine the length of the base to the buried layer.
In
According to various embodiments, the NPN bipolar transistor 300 and the PNP bipolar transistor 350 comprise deplateable columns 303c and 353b, respectively, under the emitters 310 and 360, respectively. The depletable columns 303c and 353b are bounded on two sides by opposite conductivity type columns, such as 303b and 303d, and 353a and 353c, respectively, that do not totally deplete. This is in contrast to conventional superjunction structures that can have alternating P and N columns all of which totally deplete. Moreover, the embodiments of the present invention described herein require fewer columns than conventional devices.
According to various embodiments, the layers that are used to make the columns shown in
An integrated circuit device having multiple bipolar transistors devices comprising a super junction structure, where one of the columns of the super junction structure is self-aligned to the emitter is contemplated. An example of forming such an integrated circuit device is shown in
As stated above, a depiction of a method for forming NPN and PNP bipolar transistors devices comprising super junction structures on the same integrated circuit is shown in
In
As shown in
As shown in
According to various embodiments, the N-type columns of the transistors can be formed from the two N-type epitaxial layers 430 and 440. Further, the P-type columns can be formed from the P-type implant into the epitaxial layers 430 and 440. Moreover, the P-type implant is diffused down to the N+ and P+ buried regions 422 and 424, respectively, and up through the second N epitaxial layer 440 after it is deposited. While the figures show two columns formed in the NPN collector 448 and one column formed in the PNP collector 449, it is to be understood that more columns can be formed. Moreover, the above described procedure can be carried out multiple times.
As shown in
According to various embodiments, the integrated circuit can continue being processed according to procedures known to one of ordinary skill in the art. For example, an interlevel dielectric layer can be formed, contact holes can be patterned, and the various components can be electrically connected as required. Moreover, additional NPN and PNP bipolar devices, such as conventional devices of
According to various embodiments, a double poly transistor architecture having a super junction structure is provided. The double poly transistor architecture comprising a collector having a super junction structure as described herein can be formed. Several options exist for masking the collector implants. According to various embodiments, the columns of the super junction structure can be formed by a series of implants at different energies made through an opening in a base poly. For example, an opening can be formed that exposes the emitter regions through the base poly and the collector is implanted through the opening. Outside edges of the base poly can be patterned in a subsequent step using conventional photoresist masks. Alternatively, the base poly can be patterned with a single mask to leave a pattern such that the stack of the base poly and overlying layer of oxide is thick enough to block high energy implanted ions from reaching the island. The photoresist can also pattern oversized openings to expose the emitter such that edges of the base poly stack are exposed around the perimeter of the emitter openings. An implant can then form the collector. Still further, the collector of the double poly transistor architecture can be formed after the base poly etch and before photoresist removal using an ion implantation. In this case, the field oxide should be thick enough to block the collector implant in unwanted areas.
An exemplary method of forming a double poly transistor 500 is shown for example in
In
As shown in
Subsequently, a layer of conducting material, such as polysilicon can be deposited over the device 500. The conducting material can then be patterned to form a second poly that acts as an emitter contact 528 and which is disposed between the sidewall spacers 524, as shown in
In
In the case of the single poly transistor architecture, the opening through the base poly can be used to define the emitter area and the super junction column self aligned thereunder.
In
In
In
A heavily doped emitter poly 622 can then be formed over the opening 616 so that the emitter area is defined by the opening 616 that defines the area where the emitter poly contacts the base 612, as shown in
According to various embodiments, the absolute value of VCB can be less than the absolute value of BVCEO when the portion of the column under the emitter totally depletes. This can be true for a PNP device where VCB and BVCEO are both negative as well as the case for an NPN device where they both are positive. According to various embodiments of an NPN device, the region that depletes can be the column in the epitaxial layer, in which the collector is formed, under the emitter. Moreover, according to various embodiments, the column under the emitter can be the column that depletes regardless of how the device is formed.
The collector-base capacitance of the devices made with the depletable columns will differ from that of the conventional device. For example, it may initially be higher. This can be a result of the higher doping of the columns and increased junction area. The collector-base capacitance, however, will drop abruptly when the columns totally deplete.
According to various embodiments, devices made with depletable columns under the emitter, such as those described herein, can have BVCEO of at least 69 V and an HFE of about 83 for an NPN device, and at least 82 V and an HFE of about 101, for a PNP device. HFE is understood to be a measure of current gain and can be described, generally, as the ratio of collector current to base current at a specified collector to emitter voltage. This is in contrast to a BVCEO of 37 V for a conventional NPN device and 40 V for a conventional PNP device made with the same doped layers but without the depletable columns under the emitters. Moreover, these new devices can have lower Res, such as 1.5 kΩ, than devices made with similar emitter areas.
Exemplary collector resistances achieved using the super junction structures described herein (shown with a solid line) in comparison to collector resistances conventional collector structures (shown with a solid line with slashes) are shown in
According to various embodiments, the devices of the present invention comprise a depletable collector column under the emitter and the devices can achieve a BVCEO about twice that of conventional devices. Moreover, the NPN devices of the present invention comprising a depletable collector column under the emitter can achieve an Rcs about three times lower than that of conventional devices. Still further, the PNP devices of the present invention comprising a depletable collector column under the emitter can achieve an Rcs about 30% less than conventional devices.
In a still further exemplary embodiment, a PNP bipolar transistor comprising a super junction structure described herein can have a breakdown of about 30 V. In this example, the column under the emitter can be about 2.3 μm long before the base is formed. The columns of the super junction can be formed using, for example, six boron implants, with the following parameters: energy of 1 MeV and dose of 1.4 E12 c−2; energy of 750 KeV and dose of 1.4 E12 cm−2; energy of 500 KeV and dose of 1.4 E12 c−2; energy of 300 KeV and dose of 1.0 E12 cm−2; energy of 140 KeV and dose of 1.2 E12 cm−2; and energy of 30 KeV and dose of 6.2 E11 cm−2. Moreover in this exemplary embodiment, the ions can be implanted into an N-type epitaxial layer about 3 μm thick doped to a concentration of about 5.0 E15 cm−3. The epitaxial layer can be formed on a buried layer doped to a concentration of about 2.0 E17 cm−3. The dopant of the buried layer can be, for example boron. Still further, the super junction column implants can be made through a 1.0 μm wide mask opening and the dopants can be diffused, for example at 1200° C. for about 15 min. An exemplary dopant profile for before the diffusion is shown in
While the invention has been illustrated with respect to one or more implementations, alterations and/or modifications can be made to the illustrated examples without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been disclosed with respect to only one of several implementations, such features may be combined with one or more other features of the other implementations as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular function. Furthermore, to the extent that the terms “including”, “includes”, “having”, “has”, “with”, or variants thereof are used in either the detailed description and the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising.”
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
4532003, | Aug 09 1982 | Intersil Corporation | Method of fabrication bipolar transistor with improved base collector breakdown voltage and collector series resistance |
4729008, | Dec 08 1982 | Intersil Corporation | High voltage IC bipolar transistors operable to BVCBO and method of fabrication |
5344785, | Mar 22 1991 | UTMC MICROELECTRONIC SYSTEMS INC | Method of forming high speed, high voltage fully isolated bipolar transistors on a SOI substrate |
5428233, | Apr 04 1994 | Motorola Inc. | Voltage controlled resistive device |
5633180, | Jun 01 1995 | INTERSIL AMERICAS LLC | Method of forming P-type islands over P-type buried layer |
20020000640, | |||
20020113275, | |||
20020179933, | |||
20030008483, | |||
20040212032, | |||
20040238882, | |||
20050035424, | |||
20050074942, | |||
20050184336, | |||
JP2000208527, | |||
JP58040857, | |||
WO184631, | |||
WO2005020275, | |||
WO184631, | |||
WO2005020275, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Aug 29 2005 | BEASOM, JAMES DOUGLAS | Intersil Americas Inc | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 027222 | /0761 | |
Nov 14 2011 | Intersil Americas Inc. | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Dec 23 2011 | Intersil Americas Inc | INTERSIL AMERICAS LLC | CHANGE OF NAME SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 033119 | /0484 |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Jul 06 2016 | M1552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Year, Large Entity. |
Jul 06 2020 | M1553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Year, Large Entity. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Apr 09 2016 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Oct 09 2016 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Apr 09 2017 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Apr 09 2019 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Apr 09 2020 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Oct 09 2020 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Apr 09 2021 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Apr 09 2023 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Apr 09 2024 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Oct 09 2024 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Apr 09 2025 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Apr 09 2027 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |