Lecture 42
Lecture 42
Lecture 42
OUTLINE
• IC technology
• MOSFET fabrication process
Die photo of
• CMOS latch-up Intel Penryn processor
(Intel®CoreTM2 family)
Cross-sectional SEM view of
AMD Athlon 64 x2 processor Reading: Chapter 4
courtesy of Chipworks
ASM A412
batch
oxidation
furnace
Jargon for this entire sequence of process steps: “pattern using XX mask”
Spring 2007 EE130 Lecture 42, Slide 5
The Photo-Lithographic Process
optical
mask
Oxidation or thin-film deposition
photoresist
exposure
photoresist photoresist coating
removal (ashing)
photoresist
develop
optional etch
spin, rinse, dry
additional
process
step(s)
Typical implant energies are in the range 1-200 keV. After the ion
implantation, the wafers are heated to a high temperature (>1000oC).
This “annealing” step heals the damage and causes the implanted
dopant atoms to move into substitutional lattice sites.
Spring 2007 EE130 Lecture 42, Slide 7
N-channel MOSFET
Schematic Cross-Sectional View
• Disadvantages:
– More complex (expensive) process
– Latch-up problem
Single-well technology NA ND
• n-well must be deep enough n-well
to avoid vertical punch-through
p-substrate
NA ND
Twin-well technology p-well n-well
• Wells must be deep enough
to avoid vertical punch-through p- or n-substrate
(lightly doped)
• Lg = 35 nm
• Tox = 1.2 nm
• Strained Si channel
NMOS: tensile capping layer
PMOS: epitaxial Si1-xGex embedded in S/D
PMOSFET
n-well p-Si
VDD
(a) n-well
p epitaxial layer Rsub
p+-substrate npn
(b) n Rwell
n+ p-sub
pnp
“retrograde well”
Spring 2007 EE130 Lecture 42, Slide 17
IC Technology Trends
• Increasing # of levels of wiring (Cu interconnects)
Up to 8 levels of metal are used in ICs today.
Photo from IBM Microelectronics Gallery:
Colorized scanning-electron micrograph of
the copper interconnect layers, after removal
of the insulating layers by a chemical etch