H01L29/7455

Insulated trench gates with dopants implanted through gate oxide

In an insulated trench gate device, polysilicon in the trench is etched below the top surface of the trench, leaving a thin gate oxide layer exposed near the top of the trench. An angled implant is conducted that implants dopants through the exposed gate oxide and into the side of the trench. If the implanted dopants are n-type, this technique may be used to extend an n+ source region to be below the top of the polysilicon in the trench. If the implanted dopants are p−type, the dopants may be used to form a p-MOS device that turns on when the polysilicon is biased with a negative voltage. P-MOS and n-MOS devices can be formed in a single cell using this technique, where turning on the n-MOS device turns on a vertical power switch, and turning on the p-MOS device turns off the power switch.

Semiconductor device and method for reduced bias threshold instability

According to one embodiment, a semiconductor device, having a semiconductor substrate comprising silicon carbide with a gate electrode disposed on a portion of the substrate on a first surface with, a drain electrode disposed on a second surface of the substrate. There is a dielectric layer disposed on the gate electrode and a remedial layer disposed about the dielectric layer, wherein the remedial layer is configured to mitigate negative bias temperature instability maintaining a change in threshold voltage of less than about 1 volt. A source electrode is disposed on the remedial layer, wherein the source electrode is electrically coupled to a contact region of the semiconductor substrate.

Cell layouts for MOS-gated devices for improved forward voltage

An insulated gate turn-off (IGTO) device, formed as a die, has a layered structure including a p+ layer (e.g., a substrate), an n− epi layer, a p-well, trenched insulated gate regions formed in the p-well, and n+ regions between the gate regions, so that vertical NPN and PNP transistors are formed. The device may be formed of a matrix of cells or may be interdigitated. To turn the device on, a positive voltage is applied to the gate, referenced to the cathode. The cells further contain a vertical p-channel MOSFET, for rapidly turning the device off. The p-channel MOSFET may be made a depletion mode device by implanting boron ions at an angle into the trenches to create a p-channel. This allows the IGTO device to be turned off with a zero gate voltage while in a latch-up condition, when the device is acting like a thyristor.

Insulated gate power device with independently controlled segments

A design technique is disclosed that divides up a cellular power switch into different size segments. Each segment is driven by a different driver circuit. The selection of the combination of segments is made to minimize the combined conduction and switching losses of the power switch. For example, for very light loads, switching losses dominate so only a small segment is activated for driving the load. For medium and high load currents, conduction losses become more significant, so additional segments are activated to minimize the total losses. In one embodiment, the number of cells in the segments is binary weighted, such as 1×, 2×, and 4×, so that there are seven different combinations of segments. The drivers may be configured to achieve the same or different slew rates of the segments, such as to reduce transients. The segments may all be in the same die or a plurality of dies.

Feedback 1T DRAM device having localized partial insulating layers

A feedback 1T DRAM device that has a partial insulating film structure is provided. A body region may be divided into two or more in a channel direction by pn junctions and/or partial insulating layers, and gates may be formed on each of the divided body regions. The present invention can be operated by filling and subtracting electrons in the energy well of the conduction band and holes in the energy well of the valence band, respectively. In addition, it is possible to maximize retention time and improve operation reliability by reducing carrier loss by energy barriers of pn junctions and/or partial insulating layers.

INSULATED TRENCH GATES WITH DOPANTS IMPLANTED THROUGH GATE OXIDE
20220045168 · 2022-02-10 ·

In an insulated trench gate device, polysilicon in the trench is etched below the top surface of the trench, leaving a thin gate oxide layer exposed near the top of the trench. An angled implant is conducted that implants dopants through the exposed gate oxide and into the side of the trench. If the implanted dopants are n-type, this technique may be used to extend an n+ source region to be below the top of the polysilicon in the trench. If the implanted dopants are p-type, the dopants may be used to form a p-MOS device that turns on when the polysilicon is biased with a negative voltage. P-MOS and n-MOS devices can be formed in a single cell using this technique, where turning on the n-MOS device turns on a vertical power switch, and turning on the p-MOS device turns off the power switch.

TRENCH GATE POWER SWITCH WITH DOPED REGIONS TO INDUCE BREAKDOWN AT SELECTED AREAS

A power device is divided into an active area, an active area perimeter, and a termination region. An array of insulated gates formed in trenches form cells in a p-well body, where n+ source regions are formed in the top surface of the silicon wafer and surround the tops of the trenches. A top cathode electrode contacts the source regions, and an anode electrode is on the bottom of the die. A sufficiently high reverse voltage causes a breakdown current to flow between the anode and cathode electrodes. To ensure that a reverse breakdown voltage current occurs away from the gate oxide and/or the termination region, the active area and the active area perimeter of the p-well are additionally doped with p-type dopants to form deep p+ regions in selected areas that extend below the trenches. The deep p+ regions channel the breakdown current away from active cells and the termination region.

INSULATED TRENCH GATES WITH MULTIPLE LAYERS FOR IMPROVED PERFORMANCE OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
20220045189 · 2022-02-10 ·

Trenches having a gate oxide layer are formed in the surface of a silicon wafer for vertical gates. Conductive doped polysilicon is then deposited in the trenches to form a relatively thin layer of doped polysilicon along the sidewalls. Thus, there is a central cavity surrounded by polysilicon. Next, the cavity is filled in with a much higher conductivity material, such as aluminum, copper, a metal silicide, or other conductor to greatly reduce the overall resistivity of the trenched gates. The thin polysilicon forms an excellent barrier to protect the gate oxide from diffusion from the inner conductor atoms. The inner conductor and the polysilicon conduct the gate voltage in parallel to lower the resistance of the gates, which increases the switching speed of the device. In another embodiment, a metal silicide is used as the first layer, and a metal fills the cavity.

SEMICONDUCTOR MEMORY DEVICE AND METHOD FOR FABRICATING THEREOF

Provided is a semiconductor memory device. The semiconductor memory device comprises a first semiconductor pattern including a first impurity region, a second impurity region, and a channel region, the first impurity region spaced apart from a substrate in a first direction and having a first conductivity type, the second impurity region having a second conductivity type different from the first conductivity type, and the channel region between the first impurity region and the second impurity region, a first conductive connection line connected to the first impurity region and extending in a second direction different from the first direction and a first gate structure extending in the first direction and including a first gate electrode and a first gate insulating film, wherein the first gate electrode penetrates the channel region and the first gate insulating film is between the first gate electrode and the semiconductor pattern.

Cellular insulated gate power device with edge design to prevent failure near edge

A high power vertical insulated-gate switch is described that includes a parallel cell array having inner cells and an edge cell. The cells have a vertical npnp structure with a trenched field effect device that turns the device on and off. The edge cell is prone to breaking down at high currents. Techniques used to cause the current in the edge cell to be lower than the current in the inner cells, to improve robustness, include: forming a top n-type source region to not extend completely across opposing trenches in areas of the edge cell; forming the edge cell to have a threshold voltage of its field effect device that is greater than the threshold voltage of the field effect devices in the inner cells; and providing a resistive layer between the edge cell and a top cathode electrode electrically contacting the inner cells and the edge cell.