MULTILAYER POWER, CONVERTER WITH DEVICES HAVING REDUCED LATERAL CURRENT
20220173084 · 2022-06-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02M3/07
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/19105
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/16225
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/0401
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/0557
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/19103
ELECTRICITY
H05K1/115
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/481
ELECTRICITY
H01L25/16
ELECTRICITY
H10N19/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/19104
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/5227
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L25/16
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/48
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/522
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/01
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/06
ELECTRICITY
H02M3/07
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An apparatus having a power converter circuit having a first active layer having a first set of active devices disposed on a face thereof, a first passive layer having first set of passive devices disposed on a face thereof, and interconnection to enable the active devices disposed on the face of the first active layer to be interconnected with the non-active devices disposed on the face of the first passive layer, wherein the face on which the first set of active devices on the first active layer is disposed faces the face on which the first set of passive devices on the first passive layer is disposed.
Claims
1. (canceled)
2. An apparatus comprising: a first layer including a first plurality of active devices; a second layer including a second plurality of active devices; and a third layer including a plurality of passive devices and disposed between the first and the second layers, wherein an active device of the first plurality of active devices and an active device of the second plurality of active devices influence a state of charge of a passive device of the plurality of passive devices.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising an interconnect layer to electrically connect the first plurality of active devices, the second plurality of active devices, and the plurality of passive devices, wherein the interconnect layer is disposed between the first layer and the third layer.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the interconnect layer is disposed between the second layer and the third layer.
5. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein each of the first and the second plurality of active devices includes switches.
6. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the first plurality of active devices includes a plurality of stack switches and the second plurality of active devices include a plurality of phase switches.
7. The apparatus of claim 6, wherein the plurality of stack switches is electrically connected to a positive terminal of the passive device.
8. The apparatus of claim 6, wherein the plurality of phase switches is electrically connected to a negative terminal of the passive device.
9. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the passive device of the plurality of passive devices comprises a capacitor.
10. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the capacitor comprises a fly capacitor.
11. The apparatus of claim 3, further comprising one or more through-hole vias to enable an electrical connection between the first layer, the second layer, and the third layer through the interconnect layer.
12. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising driver circuitry and control circuitry to supply power to the first and the second plurality of active devices.
13. An integrated circuit comprising: a first layer including at least two passive devices; a second layer including at least four active devices to influence a state of charge of a passive device of the at least two passive devices; and an interconnect layer disposed between the first and the second layer to electrically connect the two passive devices and the four active devices to form a DC-to-DC power converter.
14. The integrated circuit of claim 13, wherein the at least four active devices comprise a first switch, a second switch, a third switch, and a fourth switch.
15. The integrated circuit of claim 14, wherein the second layer further comprises a fifth switch and a sixth switch.
16. The integrated circuit of claim 15, wherein the first layer includes at least two fly capacitors.
17. The integrated circuit of claim 16, wherein the first switch, the second switch, the third switch, the fourth switch, and one of the at least two fly capacitors are electrically connected to form a charge pump.
18. The integrated circuit of claim 16, wherein the first switch, the second switch, the third switch, the fourth switch, and one of the at least two fly capacitors are electrically connected to form a multi-level power converter.
19. The integrated circuit of claim 13, further comprising one or more through-hole vias to enable an electrical connection between the first layer and the second layer through the interconnect layer.
20. The integrated circuit of claim 13, further comprising driver circuitry and control circuitry to supply power to the plurality of active devices.
21. A method of forming an apparatus, the method comprising: forming a first layer including a first plurality of active devices; forming a second layer including a second plurality of active devices; and forming a third layer including a plurality of passive devices and disposed between the first and the second layers, wherein an active device of the first plurality of active devices and an active device of the second plurality of active devices influence a state of charge of a passive device of the plurality of passive devices.
22. The method of claim 21, further comprising forming an interconnect layer to electrically connect the first plurality of active devices, the second plurality of active devices, and the plurality of passive devices, wherein the interconnect layer is formed between the first layer and the third layer.
23. The method of claim 21, wherein the first plurality of active devices includes a plurality of stack switches and the second plurality of active devices includes a plurality of phase switches.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein the plurality of stack switches is electrically connected to a positive terminal of the passive device, and wherein the plurality of phase switches is electrically connected to a negative terminal of the passive device.
25. A method of forming an integrated circuit, the method comprising: forming a first layer including at least two passive devices; forming a second layer including at least four active devices to influence a state of charge of a passive device of the at least two passive devices; and forming an interconnect layer disposed between the first and the second layer to electrically connect the two passive devices and the four active devices.
26. The method of claim 25, wherein the at least four active devices comprise a first switch, a second switch, a third switch, and a fourth switch.
27. The method of claim 26, wherein the second layer further comprises a fifth switch and a sixth switch.
28. The method of claim 25, wherein the first layer includes at least two fly capacitors.
29. The method of claim 28, wherein the first switch, the second switch, the third switch, the fourth switch, and one of the at least two fly capacitors are electrically connected to form a charge pump.
30. The method of claim 28, wherein the first switch, the second switch, the third switch, the fourth switch, and one of the at least two fly capacitors are electrically connected to form a multi-level power converter.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0066] Power converters that use capacitors to transfer energy have certain disadvantages when packaged in the traditional way. Such power converters require a larger number of components and a larger number of pins than conventional topologies. For example, power converter 20 requires two additional capacitors and four additional pins when compared to a buck converter.
[0067] Furthermore, extra energy is lost due to parasitic losses in the interconnection structure between the additional capacitors and the devices in the switch network. The devices and methods described herein address these issues by vertically integrating the passive devices with the active devices within a power converter.
[0068] Embodiments described herein generally include three components: a passive device layer 41A, also referred to a “passive layer”, an active device layer 42A, also referred to as an “active layer”, and an interconnect structure 43B. Each layer has devices that will typically be integrated on a single monolithic substrate or on multiple monolithic substrates, both of which may also be incorporated within a reconstituted wafer as in the case of fan-out wafer scale packaging. The passive layer 41A can be fabricated by an IPD process while the active layer 42A can be fabricated by a CMOS process. Each device layer pair is electrically connected together through a high density interconnect structure, which may also include a redistribution layer or micro bumps.
[0069] Additionally, thru vias 47A can be included which allow electrical connections to additional device layers. In the case of a single monolithic substrate, the thru vias may include thru silicon vias, whereas in the case of a reconstituted wafer, the thru vias may include thru mold vias.
[0070] Side views of three different embodiments with thru vias 47A are illustrated in
[0071] The passive layer 41A includes passive devices such as capacitors, inductors, and resistors. The active layer 42A includes active devices such as transistors and diodes. The interconnect structure 43B provides electrical connections between the passive layer 41A and the active layer 42A. Meanwhile, thru vias 47A allow for electrical connections to pass thru the passive layer 41A or thru the active layer 42A.
[0072] The interconnect structure 43B can also provide electrical connection between devices on the same layer. For example, separate active devices in different locations on the active layer 42A can be electrically connected using the interconnect structure 43B.
[0073] In the particular embodiment shown in
[0074] In the embodiment of
[0075] In the alternative embodiment shown in
[0076] As shown in yet another embodiment in
[0077] The embodiment shown in
[0078] As illustrated in
[0079] A top view of the power converter 30A in
[0080] Each capacitor is arranged such that it is directly above the particular active device to which it is to be electrically connected. For example, a first capacitor C31 is directly above switches S1-S4. This is consistent with
[0081]
[0082] If the power converter 30B is implemented using the embodiment illustrated in
[0083] In operation, the input voltage VIN is chopped using the active devices S31-S36 and the two fly capacitors C3A-C3B. This results in a pulsating voltage at an output node LX. This pulsating voltage is presented to an LC filter represented by a filter inductor L31 and a load capacitor CL, thereby producing an output voltage VO, which is the average of the voltage at the LX node.
[0084] In the remaining description of
[0085] The power converter 30B alternates between combinations of the states depending upon the desired output voltage VO. Additionally, the duration of time the power converter 30B is in each state enables regulation of the output voltage VO. It is important to note that the power converter 30B always operates such that the fly capacitors C3A-C3B are charged as much as they are discharged. This maintains a constant average voltage across the fly capacitors C3A-C3B.
[0086] A generalization of the embodiments illustrated in
[0087] Since semiconductor processing is sequential, it is common to only process one side of a wafer. This adds one more dimension to the number of possible permutations. Assuming there is one active layer 42A, one passive layer 41A, one device face per layer, and thru vias 47A, there are a total of eight different ways of arranging the two layers.
[0088]
[0089] In
[0090] In
[0091] Lastly, in
[0092] In comparison,
[0093] In
[0094] The passive substrate and active substrate can be in any form when attached, such as singulated dice or full wafers. Two different implementations that are amenable to die-to-die attachment are shown in
[0095] The capacitors can be of any structure. However, trench capacitors have a capacitance per unit area that is one to two orders of magnitude higher than that of an equivalent planar capacitor, and also have lower equivalent series resistance than equivalent planar capacitors. Both of these capacitor attributes are desirable for use in power converters that use capacitive energy transfer because they favorably affect the efficiency of the power converter.
[0096] In the embodiment shown in
[0097] The interconnect structure 43B electrically connects the devices within the passive layer 41A to the devices within the active layer 42A. The interconnect structure 43B can be implemented in numerous ways, one of which are illustrated in
[0098] In the case of
[0099] The bumps 45 are not visible in
[0100] The bumps 45 can either be located above the passive layer 41A or below the active layer 42A. In the case in which the bumps 45 are located above the passive layer 41A, the thru vias cut 47A through the passive layer 41A as illustrated in
[0101] Embodiments of this invention can also be implemented with wafer-to-wafer stacking as shown in
[0102] The two wafers are electrically connected together using a bonding layer 83 instead of using solder bumps 73 as in the case of
[0103] Power converters that rely on capacitors to transfer energy generally have complex networks with many switches and capacitors. The sheer number of these components and the complexity of the resulting network make it difficult to create efficient electrical interconnections between switches and capacitors.
[0104] Typically, metal layers on an integrated circuit or on integrated passive device are quite thin. Because thin metal layers generally offer higher resistance, it is desirable to prevent lateral current flow. This can be accomplished by controlling the electrical paths used for current flow through the power converter. To further reduce energy loss resulting from having to traverse these electrical paths, it is desirable to minimize the distance the current has to travel. If properly done, significant reductions energy loss in the interconnect structure can be realized. This is accomplished using two techniques.
[0105] One way to apply the foregoing techniques to reduce interconnection losses is to partition the switched capacitor element 12A into switched capacitor units operated in parallel, but not electrically connected in parallel. Another way is to choose the shape and location of the switches on the die to fit optimally beneath the capacitors and vice versa.
[0106] Partitioning the SC element 12A is effective because it reduces the horizontal current flow that has always been seen as inevitable when routing physically large switches and capacitors to a single connection point or node as depicted in
[0107] As is apparent from
[0108] By partitioning the component into smaller sections, one can equalize the path length differences between the two nodes, thus reducing associated losses. For example, if the switch and the capacitor in
[0109]
[0110] As shown in
[0111] Although
[0112] A top view of the power converter 90 shown in
[0113] Like the power converter 30A shown in
[0114] As shown in the top view of
[0115] Furthermore, within each switched capacitor unit 92A-92C, the power switches and pump capacitors can be divided up into smaller subunits. This allows for an additional reduction in lateral current flow. An example of the power switch S1A divided up into nine sub units S9A-S9I is illustrated in
[0116] Since the single monolithic switched capacitor element 12A is divided up into numerous smaller switched capacitor units 92A-92C and placed so as to encourage current in only one direction as shown in
[0117] The technique is effective because the total capacitance increases when capacitors are placed in parallel. For example, this technique is far less effective with inductors because total inductance decreases when inductors are placed in parallel.
[0118] Another possible arrangement of the switched capacitor cells is shown in
[0119] Among other advantages, the arrangements described above avoids the component and pin count penalty, reduces the energy loss in the parasitic interconnect structures and reduces the total solution footprint of power converters that use capacitors to transfer energy.
[0120] An apparatus as described herein finds numerous applications in the field of consumer electronics, particularly smart phones, tablet computers, and portable computers. In each of these cases, there are displays, including touch screen displays, as well as data processing elements and/or radio transceivers that consume power provided by the apparatus described herein.