Wide bandgap semiconductor switching device with wide area schottky junction, and manufacturing process thereof
11177394 · 2021-11-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L21/76897
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/417
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/6606
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L29/66
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/417
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/225
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/16
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/535
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/06
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A switching device including: a body of semiconductor material, which has a first conductivity type and is delimited by a front surface; a contact layer of a first conductive material, which extends in contact with the front surface; and a plurality of buried regions, which have a second conductivity type and are arranged within the semiconductor body, at a distance from the contact layer.
Claims
1. A switching device comprising: a body of semiconductor material, which includes a first epitaxial layer and a second epitaxial layer each having a first conductivity type, the body having a front surface; a contact layer of a first conductive material, which extends in contact with the front surface and forms a Schottky contact with the body; and a plurality of buried regions which have a second conductivity type, are arranged within the first epitaxial layer, and are spaced apart from the front surface of the body by the second epitaxial layer, the second epitaxial layer overlying, and directly contacting, the plurality of buried regions, wherein the plurality of buried regions includes consecutive first and second buried regions that are adjacent to one another, each of the first and second buried regions being spaced apart from the contact layer by the second epitaxial layer, and the second epitaxial layer having a substantially same thickness overlying each of the first and second buried regions, and wherein the second epitaxial layer is a single layer.
2. The switching device of claim 1, further comprising a plurality of connection regions of a second conductive material, which is different from the first conductive material, each connection region extending in the semiconductor body from the front surface, and contacting a corresponding buried region of the buried regions.
3. The switching device of claim 2, wherein each connection region extends at least in part into the corresponding buried region.
4. The switching device of claim 2, wherein the semiconductor body and the contact layer form a Schottky contact, and wherein each connection region forms an ohmic contact with the corresponding buried region.
5. The switching device of claim 2, wherein said second conductive material is a silicide of a transition metal.
6. The switching device of claim 2, wherein the second conductive material is a homogenous material.
7. The switching device of claim 1, wherein said first and second epitaxial layers have different doping levels with respect to each other.
8. The switching device of claim 1, further comprising a top layer of conductive material, which overlies, in direct contact, the contact layer and has a greater thickness than the contact layer.
9. The switching device of claim 1, wherein the body comprises silicon carbide.
10. A device, comprising: a semiconductor body having a front surface, the semiconductor body including: a semiconductor substrate having a first conductivity type; a first epitaxial layer, having the first conductivity type, positioned on the semiconductor substrate; and a second epitaxial layer, having the first conductivity type, positioned on the first epitaxial layer; a conductive layer on the second epitaxial layer; a first semiconductor region, having a second conductivity type different than the first conductivity type, positioned in and at a first side of the first epitaxial layer, the first semiconductor region including consecutive first and second buried regions that are laterally adjacent to one another, each of the first and second buried regions being spaced apart from the conductive layer by the second epitaxial layer, and the second epitaxial layer having a substantially same thickness overlying each of the first and second buried regions; and a first contact that extends from the conductive layer through the second epitaxial layer and to the first buried region the first semiconductor region, wherein the second epitaxial layer is a single layer.
11. The device of claim 10, wherein the first contact extends into a portion of the first semiconductor region.
12. The device of claim 10, further comprising: a second contact that extends from the conductive layer through the second epitaxial layer and to the second buried region, wherein the conductive layer electrically couples the first contact to the second contact.
13. The device of claim 12, wherein: the second epitaxial layer and the conductive layer form a Schottky contact; the first contact forms a first ohmic contact with the first buried region; and the second contact forms a second ohmic contact with the second buried region.
14. The device of claim 13, wherein the Schottky contact and the first ohmic contact form a Junction-barrier Schottky diode.
15. The switching device of claim 10, wherein said first and second epitaxial layers have different doping levels with respect to each other.
16. A switching device comprising: a semiconductor body, which includes first and second epitaxial layers having a first conductivity type, the second epitaxial layer being arranged on the first epitaxial layer and having a doping level different from a doping level of the first epitaxial layer, the semiconductor body having a front surface; a contact layer of a first conductive material, which extends in contact with the front surface and forms a Schottky contact with the semiconductor body; a plurality of buried regions which have a second conductivity type and are arranged within the first epitaxial layer, at a distance from the contact layer, the second epitaxial layer overlying and directly contacting the buried regions; and a plurality of connection regions of a second conductive material, which is different from the first conductive material, each connection region extending in the semiconductor body from the front surface and contacting a corresponding buried region of the plurality of buried regions and forming an ohmic contact with said corresponding buried region, wherein the plurality of buried regions includes consecutive first and second buried regions that are adjacent to one another, each of the first and second buried regions being spaced apart from the contact layer by the second epitaxial layer, and the second epitaxial layer having a substantially same thickness overlying each of the first and second buried regions, and wherein the second epitaxial layer is a single layer.
17. The switching device of claim 16, wherein each connection region extends at least in part into the corresponding buried region.
18. The switching device of claim 16, wherein said second conductive material is a silicide of a transition metal.
19. The switching device of claim 16, wherein said first conductive material is a transition metal.
20. The switching device of claim 16, wherein the body is of silicon carbide.
21. The switching device of claim 16, wherein the first conductivity type is an N type and the second conductivity type is a P type.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) For a better understanding of the present disclosure preferred embodiments thereof are now described, purely by way of non-limiting example, with reference to the attached drawings, wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7)
(8) In detail, the diode 1 comprises a semiconductor body 2, which is made, for example, of a wide bandgap semiconductor, such as for example a material chosen from silicon carbide (SiC), gallium arsenide (GaAs), and gallium nitride (GaN). In what follows, without this implying any loss of generality, it is assumed that the semiconductor body 2 is of silicon carbide.
(9) The semiconductor body 2 comprises a substrate 4 of an N+type and a first epitaxial layer 6 of an N type. The first epitaxial layer 6 is arranged on the substrate 4, with which it is in direct contact, and has a doping level lower than the doping level of the substrate 4. In addition, the semiconductor body 2 is delimited at the top and at the bottom by a first surface S.sub.a and a second surface S.sub.b, respectively, which are formed by the first epitaxial layer 6 and by the substrate 4, respectively.
(10) The diode 1 further comprises a bottom contact layer 10, which is made, for example, of nickel silicide and extends underneath the second surface S.sub.b, in direct contact with the substrate 4.
(11) The diode further comprises a conductive layer 12 and a top metallization 14.
(12) The conductive layer 12 extends over the first surface S.sub.a, in direct contact with the first epitaxial layer 6, and is of a metal, such as for example a material chosen from nickel, titanium, and molybdenum, or any transition metal.
(13) The top metallization 14 extends over the conductive layer 12 and in direct contact with the latter. Furthermore, the top metallization 14 is of a metal material, such as for example aluminum, and has a thickness greater than the thickness of the conductive layer 12. For practical purposes, the top metallization 14 is designed to contact a conductive element, such as for example a so-called “lead”, in order to make it possible to inject current into the diode 1 or draw off current therefrom. Consequently, the top metallization 14 is designed to withstand the mechanical stresses induced by contact with the conductive element.
(14) The diode 1 further comprises a plurality of buried regions 20, of the same semiconductor material as that of the semiconductor body 2, which are located at a distance from the first surface S.sub.a and thus do not contact the conductive layer 12.
(15) Without this implying any loss of generality, in the embodiment illustrated in
(16) In greater detail, the buried regions 20 are separated from one another. In addition, in top plan view, the buried regions 20 may for example have an elongated shape (for instance, in a direction parallel to the first surface S.sub.a), or else, once again by way of example, a shape chosen from between circular and polygonal. In general, in top plan view, the buried regions 20 may thus define a strip-like or else cell-like arrangement.
(17) In even greater detail, the conductive layer 12 and the first epitaxial layer 6 are such that a so-called Schottky contact is formed between them. In the contact regions between the buried regions 20 and the first epitaxial layer 6 there PN junctions are, instead, formed. In other words, the first epitaxial layer 6 and the buried regions 20 form, respectively, cathode regions and anode regions of bipolar diodes, while the first conductive layer 12 and the first epitaxial layer 6 form, respectively, an anode region and a cathode region of a Schottky diode. In use, the Schottky contact is activated for low biasing voltages of the diode 1, whereas the PN contacts are activated at higher voltages. Furthermore, since the buried regions 20 are separate from the conductive layer 12, the Schottky contact develops over a particularly extensive area.
(18) As illustrated in
(19) For instance, the second epitaxial layer 24 may have approximately the same doping level as the first epitaxial layer 6. In the case where, instead, the first and second epitaxial layers 6, 24 have different doping levels, two degrees of freedom are available for optimizing, in the design stage, the compromise between forward-biasing voltage drop and reverse-biasing leakage current. Furthermore, the second epitaxial layer 24 forms the aforementioned first surface S.sub.a and a third surface S.sub.c. In particular, the second epitaxial layer 24 overlies, in direct contact, the buried regions 20, which extend into the first epitaxial layer 6 starting from the third surface S.sub.c. In practice, the third surface S.sub.c delimits the first epitaxial layer 6 at the top.
(20)
(21) In detail, the connection regions 28 are of a conductive material, such as for example nickel silicide, titanium silicide, molybdenum silicide, or a silicide of a transition metal. Furthermore, each connection region 28 extends into the first epitaxial layer 6 starting from the first surface S.sub.a until it contacts a corresponding buried region 20. In addition, as illustrated precisely in
(22) In greater detail, the connection regions 28 and the buried regions 20 are such that the area of contact between each connection region 28 and the corresponding buried region 20 forms a corresponding ohmic contact. In this way, the diode 1 is characterized by a particular strength in forward biasing.
(23) As illustrated in
(24) The diode 1 illustrated in
(25) Initially, as illustrated
(26) Next, as shown in
(27) Next, as shown in
(28) Next, as shown in
(29) Next, as shown in
(30) Finally, in a way not illustrated, the top metallization 14 is formed on the conductive layer 12, for example by sputtering or evaporation.
(31) As regards the embodiment illustrated in
(32) After the operations illustrated in
(33) Next, as shown in
(34) Next, as shown in
(35) Next, as shown in
(36) Next, as shown in
(37) As regards the embodiment shown in
(38) Initially the operations illustrated in
(39) Next, as shown in
(40) In greater detail, each trench 50 extends from the top surface (designated by S.sub.d) of the masking layer 42 and traverses, beyond the masking layer 42, a corresponding portion of the first epitaxial layer 6, arranged between the masking layer 42 and a corresponding buried region 20, until it extends in part into said corresponding buried region 20. In particular, a bottom portion of each trench 50 extends through a top portion of the corresponding buried region 20. Consequently the bottom of each trench 50 extends into the corresponding buried region 20.
(41) Next, as shown in
(42) Next, as shown in
(43) As shown in
(44) Next, as shown in
(45) As regards the embodiment illustrated in
(46) Initially, the operations illustrated in
(47) Next, as shown in
(48) In greater detail, each trench 50 extends from the top surface (designated by S.sub.d) of the masking layer 42 and traverses, beyond the masking layer 42, a corresponding portion of the second epitaxial layer 24, arranged between the masking layer 42 and a corresponding buried region 20, until it extends in part into said corresponding buried region 20. In particular, a bottom portion of each trench 50 extends through a top portion of the corresponding buried region 20. Consequently the bottom of each trench 50 extends into the corresponding buried region 20.
(49) Next, as shown in
(50) Next, as shown in
(51) As shown in
(52) Next, as shown in
(53) The switching device described presents numerous advantages. In particular, it can be shown that the present switching device presents substantially the same electrical field as a so-called JBS trench diode; i.e., it has a value of electrical field lower than the one set up in planar JBS structures, but has a wider Schottky-contact area and thus has a wider useful area for passage of current. Furthermore, the present switching device is characterized by lower leakage currents, as well as by a forward-biasing voltage drop lower than what occurs, for example, in planar JBS structures.
(54) Finally, it is clear that modifications and variations can be made to the device and to the manufacturing method described and illustrated herein, without thereby departing from the scope of the present disclosure.
(55) For instance, the types of doping may be reversed with respect to what has been described herein.
(56) As regards the manufacturing process, the order of the steps may be different from what has been described herein. In addition, the manufacturing process may include further steps other than the ones described. For instance, the manufacturing process may include, in a per se known manner, a so-called step of definition of the active area, which envisages formation of field-oxide regions (not illustrated) delimiting the area in which the JBS diode is to be obtained.
(57) The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments. These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.