METHODS TO PROCESS A 3D SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE AND STRUCTURE
20210287941 · 2021-09-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L2225/06593
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/486
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/088
ELECTRICITY
H01L25/18
ELECTRICITY
H01L25/0652
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/78
ELECTRICITY
H01L2221/6834
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/8221
ELECTRICITY
H01L2225/06524
ELECTRICITY
H01L2223/5448
ELECTRICITY
H01L2223/5442
ELECTRICITY
H01L24/94
ELECTRICITY
H01L25/50
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/544
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/0688
ELECTRICITY
H01L2225/06541
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/2007
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/15153
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L21/822
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/48
ELECTRICITY
H01L25/065
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/06
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method to process a 3D device, the method including: providing a first wafer including first transistors and a plurality of first interconnecting metal layers; providing a second wafer; processing the second wafer to form second transistors and a plurality of second interconnecting metal layers; processing further the second wafer with a first singulation process providing a plurality of dies; placing the plurality of dies on top of the first wafer; performing a bonding process to simultaneously bond the plurality of dies to the first wafer thus forming a bonded structure; and processing the bonded structure with a second singulation process providing a plurality of bonded dies, where the bonded structure includes oxide to oxide bonding, and where the second singulation process includes an etch process.
Claims
1. A method to process a 3D device, the method comprising: providing a first wafer comprising first transistors and a plurality of first interconnecting metal layers; providing a second wafer; processing said second wafer to form second transistors and a plurality of second interconnecting metal layers; processing further said second wafer with a first singulation process providing a plurality of dies; placing said plurality of dies on top of said first wafer; performing a bonding process to simultaneously bond said plurality of dies to said first wafer thus forming a bonded structure; and processing said bonded structure with a second singulation process providing a plurality of bonded dies, wherein said bonded structure comprises oxide to oxide bonding, and wherein said second singulation process comprises an etch process.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said processing said second wafer to form comprises forming a plurality of vias disposed through said second wafer, and wherein said vias comprise a diameter of less than 1 micron.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising: performing a thinning process of said bonded structure.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein said bonded structure comprises metal to metal bonding.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein said processing said second wafer comprises forming at least two alignment marks for each die of said plurality of dies.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein said placing comprises precise placement of said plurality of dies with a less than 1 micron placement misalignment.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein said placing comprises use of a carrier structure to simultaneously place said plurality of dies.
8. A method to process a 3D device, the method comprising: providing a first wafer comprising first transistors and a plurality of first interconnecting metal layers; providing a second wafer; processing said second wafer to form second transistors and a plurality of second interconnecting metal layers; processing further said second wafer with a first singulation process providing a plurality of dies; placing said plurality of dies on top of said first wafer; performing a bonding process to simultaneously bond said plurality of dies to said first wafer thus forming a bonded structure; and processing said bonded structure with a second singulation process providing a plurality of bonded dies, wherein said bonded structure comprises oxide to oxide bonding, and wherein said placing comprises use of a carrier structure to simultaneously place said plurality of dies.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein said processing said second wafer to form comprises forming a plurality of vias disposed through said second wafer, and wherein said vias comprise a diameter of less than 1 micron.
10. The method of claim 8, further comprising: performing a thinning process of said bonded structure.
11. The method of claim 8, wherein said bonded structure comprises metal to metal bonding.
12. The method of claim 8, wherein said processing said second wafer comprises forming at least two alignment marks for each die of said plurality of dies.
13. The method of claim 8, wherein said placing comprises precise placement of said plurality of dies with a less than 1 micron placement misalignment.
14. The method of claim 8, wherein said second singulation process comprises an etch process.
15. A method to process a 3D device, the method comprising: providing a first wafer comprising first transistors and a plurality of first interconnecting metal layers; providing a second wafer; processing said second wafer to form second transistors and a plurality of second interconnecting metal layers; processing further said second wafer with a first singulation process providing a plurality of dies; placing said plurality of dies on top of said first wafer; performing a bonding process to simultaneously bond said plurality of dies to said first wafer thus forming a bonded structure; and processing said bonded structure with a second singulation process providing a plurality of bonded dies; wherein said bonded structure comprises oxide to oxide bonding.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein said processing said second wafer to form comprises forming a plurality of vias disposed through said second wafer, and wherein said vias comprise a diameter of less than 1 micron.
17. The method of claim 15, further comprising: performing a thinning process of said bonded structure.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein said bonded structure comprises metal to metal bonding.
19. The method of claim 15, wherein said processing said second wafer comprises forming at least two alignment marks for each die of said plurality of dies.
20. The method of claim 15, wherein said placing comprises precise placement of said plurality of dies with a less than 1 micron placement misalignment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0030] Various embodiments of the invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0037] An embodiment of the invention is now described with reference to the drawing figures. Persons of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the description and figures illustrate rather than limit the invention and that in general the figures are not drawn to scale for clarity of presentation. Such skilled persons will also realize that many more embodiments are possible by applying the inventive principles contained herein and that such embodiments fall within the scope of the invention which is not to be limited except by the appended claims.
[0038] Some drawing figures may describe process flows for building devices or die bonding and die stacking devices and methods. The process flows, which may be a sequence of steps for building a device or die bonding and die stacking devices and methods, may have many structures, numerals and labels that may be common between two or more adjacent steps. In such cases, some labels, numerals and structures used for a certain step's figure may have been described in the previous steps' figures.
[0039] There are many advantages to constructing a 3D IC system using die to wafer integration. A severe limitation in respect to such die to wafer integration is the throughput of such processing and its implication on the end 3D device cost. Herein we seek to present alternative process flows to support higher throughput and lower cost for such die to wafer integration including processes to allow ultra-thin die which further reduces cost and increases integration.
[0040] It is known in the art that die to wafer processing could be done with dies having thickness of less than about 20 micron to about a die thickness of about 6 micron. Such has been presented in a paper by Christine Harendt, Evangelos A. Angelopoulos, Stefan Endler, Mahadi-Ul Hassan, Tu Hoang, Joachim N. Burghartz, “Mechanical Stability of Ultra-thin Chips down to 6 μm,” in Forum ‘be-flexible’ 2010, 11th International Workshop, Munich, Germany, (Vortrag), Vorträge nur für Teilnehmer, Dec. 1, 2010 (2010); and a paper by Saleh Ferwana, et al., “Self-Aligned Through Silicon Vias in Ultra-Thin Chips for 3D-Integration,” Proc. of 4th Electronics System Integration Technology Conferences (ESTC), Amsterdam, Netherlands, (Vortrag), 2012, both incorporated herein by reference. As well, in the book Ultra-thin Chip Technology and Applications, Joachim N. Burghartz, ed. Berlin, Germany: Springer, December, 2010, ISBN: 978-1-4419-7275-0, p. 467 (2010), incorporated herein by reference. Additionally, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,466,037 and 7,951,691, both incorporated herein by reference.
[0041] As illustrated in
[0042] The low porosity layer 114 could be partially oxidized to give it stronger mechanical strength. For example, dry oxidation of the porous silicon may be carried out at a low temperature of about 400° C. This results in oxidization of about 1-3 nm of the inner walls of the pores, thus preventing the structure of the porous silicon from changing under a subsequent high-temperature treatment.
[0043] As illustrated in
[0044] As illustrated in
[0045] As illustrated in
[0046] As illustrated in
[0047] As illustrated in
[0048] As illustrated in
[0049] In general a 6-20 micron thick silicon-porous silicon structure would be transparent enough to enable good detection of the individual die (such as dies 230) alignment marks for the following steps of precise die alignment. Alternatively the alignment marks could be exposed with an etch step. Selectivity for such a step would not be an issue as the alignment mark could be formed with metal layers while the 6-20 micron etch is of silicon and silicon oxide.
[0050] The dies 230 from the structure 211 could be pulled out for integration into a 3D IC structure. This step could be done one die at a time at a relatively slow throughput. An improved process was suggested in a paper titled “Simultaneous Cu—Cu and Compliant Dielectric Bonding for 3D Stacking of ICs,” A. Jourdain et al, II TC07, and paper by A. Sigl et al, “Throughput Enhanced Flip-Chip to Wafer Bonding: The Advanced Chip to Wafer Bonding,” ECS09; both incorporated herein by reference. They suggested a modification of the bonding process into two steps, first tacking the individual dies, and second, collectively bonding all stacked dies in a wafer-level bonding process. U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,597,980 and 8,697,542, incorporated herein by reference, also teach two step die to wafer bonding.
[0051] In a die to wafer bonding flow it could be desired to test the dies so that only good dies get bonded and also the target base circuit could be tested so bonding could be saved and be done to a good yielded circuit die(s) on either or both.
[0052] The die tacking could be done, for example, by using a glue, temporary copper to copper bonding or ultrasound techniques. Some glue would evaporate during the second step of the simultaneous bonding leaving no residue. Some of the tacking techniques do form metal to metal connection that would allow testing and rework to make sure all die to target base circuit connections are good before moving to the longer process for simultaneous permanent bonding of all dies.
[0053] For the known processes for metal to metal, copper to copper bonding, a short cycle of such processes could provide enough holding force to hold the die once placed until all the dies are placed, and then continue with the full permanent bonding performed for all dies on the wafer simultaneously. The short bonding/tacking should take less than a minute as it is done a die at a time, the permanent bonding could take more than 30 minutes as it is done to many dies such as full wafer populated structure simultaneously. Such bonding is presented in a paper by Y. H. Hu, et al., “Cu—Cu Hybrid Bonding as Option for 3D IC Stacking,” IEEE IITC 2012, incorporated herein by reference.
[0054] Tacking using glue has been presented in a paper by J. Van Olmen, et al., “3D Stacked IC demonstrator using Hybrid Collective Die-to-Wafer Bonding with copper Through Silicon Vias (TSV),” IEEE 3DIC 2009, and in a paper by A Jourdain, et al., “Mechanical and electrical characterization of BCB as a bond and seal material for cavities housing (RF-)MEMS devices,” J. Micromech. Microeng. 15 (2005), both incorporated herein by reference.
[0055] Tacking could be done using ultrasound for bonding. Ultrasound could be use for tacking and also for permanent bonding. Ultrasound bonding processing is presented in a paper by Yanhong Tian, “Investigation of ultrasonic copper wire wedge bonding on Au/Ni plated Cu substrates at ambient temperature,” Journal of Materials Processing Technology (2008), incorporated herein by reference.
[0056] Equipment for picking a die and placing it on a wafer is available in the market by multiple vendors such as the FC 300 by SET, and similar equipment by EV Group. Both companies support two step bonding as been described herein.
[0057] These die bonders are designed to support fast placement of about 5-10 micron alignment accuracy or slower placement with alignment accuracy of about 1 micron.
[0058] While 1 micron accuracy is good enough for TSV based 3D IC system, a much higher precision would be desirable for monolithic 3D applications as been presented in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/642,724. An embodiment for such monolithic 3D applications is a three phase die to wafer bonding scheme.
[0059] The first step would be to lightly tack dies to the target wafer using existing die to wafer bonders such as the before mentioned FC 300. Such placement would be done with better than 10 micron accuracy.
[0060] The second step could use a precision die to wafer bonder to relocate the dies that had been placed at 10 micron accuracy to better than about 400 nm, or to better than about 100 nm, or better than about 50 nm, or better than about 10 nm. The step could be done following the completion of the above first step. This precise tacking could use a stronger type of tacking than the first step. Following this stronger tacking second step a sub-step of testing and rework as needed could be done to support a higher yielding process. The equipment for such small step of dies realignment is not currently available as standard industry equipment. A co-pending application details a possible construction of such precise high throughput die realignment equipment. This new type equipment would be leveraging the pre-placement of dies at about 10 micron accuracy so the realignment movement is for only about 10 micron or less, making it easier to achieve 100 nm precision at the end of such small movement and doing so at a good throughput.
[0061] For this second step of precise alignment of the individual dies, die level alignment could be used.
[0062] Once the second step is complete and all dies on the target wafer/substrate are placed at the required precision such as 100 nm, and possibly tested to validate good tacking connection, the third step of simultaneous bonding could commence.
[0063] In the third step all dies are permanently bonded at their precise position. Some bonding techniques would leverage the surface tension of the bonding surface to hold the dies at their precise location and to achieve a self-alignment to complete the third step of having all the die precisely and permanently boded to the target wafer.
[0064] Once all die had been bonded the wafer could be moved to further the process of 3D integration. A follow-on step could etch the low porosity layer 114. The porous layer etch rate is about 100,000 faster than the etch rate of solid (substantially non-porous) silicon. Low porosity layer 114 could be removed completely leaving the thin active circuits of device layer 118. Through layer vias could now be made to support the following steps of the 3D integration.
[0065] When the starting material structure used is the one illustrated in
[0066] As illustrated in
[0067] As illustrated in
[0068] The target wafer for which these dies would be precisely bonded to could have also die alignment marks. Those could be placed in the street area as those streets would not be etched or diced prior to the precise die bonding of step 2, especially if the design is that the die bonding would be toward the target bonding die edge. The target alignment marks/structures could correspond to the size of the die to be bonded if that die is smaller than the target die it is bonded to. If it is desired to bond smaller die to a target die and not toward the edge of that target die than it could be desired to have the target die alignment marks/structures inside the target die.
[0069] The target wafer could be processed with patterns according to the planed bonded dies so that all the areas which are not going to be covered with bonded dies would be protected from the planned die thinning etch step. Silicon nitride could be used for such or other layers with good etch selectivity to the underlying structure and to silicon and silicon oxide which would be etched for the thinning step.
[0070] After the thinning step, an oxide deposition and CMP planarization could be used to form a flat top surface for the follow-on 3D integration steps.
[0071]
[0072]
[0073] An advantage of the die level bonding is the flexibility with wafer size integration. Most modern fabs currently use larger than 280 mm wafers, commonly known as 300 mm or 12 inch wafers. In most cases it would be very hard to find a fab having a smaller wafer size being used for advance process nodes such as 28 nm or more advanced. Likewise it is very hard to find an old process nodes fab with 300 mm wafers. Old nodes such as 250 nm or older use smaller than 240 mm wafer size such wafer commonly known as 200 mm or 8 inch wafers. Smaller wafer size are also used for non-digital CMOS such as RF, high power, electro-optics and so forth. Most of the wafers that are non-silicon are only available with smaller than 240 mm wafer size. Die level 3D integration opens the ability to form 3D device with mixed technologies and overcomes the differing wafer diameter/size barrier.
[0074] An advantage of the die level bonding is the ability to pre-test the die before bonding and accordingly use what is commonly called Known Good Dies (“KGD”). In U.S. Pat. No. 9,142,55, incorporated herein by reference, a method for contact-less testing is described in reference to FIG. 24A-C. Such testing could be advantageous for very thin die bonding method as has been described herein.
[0075] While concepts in this patent application have been described with respect to 3D-ICs with two stacked device layers, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that it can be valid for 3D-ICs with more than two stacked device layers. Additionally, some of the concepts may be applied to 2D ICs.
[0076] Some embodiments of the invention may include alternative techniques to build IC (Integrated Circuit) devices including techniques and methods to construct 3D IC systems. Some embodiments of the invention may enable device solutions with far less power consumption than prior art. The device solutions could be very useful for the growing application of mobile electronic devices and mobile systems such as, for example, mobile phones, smart phone, and cameras, those mobile systems may also connect to the internet. For example, incorporating the 3D IC semiconductor devices according to some embodiments of the invention within the mobile electronic devices and mobile systems could provide superior mobile units that could operate much more efficiently and for a much longer time than with prior art technology.
[0077] Smart mobile systems may be greatly enhanced by complex electronics at a limited power budget. The 3D technology described in the multiple embodiments of the invention would allow the construction of low power high complexity mobile electronic systems. For example, it would be possible to integrate into a small form function a complex logic circuit with high density high speed memory utilizing some of the 3D DRAM embodiments of the invention and add some non-volatile 3D NAND charge trap or RRAM described in some embodiments of the invention. Mobile system applications of the 3D IC technology described herein may be found at least in FIG. 156 of U.S. Pat. No. 8,273,610, the contents of which are incorporated by reference.
[0078] Furthermore, some embodiments of the invention may include alternative techniques to build systems based on integrated 3D devices including techniques and methods to construct 3D IC based systems that communicate with other 3DIC based systems. Some embodiments of the invention may enable system solutions with far less power consumption and intercommunication abilities at lower power than prior art. These systems may be called ‘Internet of Things’, or IoT, systems, wherein the system enabler is a 3DIC device which may provide at least three functions: a sensing capability, a digital and signal processing capability, and communication capability. For example, the sensing capability may include a region or regions, layer or layers within the 3DIC device which may include, for example, a MEMS accelerometer (single or multi-axis), gas sensor, electric or magnetic field sensor, microphone or sound sensing (air pressure changes), image sensor of one or many wavelengths (for example, as disclosed in at least U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,283,215 and 8,163,581, incorporated herein by reference), chemical sensing, gyroscopes, resonant structures, cantilever structures, ultrasonic transducers (capacitive & piezoelectric). Digital and signal processing capability may include a region or regions, layer or layers within the 3D IC device which may include, for example, a microprocessor, digital signal processor, micro-controller, FPGA, and other digital land/or analog logic circuits, devices, and subsystems. Communication capability, such as communication from at least one 3D IC of IoT system to another, or to a host controller/nexus node, may include a region or regions, layer or layers within the 3D IC device which may include, for example, an RF circuit and antenna or antennas for wireless communication which might utilize standard wireless communication protocols such as G4, WiFi or Bluetooth, I/O buffers and either mechanical bond pads/wires and/or optical devices/transistors for optical communication, transmitters, receivers, codecs, DACs, digital or analog filters, modulators.
[0079] Energy harvesting, device cooling and other capabilities may also be included in the system. The 3DIC inventions disclosed herein and in the incorporated referenced documents enable the IoT system to closely integrate different crystal devices, for example a layer or layers of devices/transistors formed on and/or within mono or poly crystalline silicon combined with a layer or layers of devices/transistors formed on and/or within Ge, or a layer of layers of GaAs, InP, differing silicon crystal orientations, and so on. For example, incorporating the 3D IC semiconductor devices according to some embodiments of the invention as or within the IoT systems and mobile systems could provide superior IoT or mobile systems that could operate much more efficiently and for a much longer time than with prior art technology. The 3D IC technology herein disclosed provides a most efficient path for heterogeneous integration with very effective integration reducing cost and operating power with the ability to support redundancy for long field life and other advantages which could make such an IoT System commercially successful.
[0080] Alignment is a basic step in semiconductor processing. For most cases it is part of the overall process flow that every successive layer is patterned when it is aligned to the layer below it. These alignments could all be done to one common alignment mark, or to some other alignment mark or marks that are embedded in a layer underneath. In today's equipment such alignment would be precise to below a few nanometers and better than 40 nm or better than 20 nm and even better than 10 nm. In general such alignment could be observed by comparing two devices processed using the same mask set. If two layers in one device maintain their relative relationship in both devices—to few nanometers—it is clear indication that these layers are aligned each to the other. This could be achieved by either aligning to the same alignment mark (sometimes called a zero mark alignment scheme), or one layer is using an alignment mark embedded in the other layer (sometimes called a direct alignment), or using different alignment marks of layers that are aligned to each other (sometimes called an indirect alignment).
[0081] In this document, the connection made between layers of, generally, single crystal, transistors, which may be variously named for example as thermal contacts and vias, Thru Layer Via (TLV), TSV (Thru Silicon Via), may be made and include electrically and thermally conducting material or may be made and include an electrically non-conducting but thermally conducting material or materials. A device or method may include formation of both of these types of connections, or just one type. By varying the size, number, composition, placement, shape, or depth of these connection structures, the coefficient of thermal expansion exhibited by a layer or layers may be tailored to a desired value. For example, the coefficient of thermal expansion of the second layer of transistors may be tailored to substantially match the coefficient of thermal expansion of the first layer, or base layer of transistors, which may include its (first layer) interconnect layers.
[0082] Base wafers or substrates, or acceptor wafers or substrates, or target wafers substrates herein may be substantially comprised of a crystalline material, for example, mono-crystalline silicon or germanium, or may be an engineered substrate/wafer such as, for example, an SOI (Silicon on Insulator) wafer or GeOI (Germanium on Insulator) substrate. Similarly, donor wafers herein may be substantially comprised of a crystalline material and may include, for example, mono-crystalline silicon or germanium, or may be an engineered substrate/wafer such as, for example, an SOI (Silicon on Insulator) wafer or GeOI (Germanium on Insulator) substrate, depending on design and process flow choices.
[0083] While mono-crystalline silicon has been mentioned as a transistor material in this document, other options are possible including, for example, poly-crystalline silicon, mono-crystalline germanium, mono-crystalline III-V semiconductors, graphene, and various other semiconductor materials with which devices, such as transistors, may be constructed within. Moreover, thermal contacts and vias may or may not be stacked in a substantially vertical line through multiple stacks, layers, strata of circuits. Thermal contacts and vias may include materials such as sp2 carbon as conducting and sp3 carbon as non-conducting of electrical current. Thermal contacts and vias may include materials such as carbon nano-tubes. Thermal contacts and vias may include materials such as, for example, copper, aluminum, tungsten, titanium, tantalum, cobalt metals and/or silicides of the metals. First silicon layers or transistor channels and second silicon layers or transistor channels may be substantially absent of semiconductor dopants to form an undoped silicon region or layer, or doped, such as, for example, with elemental or compound species that form a p+, or p, or p−, or n+, or n, or n− silicon layer or region. A heat removal apparatus may include an external surface from which heat transfer may take place by methods such as air cooling, liquid cooling, or attachment to another heat sink or heat spreader structure. Furthermore, raised source and drain contact structures, such as etch and epi SiGe and SiC, and implanted S/Ds (such as C) may be utilized for strain control of transistor channel to enhance carrier mobility and may provide contact resistance improvements. Damage from the processes may be optically annealed. Strain on a transistor channel to enhance carrier mobility may be accomplished by a stressor layer or layers as well.
[0084] In this specification the terms stratum, tier or layer might be used for the same structure and they may refer to transistors or other device structures (such as capacitors, resistors, inductors) that may lie substantially in a plane format and in most cases such stratum, tier or layer may include the interconnection layers used to interconnect the transistors on each. In a 3D device as herein described there may at least two such planes called tier, or stratum or layer.
[0085] In a 3D IC system stack, each layer/stratum may include a different operating voltage than other layers/stratum, for example, one stratum may have Vcc of 1.0 v and another may have a Vcc of 0.7 v. For example, one stratum may be designed for logic and have the appropriate Vcc for that process/device node, and another stratum in the stack may be designed for analog devices, and have a different Vcc, likely substantially higher in value-for example, greater than 3 volts, greater than 5 volts, greater than 8 volts, greater than 10 volts. In a 3D IC system stack, each layer/stratum may include a different gate dielectric thickness than other layers/stratum. For example, one stratum may include a gate dielectric thickness of 2 nm and another 10 nm. The definition of dielectric thickness may include both a physical definition of material thickness and an electrically ‘effective’ thickness of the material, given differing permittivity of the materials. In a 3D IC system stack, each layer/stratum may include different gate stack materials than other layers/stratum. For example, one stratum may include a HKMG (High k metal gate) stack and another stratum may include a polycide/silicon oxide gate stack. In a 3D IC system stack, each layer/stratum may include a different junction depth than other layers/stratum. For example, the depth of the junctions may include a FET transistor source or drain, bipolar emitter and contact junctions, vertical device junctions, resistor or capacitor junctions, and so on. For example, one stratum may include junctions of a fully depleted MOSFET, thus its junction depth may be defined by the thickness of the stratum device silicon to the vertical isolation, and the other stratum may also be fully depleted devices with a junction depth defined similarly, but one stratum has a thicker silicon layer than the other with respect to the respective edges of the vertical isolation. In a 3D IC system stack, each layer/stratum may include a different junction composition and/or structure than other layers/stratum. For example, one stratum may include raised source drains that may be constructed from an etch and epitaxial deposition processing, another stratum in the stack may have implanted and annealed junctions or may employ dopant segregation techniques, such as those utilized to form DSS Schottky transistors.
[0086] It should be noted that one of the design requirements for a monolithic 3D IC design may be that substantially all of the stacked layers and the base or substrate would have their respective dice lines (may be called scribe-lines) aligned. As the base wafer or substrate is processed and multiple circuits may be constructed on semiconductor layers that overlay each other, the overall device may be designed wherein each overlaying layer would have its respective dice lines overlying the dice lines of the layer underneath, thus at the end of processing the entire layer stacked wafer/substrate could be diced in a single dicing step. There may be test structures in the streets between dice lines, which overall may be called scribe-lanes or dice-lanes. These scribe-lanes or dice-lanes may be 10 um wide, 20 um wide, 50 um wide 100 um wide, or greater than 100 um wide depending on design choice and die singulation process capability. The scribe-lanes or dice-lanes may include guard-ring structures and/or other die border structures. In a monolithic 3D design each layer test structure could be connected through each of the overlying layers and then to the top surface to allow access to these ‘buried’ test structure before dicing the wafer. Accordingly the design may include these vertical connections and may offset the layer test structures to enable such connection. In many cases the die borders comprise a protection structure, such as, for example, a guard-ring structure, die seal structure, ESD structure, and others elements. Accordingly in a monolithic 3D device these structures, such as guard rings, would be designed to overlay each other and may be aligned to each other during the course of processing. The die edges may be sealed by a process and structure such as, for example, described in relation to FIG. 183C of incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 8,273,610, and may include aspects as described in relation to FIGS. 183A and 183B of same reference. One skilled in the art would recognize that the die seal can be passive or electrically active. On each 3D stack layer, or stratum, the electronic circuits within one die, that may be circumscribed by a dice-lane, may not be connected to the electronic circuits of a second die on that same wafer, that second die also may be circumscribed by a dice-lane. Further, the dice-lane/scribe-lane of one stratum in the 3D stack may be aligned to the dice-lane/scribe-lane of another stratum in the 3D stack, thus providing a direct die singulation vector for the 3D stack of strata/layers.
[0087] It will also be appreciated by persons of ordinary skill in the art that the invention is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described hereinabove. For example, drawings or illustrations may not show n or p wells for clarity in illustration. Moreover, transistor channels illustrated or discussed herein may include doped semiconductors, but may instead include undoped semiconductor material. Further, any transferred layer or donor substrate or wafer preparation illustrated or discussed herein may include one or more undoped regions or layers of semiconductor material. Moreover, epitaxial regrow of source and drains may utilize processes such as liquid phase epitaxial regrowth or solid phase epitaxial regrowth, and may utilize flash or laser processes to freeze dopant profiles in place and may also permit non-equilibrium enhanced activation (superactivation). Further, transferred layer or layers may have regions of STI or other transistor elements within it or on it when transferred. Rather, the scope of the invention includes combinations and sub-combinations of the various features described hereinabove as well as modifications and variations which would occur to such skilled persons upon reading the foregoing description. Thus the invention is to be limited only by the appended claims.