SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE WITH SINGLE ELECTRON COUNTING CAPABILITY
20200212245 · 2020-07-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
The semiconductor device comprises a bipolar transistor with emitter, base and collector, a current or voltage source electrically connected with the emitter, and a quenching component electrically connected with the collector, the bipolar transistor being configured for operation at a collector-to-base voltage above the breakdown voltage.
Claims
1. A semiconductor device with single electron counting capability, comprising: a bipolar transistor with emitter, base and collector, a collector-to-base breakdown voltage, a current or voltage source electrically connected with the emitter, and a quenching component electrically connected with the collector, the bipolar transistor being configured for operation at a reverse collector-to-base voltage above the breakdown voltage.
2. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein the current or voltage source comprises a photodiode.
3. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein the quenching circuit comprises a resistor or a transistor.
4. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein the quenching component is an active quenching circuit.
5. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: a pulse generating component electrically connected with the collector.
6. The semiconductor device according to claim 5, wherein the pulse generating component is an inverter or a Schmitt trigger.
7. The semiconductor device according to claim 5, further comprising: a counter, a clock and a processing unit, which are connected with the pulse generating component, the counter being configured to count pulses generated by the pulse generating component, the clock being configured to provide a time normal or standard, and the processing unit being configured to generate a result of a measurement.
8. The semiconductor device according to claim 7, wherein the processing unit is configured to determine the result in digital form as a relation between a count of pulses and the time normal or standard.
9. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: a switch or further transistor, which enables to short-circuit the base and the emitter.
10. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: at least one further bipolar transistor comprising a further collector connected with a further quenching component the bipolar transistor and the at least one further bipolar transistor comprising different efficiencies in converting the occurrence of injected charge carriers into counts.
11. The semiconductor device of claim 10, further comprising: switches or further transistors between the current or voltage source and the emitter and at least one further emitter, the switches or further transistors enabling to connect each of the emitters separately with the current or voltage source.
12. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: at least one further bipolar transistor comprising a further collector connected with a further quenching component, and at least one more current or voltage source, the current or voltage sources including sensors of different sensitivities.
13. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: a substrate of semiconductor material, the substrate having a main surface, the bipolar transistor comprising a shallow well of a first type of conductivity in a deep well of an opposite second type of conductivity in the substrate, a doped region of the second type of conductivity in the shallow well at the main surface, a p-n junction between the doped region and the shallow well, a junction-forming region arranged in the deep well under the shallow well, the junction-forming region having a doping concentration for the second type of conductivity, the doping concentration of the junction-forming region being higher than a doping concentration of the deep well outside the junction-forming region, and a further p-n junction between the junction-forming region and the shallow well, the further p-n junction being configured for detecting an injection of charge-carriers by a current or voltage across the p-n junction when the further p-n junction is reverse biased above a breakdown voltage.
14. The semiconductor device of claim 13, further comprising: a shallow well contact region of the first type of conductivity in the shallow well at the main surface, the shallow well contact region having a doping concentration that is higher than a doping concentration of the shallow well, and the doped region being arranged at a distance from the shallow well contact region.
15. The semiconductor device of claim 13, further comprising: a deep well contact region of the second type of conductivity in the deep well at the main surface, the deep well contact region having a doping concentration that is higher than a doping concentration of the deep well.
16. A semiconductor device with single electron counting capability, comprising: at least two bipolar transistors with emitter, base and collector, a collector-to-base breakdown voltage, a current or voltage source electrically connected with the emitter, and a quenching component electrically connected with the collector, the bipolar transistor being configured for operation at a reverse collector-to-base voltage above the breakdown voltage, wherein one of the bipolar transistors comprising: a shallow well of a first type of conductivity in a deep well of an opposite second type of conductivity in the substrate, and a doped region of the second type of conductivity in the shallow well at the main surface, another one of the bipolar transistors comprising; a shallow well of a first type of conductivity in a deep well of an opposite second type of conductivity in the substrate, and a doped region of the first type of conductivity in the shallow well at the main surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023] The following is a detailed description of examples of the semiconductor device in conjunction with the appended figures.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0035]
[0036] Doped regions in the substrate 1 have a first type of conductivity or an opposite second type of conductivity. The first type of conductivity may be p-type conductivity, so that the second type of conductivity is n-type conductivity, as indicated in the figures by way of example. The types of conductivity may be reversed. Doping concentrations for either type of conductivity that are sufficiently high for the formation of ohmic contacts on the semiconductor material are respectively indicated by p+ and n+.
[0037] The substrate 1 may be intrinsically doped or have a low doping concentration for the first type of conductivity. At a main surface 10 of the substrate 1, a shallow well 3 of the first type of conductivity is located in a deep well 2 of the second type of conductivity.
[0038] An isolation region 4, which may be a shallow trench isolation, for instance, can be present where a lateral boundary of the deep well 2 reaches the main surface 10. A cover layer 5 of a dielectric material is optionally present on the main surface 10. The cover layer 5 can be an oxide of the semiconductor material, in particular silicon nitride, silicon dioxide or a combination of silicon nitride and silicon oxide, for instance.
[0039] A substrate contact region 6, which has a high doping concentration for the first type of conductivity, may be provided if an electric connection of the substrate 1 is desired. The substrate contact region 6 is formed at the main surface 10 and may be arranged in a substrate region 11, which has a doping concentration for the first type of conductivity yielding an electric conductivity that is higher than the basic conductivity of the substrate 1.
[0040] A deep well contact region 7, which has a high doping concentration for the second type of conductivity, is provided for an electric connection of the deep well 2. The deep well contact region 7 is formed at the main surface 10 and may be arranged in a well region 12, which has a doping concentration for the second type of conductivity yielding an electric conductivity that is higher than the basic conductivity of the deep well 2.
[0041] A doped region 8, which has a high doping concentration for the second type of conductivity, is arranged at the main surface 10 in the shallow well 3. A shallow well contact region 9, which has a high doping concentration for the opposite first type of conductivity, is provided for an electric connection of the shallow well 3 and is also arranged at the main surface 10 in the shallow well 3, at a small distance from the doped region 8.
[0042] A p-n junction 14 is formed between the doped region 8 and the shallow well 3. A special region, which will be referred to as junction-forming region 13, is present in the deep well 2 under the shallow well 3, where a further p-n junction 15 is formed between the junction-forming region 13 and the shallow well 3. The junction-forming region 13 has an elevated doping concentration for the second type of conductivity at least at the further p-n junction 15 and is thus suitable for an avalanche multiplication of charge carriers. In the semiconductor device shown in
[0043] In particular, the bipolar transistor is a vertical bipolar transistor. The deep well 2 provides the collector, the shallow well 3 provides the base, and the doped region 8 provides the emitter. The deep well 2 has a region that reaches deeper into the substrate 1 than the shallow well 3. The junction-forming region 13 especially is a region of the deep well 2 that is arranged below the shallow well 3. Thus the distance of the junction-forming region 13 from the main surface 10 is larger than the distance of the shallow well 3 from the main surface 10. Hence the movement of charge carriers of an electric current through the shallow well 3 and the p-n junction 30 has a component in the direction normal to the main surface 10.
[0044] The high doping concentrations of the regions 6, 7, 8, 9 enable to form ohmic contacts between the semiconductor material and electrically conductive contact layers. In the described examples, the contact layers are provided by optional silicide layers 16, 17, 18, 19. Contact plugs 20, 21, 22, 23 may be arranged in a dielectric layer, in particular an intermetal dielectric of a wiring, for instance. Such a dielectric layer is known per se in semiconductor technology, in particular standard CMOS technology, and not shown in the figures. The contact plugs 20, 21, 22, 23 electrically connect the contact layers 16, 17, 18, 19 to respective conductor layers 24, 25, 26, 27, which may be conductor tracks in a structured metallization level of a wiring, for instance. If the silicide layers 16, 17, 18, 19 are not provided, the contact plugs 20, 21, 22, 23 can be applied directly on the regions 6, 7, 8, 9.
[0045] In the example shown in
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[0047] In the semiconductor device shown in
[0048]
[0049] In the semiconductor device shown in
[0050]
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[0052] A semiconductor device with single electron counting capability is intended to produce a single pulse for every single event. It should not give spurious pulses and should quickly recover to a state in which it is ready for the next count. Some form of quenching is required to inhibit a prolonged avalanche and to reduce the time during which the device is not ready to detect new events.
[0053] The inverter 29 generates digital pulses, which can be further processed. The inverter 29 and subsequent circuits operate between a high voltage V.sub.HV and a low voltage V.sub.N, which may typically satisfy the relation 1 V<V.sub.HVV.sub.N<6 V. A Schmitt trigger or other appropriate circuit components may instead be used to generate digital pulses. The pulses are counted with a counter, a clock is provided, and a processing unit is applied to relate the count of pulses to a time interval or time unit provided by the clock in order to generate the result of the measurement in digital form.
[0054] A current source 30 generates the emitter current, which is the analog signal that is to be measured. Alternatively, a voltage source 31 can be used. The current or voltage source 30, 31 may be any type of sensor that generates a current or a voltage, in particular a photodiode 32, for instance.
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[0056] In the circuit according to the diagram shown in
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[0058] The capacitor 34 of the circuit diagram shown in
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[0061] In the circuit according to
[0062] In a further circuit for enlarging the dynamic range of the analog-to-digital conversion, both the efficiencies of the bipolar transistors and the sensitivities of the sensors providing the current or voltage source can be varied. In particular, such a circuit can be obtained by a combination of components of the circuits according to
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[0064] In the described semiconductor device, the base-collector junction is operated above the breakdown voltage in a manner that is similar to the operation of a single-photon avalanche diode. Combined with the appropriate electronic circuit components (quencher, counter, clock, processing unit) the number of electrons passing the base-collector junction (=collector current) can be counted. Hence very small currents can be measured and the result is directly digital (=counted number of electrons).
[0065] An emitter current of 1 pA corresponds to 6.24.Math.10.sup.6 electrons per second. As in a single-photon avalanche diode, not every electron or hole generates an avalanche pulse. The probability for a carrier traversing the high electric field to generate an avalanche is in the order of 10% to 90% and is mainly impacted by the carrier type (electrons or holes) and the electric field, which depends on the design of the junction and the excess bias voltage. Even with a trigger probability of 10%, a current of 1 pA results in a count rate of 6.Math.10.sup.5 counts per second.
[0066] With the exception of the quenching component, all components of the described semiconductor device are digital. This is a further advantage that is obtained by using the described semiconductor device.