RF DEVICE WITH REDUCED SUBSTRATE COUPLING
20180083098 ยท 2018-03-22
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L21/845
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/1218
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/1203
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/1211
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L29/06
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/762
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/12
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A substrate is provided with at least one etch stop layer to line a cavity after etching of the substrate. The cavity isolates the substrate from an active layer including a plurality of transistors.
Claims
1. A semiconductor-on-insulator (SOI) device, comprising: a semiconductor layer including a plurality of transistors, the semiconductor layer including an active surface and a buried surface; a buried oxide layer, wherein the buried oxide layer surrounds the buried surface of the semiconductor layer; a cavity; and an etch stop layer in a substrate, wherein a first surface of the etch stop layer faces the cavity and a second surface of the etch stop layer faces the substrate.
2. The SOI device of claim 1, wherein the buried oxide layer includes a plurality of through vias extending into the cavity.
3. The SOI device of claim 1, wherein the substrate comprises silicon and the etch stop layer is an ion-implanted silicon layer in the substrate.
4. The SOI device of claim 3, wherein the ion is selected from the group consisting of boron and germanium.
5. The SOI device of claim 1, further comprising a deep dielectric trench configured to laterally isolate the cavity.
6. The SOI device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of transistors comprises a plurality of fin-shaped field effect transistors.
7. The SOI device of claim 1, wherein the semiconductor layer is part of an active layer including a plurality of metal layers interconnected by a plurality of vias.
8. The SOI device of claim 1, wherein the transistors are RF transistors, and wherein the cavity is configured to isolate the substrate from parasitically coupling with an RF signal transmitted by the RF transistors.
9. The SOI device of claim 1, wherein the cavity is filled with air.
10.-20. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017] Embodiments of the present invention and their advantages are best understood by referring to the detailed description that follows. It should be appreciated that like reference numerals are used to identify like elements illustrated in one or more of the figure.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] A semiconductor-on-substrate device is provided that includes a cavity between a buried oxide layer and an etch stop layer. The buried oxide layer supports an active layer containing transistors and includes a plurality of through vias through which an intervening portion of a substrate between the etch stop layer and the buried oxide layer is etched away to form the cavity. A remainder of the substrate is protected from the etching by the etch stop layer. The cavity may comprise free space filled with air or be partially filled with a dielectric material. Regardless of whether the cavity is partially filled with dielectric material or not, the resulting isolation between the remainder of the substrate and the active layer substantially eliminates parasitic coupling between the remaining substrate and the active layer. Transistors in the active layer may thus conduct RF signals without the generation of undesirable second and third harmonics from any parasitic coupling with the substrate.
[0019] The substrate in the following example embodiments is silicon such that the semiconductor-on-insulator architecture is a silicon-on-insulator architecture. But it will be appreciated that the devices and techniques disclosed herein may be readily adapted to other semiconductor substrates such as III-V semiconductor substrates. An example silicon-on-insulator device 100 is shown in
[0020] Active layer 160 also include a plurality of metal layers such as metal layers M1, M2, M3, and M4 that are separated by dielectric material 150. The metal layers couple together through a plurality of vias 135 to transistors 145 as well as to pads 130 so that signals may be driven into and out of device 100. Should these signals be RF signals, the resulting electrical activity would tend to undesirably parasitically couple with substrate 120. But this coupling is substantially eliminated by cavity 105 without the complication and expense of processing steps such as the introduction of a trap-rich layer. Moreover, the isolation provided by cavity 105 offers greater reduction of second and third harmonics of the RF signals than conventional trap-rich layer approaches. In addition, this isolation avoids the expense and complication of exotic substrate architectures such as silicon-on-sapphire architectures.
[0021] Etch stop layer 115 may be formed using an epitaxial deposition process or through ion implantation. In an epitaxial deposition, etch stop layer 115 would be deposited on a portion of substrate 120. An additional epitaxial deposition of another portion of substrate 120 would then cover etch stop layer 115 prior to the deposition of buried oxide layer 110. Buried oxide layer 110 covers this portion of substrate 120 and in turn is covered by an active layer 160 that includes a device layer of silicon 125 in which transistors 145 are formed. The manufacture of silicon-on-insulator device 100 will now be explained in more detail with regard to an ion implantation process for forming etch stop layer 115.
Silicon-On-Insulator with Cavity Isolation Manufacture
[0022] A silicon wafer or substrate 120 is processed such as through conventional silicon-on-insulator techniques to include a buried oxide (BOX) layer 110 that separates substrate 120 from a device silicon layer 125 (which may also be denoted as a top silicon layer) as shown in
[0023] With etch stop layer 115 completed, transistors 145 may be formed on device silicon layer 125 as shown in
[0024] After transistors 145 are completed and covered with inter-layer dielectric (ILD) 150, through vias 140 are formed as shown in
[0025] A wet etch process may then be used to etch away the intervening portion of substrate 120 between buried oxide layer 110 and etch stop layer 115 to form cavity 105 as shown in
[0026] Referring back to
[0027] Transistors 145 in silicon-on-insulator device 100 may advantageously conduct RF signals without the excitation of second and third harmonics due to the isolation provided by cavity 105 that isolates transistors 145 (as well as metal layers M1 through M4 and associated vias 135) from parasitically coupling with the remainder of substrate 120 below etch stop layer 115. Moreover this isolation is more effective than the use of trap-rich layers and can be produced at lower cost.
[0028] To better limit the lateral etching of cavity 105, it may be laterally demarcated by deep separation dielectric trenches 305 as shown in
[0029] The use of a buried oxide layer may be eliminated by introducing a top etch stop layer 405 as shown for a semiconductor device 400 of
[0030] The method of manufacture as shown in the flowchart of
[0031] The method also includes an act 505 of forming a buried oxide layer and an active device layer on the first portion of the substrate. The formation of buried oxide layer 110 and silicon device layer 125 is an example of act 505. It will be appreciated that if an ion implantation step is used to form etch stop layer 115, act 500 is performed after act 505. Conversely, should etch stop layer 115 be epitaxially deposited, act 500 would be performed prior to act 505.
[0032] Finally, the method includes an act 510 of etching the first portion of the substrate to form a cavity between the buried oxide layer and the first surface of the etch stop layer. The etching of cavity 105 as discussed with regard to
[0033] As those of some skill in this art will by now appreciate and depending on the particular application at hand, many modifications, substitutions and variations can be made in and to the materials, apparatus, configurations and methods of use of the devices of the present disclosure without departing from the scope thereof. In light of this, the scope of the present disclosure should not be limited to that of the particular embodiments illustrated and described herein, as they are merely by way of some examples thereof, but rather, should be fully commensurate with that of the claims appended hereafter and their functional equivalents.