SOLID-STATE WAFER BONDING OF FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS ON SUBSTRATES AND SELF-ALIGNED CONTACTS
20170317050 · 2017-11-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L21/28575
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/13
PHYSICS
H01L2224/83203
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20107
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/8258
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/8252
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/29187
ELECTRICITY
H01L27/0605
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/185
ELECTRICITY
International classification
G02B6/13
PHYSICS
H01L21/8252
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/02
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method for integrating III-V semiconductor materials onto a rigid host substrate deposits a thin layer of reactive metal film on the rigid host substrate. The layer can also include a separation layer of unreactive metal or dielectric, and can be patterned. The unreactive metal pattern can create self-aligned device contacts after bonding is completed. The III-V semiconductor material is brought into contact with the thin layer of reactive metal. Bonding is by a low temperature heat treatment under a compressive pressure. The reactive metal and the functional semiconductor material are selected to undergo solid state reaction and form a stable alloy under the low temperature heat treatment without degrading the III-V material. A semiconductor device of the invention includes a functional III-V layer bonded to a rigid substrate via an alloy of a component of the functional III-V layer and a metal that bonds to the rigid substrate.
Claims
1. A method for integrating III-V semiconductor materials onto a rigid host substrate comprising: depositing a thin layer of reactive metal film on the rigid host substrate; bringing functional III-V semiconductor material into contact with the thin layer of reactive metal; and bonding by a low temperature heat treatment under a compressive pressure, wherein the thin layer of reactive metal and the bulk functional semiconductor material are selected to undergo solid-state reaction and form a stable alloy under the low temperature heat treatment.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the thin layer of reactive metal film comprises a patterned metal film.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the patterned metal film is recessed into the rigid host substrate.
4. The method of claim 3, further comprising a separation metal layer that is unreactive with the III-V material under the low temperature heat treatment and separates the reactive metal from the rigid substrate.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the III-V material comprises an Arsenide or Phosphide III-V material and the reactive metal comprises Ni or Pd.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the separation metal comprises Cr, Ti, or W.
7. The method of claim 3, further comprising a separation dielectric layer that is unreactive with the III-V material under the low temperature heat treatment and separates the reactive metal from the rigid substrate.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the III-V material comprises an Arsenide or Phosphide III-V material and the reactive metal comprises Ni or Pd.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the separation dielectric comprises Al.sub.2O.sub.3, SiO.sub.2, or Si.sub.3N.sub.4.
10. The method of claim 2, further comprising a separation metal layer that is unreactive with the III-V material under the low temperature heat treatment and separates the reactive metal from the rigid substrate.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the III-V material comprises an Arsenide or Phosphide III-V material and the reactive metal comprises Ni or Pd.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the separation metal comprises Cr, Ti, or W.
13. The method of claim 2, further comprising a separation dielectric layer that is unreactive with the III-V material under the low temperature heat treatment and separates the reactive metal from the rigid substrate.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the III-V material comprises an Arsenide or Phosphide III-V material and the reactive metal comprises Ni or Pd.
15. The method of claim 8, wherein the separation dielectric comprises Al.sub.2O.sub.3, SiO.sub.2, or Si.sub.3N.sub.4.
16. The method of claim 1, wherein the III-V material comprises an Arsenide or Phosphide III-V material and the reactive metal comprises Ni or Pd.
17. The method of claim 16, further comprising a separation layer that is unreactive with the III-V material under the low temperature heat treatment and separates the reactive metal from the rigid substrate.
18. The method of claim 1, wherein Ni or Pd is the metal and the III-V material comprises an arsenide or phosphide III-V material.
19. The method of claim 1, wherein the rigid host substrate comprises silicon, glass, or sapphire.
20. The method of claim 1, wherein the low temperature is in the range of 220-300° C.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the heat treatment comprises treatment in a thermal furnace or a vacuum chamber flowing with forming gas.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein the forming gas comprises N.sub.2 or Ar.
23. The method of claim 1, wherein the low temperature is high enough for the solid state reaction and low enough to avoid degradation of the functional semiconductor and the rigid substrate.
24. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step of thinning the functional III-V semiconductor material to a predetermined thickness after said bonding.
25. The method of claim 24, wherein the thinning comprises lapping, polishing, smart ion cut, or selective dry or wet etching.
26. The method of claim 1, wherein the reactive metal film is metal layer thickness is equal to or less than half of the thickness III-V semiconductor material during the solid-state reaction
27. The method of claim 1, wherein the III-V semiconductor material comprises bulk III-V material.
28. The method of claim 27, further comprising a thin film III-V epitaxial material on the bulk III-V material.
29. A semiconductor device comprising a functional III-V layer bonded to a rigid substrate via an alloy of a component of the functional III-V layer and a metal that bonds to the rigid substrate.
30. The semiconductor device of claim 29, a bond between said functional III-V layer and said rigid substrate consists of said alloy.
31. The semiconductor device of claim 30, wherein said rigid substrate comprises silicon.
32. The semiconductor device of claim 30, wherein said rigid substrate comprises a silicon wafer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0018] An embodiment of the invention is a wafer bonding method for integrating bulk or thin film functional III-V semiconductor materials to a rigid host substrate (e.g., a Si substrate such as an Si wafer, glass, sapphire, etc.). Preferred methods exploit a solid-state reaction between a functional semiconductor layer and a metal layer that is pre-deposited or pre-patterned on the rigid host substrate, a low temperature heat treatment (e.g., preferably 220-450° C., more preferably 220-300° C., and most preferably 220-250° C. and a fast bonding process, e.g. requiring only a few minutes. In preferred embodiments, bonding is achieved in less than 20 minutes. With a metal layer having lower area density than 15% the higher end of the 220-300° C. range is preferred, and only III-V materials that decompose above 450° C. (GaAs, GaP, AlAs, etc.) should use temperatures above 300° C.
[0019] A “functional” layer is a III-V layer that can perform a semi-conducting function required by a device. A functional layer can perform a function required, for example, in a transistor, optical waveguides, semiconductor laser or other device.
[0020] Preferred methods of the invention tolerate levels of surface roughness for both the functional semiconductors and the host substrate that are not tolerated by prior methods discussed in the background. Preferred methods also provide for self-aligned contact formation. Preferred methods further enable bonding of multiple layers of functional semiconductors to the host substrate with precise location control. Preferred integrated III-V/rigid substrates of the invention provide a platform to fabricate advanced electronic and optoelectronic devices utilizing the transferred functional semiconductors on Si, in a CMOS compatible fabrication process.
[0021] Preferred embodiment methods integrate III-V semiconductors onto Si with steps that are compatible with current CMOS fabrication procedures. Preferred methods of the invention cause minimum or zero crystal defects to the bonded semiconductor layers, and enable further fabrication of advanced functional devices using the bonded layers atop functional CMOS circuitry without degraded performance.
[0022] Preferred methods are based on the solid-state reaction between a metal layer and III-V material, which can tolerate the roughness and defects at the bonding interface. Yields in bonding can be very high as a result, and the method can be expected to provide 100% yields or close to 100% yields. The bonding based on the solid-state reaction between metal and III-V material involves a chemical reaction that is stable and irreversible.
[0023] Preferred embodiments are based on the reaction between metal (Ni for example) and Si to form metal silicide. This reaction doesn't require a melting eutectic and it happens in solid phase at temperatures as low as 220° C., with a preferred temperature of 280° C. This is a one directional diffusion reaction in which Ni diffuses into Si but not the other way around.
[0024] Preferred embodiments provide Self-aligned Electrical Contacts (SAEC). Pre-patterned electrical metal contacts on a host substrate play the dual roles of bonding with functional semiconductors and also as conductive electrical leads to the outer electrodes. Preferred embodiments integrate III-V (or other functional semiconductor) materials onto rigid host substrates (for example Si) by a solid-state reaction between the III-V semiconductor and a metal layer (for example Ni or Pd) pre-defined on the host substrate. Preferred embodiments advantageously provide 1) Tolerance to surface imperfections; 2) Compatibility to Si CMOS processes; 3) Integration to a variety of substrates; 4) the ability to provide multi-layer stacking; and 5) Self-aligned electrical contacts for III-V transistors on Si, which is a foundation for short-channel high-performance devices.
[0025] The invention enables the integration of high-mobility III-V transistor layers, such as InGaAs, atop Si CMOS circuits. It also enables the integration of the high-speed optoelectronic elements made from InP (waveguides, modulators, switches and photodetectors) that are necessary for optical transmission with large data rate and bandwidth atop a Si CMOS circuit. Such mixed platform circuits can be used to produce powerful systems that can greatly benefit systems that handle large amounts of data, such as big data centers and large servers. The invention can also provide for on-chip optical processing in microprocessor chips, which has widespread application to sensor and communication systems. Further, light emission (Lasers, light emitting diodes) and detection (photodetctors, photconductors, photovoltaic cells) made of III-V materials can be integrated with on Si CMOS.
[0026] Present preferred methods of the invention integrate III-V (or other functional semiconductor) materials onto rigid host substrate (for example Si) by a solid-state reaction between the III-V semiconductor and a metal layer or patterned metal layer (for example Ni or Pd) pre-defined on the host substrate. Compared with existing bonding methods, the present invention provides a number of advantages that artisans will appreciate.
[0027] One advantage provided by the invention is tolerance to surface imperfections. There is no need for surfaces to have a total surface roughness of bonded surfaces of less than 1 nm to activate Van der Waals or H- or hydroxyl group bonding in non-eutectic bonding with methods of the invention. Instead, methods of the invention gradually eliminate surface roughness by the mechanism of metal diffusion into the III-V semiconductors (in a small protrusion) during the solid-state reaction that will eventually equilibrate to planarize interfaces and levels the bonded layers flat on the Si substrate. The reaction between Ni and InGaAs equilibrate during the process after nucleation of the new NiInGaAs phase. The “eventually equilibrate” here means that the Ni will be finally completely consumed, forming a stable bonding and planarized interface.
[0028] Another advantage provided by the invention is compatibility to with CMOS fabrication processes. An example embodiment demonstrated experimentally showed that the solid-state reaction between a typical III-V semiconductor, InGaAs, and a Ni metal layer, can be achieved at temperatures as low as 220° C. This preferred wafer bonding method is accomplished with heat treatment generally around 250-300° C., and the bonding quality didn't show degradation with post-bonding anneals at temperatures up to 500° C. Even though the eutectic bonding method discussed in the background has been used in Si wafer bonding processes, based on the eutectic reaction between Si and Au, it involves the dissolution of Si to form liquid phase and the Au is not desired in a CMOS compatible process. Further, the present bonding approach can provide for electrical isolation between metal-semiconductor alloyed patterns whereas eutectic bonding doesn't preserve a pre-patterned metal lead shape and intermixes with neighboring liquid solution at the bonding temperature.
[0029] Another advantage provided by the invention is integration to a variety of substrates. III-V semiconductors can be bonded atop any rigid host substrate provided that there is a thin metal layer pre-deposited on the host substrate and that this metal layer can form a solid-state reaction with the III-V semiconductor. This can include silicon wafers, for example, but also other rigid substrates such as glass and sapphire.
[0030] Multi-layer stacking is another advantage provide by the invention. With diffusion barrier layers, dissimilar materials such as different composition III-V layers, can be integrated in a layer-by-layer fashion on a substrate such as Si, in a planar technology approach that is compatible with Si CMOS processing.
[0031] The self-aligned electrical contacts for III-V transistors on Si provided by preferred embodiments also provide advantages. Electrical metal contacts are first defined on the host substrate and the metal contacts have the functions not only for bonding with functional semiconductors but also for conducting current to the outer world. The bonding approach results in low resistivity self-aligned contacts that can provide very short channel and high performance devices.
[0032] The invention has been demonstrated experimentally. The experiments showed feasibility of the present manufacturing methods for bonding III-V semiconductor materials to a rigid host substrate by utilizing metal-semiconductor solid-state reactions. Both bulk (InP) and thin film (InGaAs) III-V semiconductors have been successfully bonded to Si wafer with SiO.sub.2 dielectric layer in the lab. The experimental results demonstrated the wafer bonding technology and the SAEC process for advanced functional device fabrication in a CMOS compatible process. This is the basis for active III-V devices on top of CMOS circuitry.
[0033] A semiconductor device of the invention includes a functional III-V layer bonded to a rigid substrate via an alloy of a component of the functional III-V layer and a metal that bonds to the rigid substrate. The bond between the functional III-V layer and the rigid substrate can consists of the alloy. The rigid substrate is preferably silicon, and preferably a silicon wafer.
[0034] Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be discussed with respect to the drawings. The drawings may include schematic representations, which will be understood by artisans in view of the general knowledge in the art and the description that follows. Features may be exaggerated in the drawings for emphasis, and features may not be to scale.
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Experiments
[0039] Fabrication was conducted experimentally with example materials to demonstrate the invention. Bulk (InP) and thin film (InGaAs) III-V semiconductors have been successfully bonded to a Si wafer with SiO.sub.2 dielectric layer in the experiments.
[0040] In a first set of experiments according to
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[0043] While specific embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it should be understood that other modifications, substitutions and alternatives are apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art. Such modifications, substitutions and alternatives can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
[0044] Various features of the invention are set forth in the appended claims.