Basic Planar Process
Basic Planar Process
Cont.
A small single crystal rod of silicon called a seed crystal is then dipped into the silicon melt and slowly pulled out
During the crystal pulling process, the seed crystal and the crucible are rotated in opposite directions in order to produce ingots of circular cross-section. The diameter of the ingot is controlled by the pulling rate and the melt temperature.
Aluminium Ingot
Reference plane
Ingot Slicing
The ingot is then sliced using a stainless steel saw blade with industrial diamonds embedded into the inner diameter cutting edge. This produces circular wafers or slices .
Wafer Cleaning
Finally the wafers are thoroughly rinsed and dried These silicon wafers will contain several hundred rectangular chips, each one containing a complete integrated circuit.
Epitaxial Growth
Epitaxy means arranged upon Epitaxy is the growth of a thin layer of single crystal material on the surface of the wafer Epitaxy layer formed on the substrate may be either n-doped or p-doped For p-type Doping bi-borane and For n-type doping phosphine are used with steam of silicon tetrachloride hydrogen gas.
Epitaxial Growth
The process is carried out in a reaction chamber consisting of a long cylindrical quartz tube encircled by an RF induction coil. The Si wafers placed on a rectangular graphite rod called a boat. This boat is then placed in the reaction chamber where the graphite is heated inductively to 1200 degree C The various gases required for the growth of desired epitaxial layers are introduced into the system through a control console.
Oxidation
The process in which a thin/thick layer of silicon dioxide formed on a surface of silicon wafer using thermal growth technique is called oxidation. Reason for selecting SiO2 1. Extremely hard protective coating and is unaffected by almost all reagents except hydrofluoric acid. 2. Mask in the etching of Si Substrates
Mask Meaning
Oxidation
The silicon wafers are stacked up in a fused quartz cassette and then inserted into quartz furnace tube. The Si wafers are raised to a high temperature in the range of 950 to 1115 degree C and at the same time exposed to a gas containing oxygen or water vapour or both.
The thickness of the film is governed by time, temperature and the moisture content
Photolithography
Photo-litho-graphy: latin- light-stone-writing It is an optical means for transferring patterns onto a substrate As many as 10,000 transistors can be fabricated on a 1 cm * 1cm chip. The conventional photolithographic process uses UV and device dimension as small as 2micro-meter can be obtained. Nowadays using X-Ray or Electron Beam Lithographic techniques, device dimension down to submicron range (<1 micro meter)
Photolithography
Photolithography involves three processes : 1. Development 2. Etching 3. Photoresist Removal
Photolithography
Cond.
The mask is removed and the wafer is developed using a chemical which depends on what type of photoresist used. The chip is immersed in the etching solution of hydrofluoric acid, which removes the SiO2 from the areas which are not protected by photoresist. After diffusion of impurities, the photoresist is removed with a chemical solvent (hot sulphuric acid) and mechanical abrasion.
Diffusion
The process of doping i.e., adding impurity to the silicon wafer is called diffusion This uses a high temperature furnace having a flat temperature profile over a useful length
Diffusion
A quartz boat containing cleaned wafers is pushed into the hot zone with temperature maintained at abt 1000 0C. Impurities to be diffused are rarely used in their elemental forms. Compounds like boron oxide, boron chloride are used for boron & phosphorous pentaoxide, phosphorous oxychloride are used as soures of Phosphorous.
Diffusion
A carrier gas such as dry oxygen or nitrogen is normally used for sweeping the impurity to the high temperature zone. The depth of diffusion depends upon the time of diffusion which normally extends to 2 hours
Ion Implantation
It is the other technique used to introduce impurities into a silicon wafer.
Ion Implantation
Silicon wafers are placed in a vacuum and are scanned by a beam of high energy dopant ions (borons for p-type & phosphorous for n-type) These ions are accelerated by energies between 20 kV to 250kV. As the ions strike the silicon wafers, they penetrate some small distance into the wafer.
Isolation Techniques
Since a number of components are fabricated on the same IC chip, it becomes necessary to provide electrical isolation between different components and interconnections. Two techniques: 1. pn junction isolation 2. Dielectric isolation
Metallization
The purpose of this process is to produce a thin metal film layer that will serve to make interconnections of the various components on the chip. Al is used for the metallization of most ICs. Reasons 1. A good conductor, easy to deposit Al films using vacuum deposition, 2. Al makes good mechanical bonds with Si 3. Al forms low resistance, ohmic contacts with heavily doped n-type Si and p-type Si.
Process takes place in a Vacuum Evaporation Chamber The pressure in the chamber is reduced to the range of abt 10-6 to 10-7 Torr. The material to be evaporated is placed in a resistance heated tungsten coil or basket. A very high power density electron beam is focussed at the surface of the material to be evaporated.
Metallization
This heats up the material to very high temp & it starts vaporizing. These vapours travel in straight line paths. The evaporated molecules hit the substrate and condense there to form a thin film coating. After thin film metallization is done, the film is patterned to produce the required interconnections and the bonding pad configuration. This is done by photolithographic process. Al is etched away from unwanted places by using mixture of phosphoric acid, nitric acid & acetic acid
Metallization
Reference
Linear Integrated Circuits by D. Roy Choudhury & S B Jain