written 6.3 years ago by | • modified 5.3 years ago |
The integrated circuits maybe viewed as a set of patterned layers of doped silicon, ,poly-silicon, metal and insulation silicon dioxide. The process to transfer a pattern to a layer on chip is called as lithography. Since each layer has its own distinct patterning requirements, the lithographic sequence must be repeated for every layer using a different mask.
Basic Fabrication Steps
1. Oxidation
The process of growing a layer of silicon dioxide (SiO2)on the surface of a silicon wafer.
Uses:
· Provide isolation between two layers
· Protect underlying material from contamination
· Very thin oxides (100 to 1000 Å) are grown using dry-oxidation techniques. Thicker oxides (>1000 Å) are grown using wet oxidation techniques.
2. Diffusion
Movement of impurity atoms at the surface of the silicon into the bulk of the silicon - from higher concentration to lower concentration. Diffusion typically done at high temperatures: 800 to 1400 °C.
3. Ion Implantation
Ion implantation is the process by which impurity ions are accelerated to a high velocity and physically lodged into the target.
· It is required to activate the impurity atoms and repair physical damage to the crystal lattice. This step is done at 500 to 800 °C.
· Lower temperature process compared to diffusion.
· Can implant through surface layers, thus it is useful for field-threshold adjustment.
· Unique doping profile available with buried concentration peak.
4. Deposition
Deposition is the means by which various materials are deposited on the silicon wafer.
Examples:
· Silicon nitride (Si3N4)
· Silicon dioxide (SiO2)
· Aluminum
· Polysilicon
There are various ways to deposit a meterial on a substrate:
· Chemical-vapor deposition (CVD)
· Low-pressure chemical-vapor deposition (LPCVD)
· Plasma-enhanced chemical-vapor deposition (PECVD)
· Sputter deposition
Materials deposited using these techniques cover the entire wafer.
5. Etching
Etching is the process of selectively removing a layer of material.
When etching is performed, the etchant may remove portions or all of:
· the desired material
· the underlying layer
· the masking layer
Important considerations:
· Anisotropy of the etch
A = 1 - (lateral etch rate / vertical etch rate)
· Selectivity of the etch (film to mask and film to substrate)
Sfilm-mask = film etch rate / mask etch rate
Desire perfect anisotropy (A=1) and invinite selectivity.
There are basically two types of etches:
· Wet etch, uses chemicals
· Dry etch, uses chemically active ionized gasses.
6. Photolithography
Components:
· Photoresist material
· Photomask
· Material to be patterned (e.g., SiO2)
Positive photoresist- Areas exposed to UV light are soluble in the developer
Negative photoresist- Areas not exposed to UV light are soluble in the developer
Steps:
Apply photoresist
Soft bake
Expose the photoresist to UV light through photomask
Develop (remove unwanted photoresist)
Hard bake
Etch the exposed layer
Remove photoresist