Patents by Inventor Daniel J. Connelly

Daniel J. Connelly has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20110210376
    Abstract: A transistor includes a semiconductor channel disposed nearby a gate and in an electrical path between a source and a drain, wherein the channel and at least one of the source or the drain are separated by an interface layer so as to form a channel-interface layer-source/drain junction in which a Fermi level of the semiconductor channel is depinned in a region near the junction and the junction has a specific contact resistance of less than approximately 1000 ?-?m2. The interface layer may include a passivating material such as a nitride, a fluoride, an oxide, an oxynitride, a hydride and/or an arsenide of the semiconductor of the channel. In some cases, the interface layer consists essentially of a monolayer configured to depin the Fermi level of the semiconductor of the channel, or an amount of passivation material sufficient to terminate all or a sufficient number of dangling bonds of the semiconductor channel to achieve chemical stability of the surface.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 7, 2011
    Publication date: September 1, 2011
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Patent number: 8003486
    Abstract: The present invention relates to creating an active layer of strained semiconductor using a combination of buried and sacrificial stressors. That is, a process can strain an active semiconductor layer by transferring strain from a stressor layer buried below the active semiconductor layer and by transferring strain from a sacrificial stressor layer formed above the active semiconductor layer. As an example, the substrate may be silicon, the buried stressor layer may be silicon germanium, the active semiconductor layer may be silicon and the sacrificial stressor layer may be silicon germanium. Elastic edge relaxation is preferably used to efficiently transfer strain to the active layer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 14, 2010
    Date of Patent: August 23, 2011
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: R. Stockton Gaines, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton
  • Publication number: 20110169124
    Abstract: An electrical device in which an interface layer is disposed between and in contact with a metal and a Si-based semiconductor, the interface layer being of a thickness effective to depin of the Fermi level of the semiconductor while still permitting current to flow between the metal and the semiconductor. The interface layer may include a layer of a passivating material (e.g., made from nitrogen, oxygen, oxynitride, arsenic, hydrogen and/or fluorine) and sometimes also includes a separation layer. In some cases, the interface layer may be a monolayer of a semiconductor passivating material. The interface layer thickness corresponds to a minimum specific contact resistance of less than or equal to 10 ?-?m2 or even less than or equal to 1 ?-?m2 for the electrical device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 7, 2011
    Publication date: July 14, 2011
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Patent number: 7972916
    Abstract: The process forms a FET with a channel region that has in plane compressive stress in one direction and in plane tensile stress in a perpendicular direction. The process deposits a germanium silicon sacrificial stressor layer on a silicon substrate so that the germanium silicon is in a state of compressive stress. Etching trenches forms silicon pillars covered by the stressor layer and transfers tensile strain to the upper portion of the pillar. The process fills the trenches with stiff insulating material to maintain the strain in the pillar and etching removes the stressor layer. More etching creates recesses on either side of a channel region in the upper portion of the pillar. Doped germanium silicon layers fill the recesses, apply lateral compressive stress to the pillar's channel region and act as source and drain electrodes. A gate is formed above the strained channel region.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 22, 2008
    Date of Patent: July 5, 2011
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton, R. Stockton Gaines
  • Publication number: 20110124170
    Abstract: Processes for forming self-aligned, deposited source/drain, insulated gate, transistors and, in particular, FETs. By depositing a source/drain in a recess such that it remains only in the recess, the source/drain can be formed self-aligned to a gate and/or a channel of such a device. For example, in one such process a gate structure of a transistor may be formed and, in a material surrounding the gate structure, a recess created so as to be aligned to an edge of the gate structure. Subsequently, a source/drain conducting material may be deposited in the recess. Such a source/drain conducting material may be deposited, in some cases, as layers, with one or more such layers being planarized following its deposition. In this way, the conducting material is kept within the boundaries of the recess.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 2, 2011
    Publication date: May 26, 2011
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton, Carl M. Faulkner
  • Publication number: 20110092047
    Abstract: The present invention relates to creating an active layer of strained semiconductor using a combination of buried and sacrificial stressors. That is, a process can strain an active semiconductor layer by transferring strain from a stressor layer buried below the active semiconductor layer and by transferring strain from a sacrificial stressor layer formed above the active semiconductor layer. As an example, the substrate may be silicon, the buried stressor layer may be silicon germanium, the active semiconductor layer may be silicon and the sacrificial stressor layer may be silicon germanium. Elastic edge relaxation is preferably used to efficiently transfer strain to the active layer.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 14, 2010
    Publication date: April 21, 2011
    Inventors: R. Stockton Gaines, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton
  • Patent number: 7902029
    Abstract: Processes for forming self-aligned, deposited source/drain, insulated gate, transistors and, in particular, FETs. By depositing a source/drain in a recess such that it remains only in the recess, the source/drain can be formed self-aligned to a gate and/or a channel of such a device. For example, in one such process a gate structure of a transistor may be formed and, in a material surrounding the gate structure, a recess created so as to be aligned to an edge of the gate structure. Subsequently, a source/drain conducting material may be deposited in the recess. Such a source/drain conducting material may be deposited, in some cases, as layers, with one or more such layers being planarized following its deposition. In this way, the conducting material is kept within the boundaries of the recess.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 23, 2005
    Date of Patent: March 8, 2011
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton, Carl M. Faulkner
  • Patent number: 7883980
    Abstract: A transistor includes a semiconductor channel disposed nearby a gate and in an electrical path between a source and a drain, wherein the channel and at least one of the source or the drain are separated by an interface layer so as to form a channel-interface layer-source/drain junction in which a Fermi level of the semiconductor channel is depinned in a region near the junction and the junction has a specific contact resistance of less than approximately 1000 ?-?m2. The interface layer may include a passivating material such as a nitride, a fluoride, an oxide, an oxynitride, a hydride and/or an arsenide of the semiconductor of the channel. In some cases, the interface layer consists essentially of a monolayer configured to depin the Fermi level of the semiconductor of the channel, or an amount of passivation material sufficient to terminate all or a sufficient number of dangling bonds of the semiconductor channel to achieve chemical stability of the surface.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 11, 2006
    Date of Patent: February 8, 2011
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Patent number: 7884003
    Abstract: An electrical device in which an interface layer is disposed between and in contact with a metal and a Si-based semiconductor, the interface layer being of a thickness effective to depin of the Fermi level of the semiconductor while still permitting current to flow between the metal and the semiconductor. The interface layer may include a layer of a passivating material (e.g., made from nitrogen, oxygen, oxynitride, arsenic, hydrogen and/or fluorine) and sometimes also includes a separation layer. In some cases, the interface layer may be a monolayer of a semiconductor passivating material. The interface layer thickness corresponds to a minimum specific contact resistance of less than or equal to 10 ?-?m2 or even less than or equal to 1 ?-?m2 for the electrical device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 25, 2008
    Date of Patent: February 8, 2011
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Publication number: 20110008953
    Abstract: A metal source/drain field effect transistor is fabricated such that the source/drain regions are deposited, multilayer structures, with at least a second metal deposited on exposed surfaces of a first metal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 9, 2010
    Publication date: January 13, 2011
    Inventors: Carl M. Faulkner, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton, Daniel E. Grupp
  • Patent number: 7851325
    Abstract: The present invention relates to creating an active layer of strained semiconductor using a combination of buried and sacrificial stressors. That is, a process can strain an active semiconductor layer by transferring strain from a stressor layer buried below the active semiconductor layer and by transferring strain from a sacrificial stressor layer formed above the active semiconductor layer. As an example, the substrate may be silicon, the buried stressor layer may be silicon germanium, the active semiconductor layer may be silicon and the sacrificial stressor layer may be silicon germanium. Elastic edge relaxation is preferably used to efficiently transfer strain to the active layer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 12, 2008
    Date of Patent: December 14, 2010
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: R. Stockton Gaines, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton
  • Patent number: 7816240
    Abstract: A metal source/drain field effect transistor is fabricated such that the source/drain regions are deposited, multilayer structures, with at least a second metal deposited on exposed surfaces of a first metal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 23, 2007
    Date of Patent: October 19, 2010
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Carl M. Faulkner, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul A. Clifton, Daniel E. Grupp
  • Patent number: 7700416
    Abstract: The process uses a sacrificial stressor layer to provide tensile strained surface regions for bulk silicon or silicon on insulator (SOI) substrates. The process deposits a sacrificial layer of silicon germanium on the surface of the substrate and then patterns the workpiece to form trenches extending through the silicon germanium stressor layer into the semiconductor substrate. The process fills the trenches with insulating materials and then removes the silicon germanium stressor layer, for example using wet etching, leaving a strained silicon or SOI substrate with a pattern of shallow trench isolation structures. The trench fill material is selected to stress the regions of silicon between the trenches to provide a tensile strained surface region to the semiconductor substrate. Such a strained semiconductor surface region can have improved mobility properties and so is advantageous for forming devices such as MOSFETs.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 25, 2008
    Date of Patent: April 20, 2010
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Paul A. Clifton, Daniel J. Connelly, R. Stockton Gaines
  • Publication number: 20100065887
    Abstract: FET configurations in which two (or more) facets are exposed on a surface of a semiconductor channel, the facets being angled with respect to the direction of the channel, allow for conformal deposition of a convex or concave S/D. A convex tip of the S/D enhances electric fields at the interface, reducing the resistance between the S/D and the channel. In contrast, a S/D having a concave tip yields a dual-gate FET that emphasizes reduced short-channel effects rather than electric field enhancement. The use of self-limiting, selective wet etches to expose the facets facilitates process control, control of interface chemistry, and manufacturability.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 27, 2009
    Publication date: March 18, 2010
    Inventors: Andreas Goebel, Paul A. Clifton, Daniel J. Connelly, Vaishali Ukirde
  • Publication number: 20090101972
    Abstract: Source and/or drain regions of a transistor are first doped with an appropriate dopant and a metal is subsequently deposited. After heating, a silicide will displace the dopant, creating an increased density of dopants at the border of the silicided region. The dopants that are adjacent to or in the gate region of the device will form a thin layer. The silicide or other reactant material is then removed and replaced with a desired source/drain material, while leaving the layer of dopant immediately adjacent to the newly deposited source/drain material.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 17, 2008
    Publication date: April 23, 2009
    Inventors: R. Stockton Gaines, Yoshio Nishi, Daniel J. Connelly, Paul Clifton
  • Publication number: 20090104746
    Abstract: A process for forming a FET (e.g., an n-FET or a p-FET), in which during formation a metal which makes up a source or drain of the transistor is stressed so that stress is induced in a semiconductor channel of the transistor.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 17, 2008
    Publication date: April 23, 2009
    Inventors: Paul Clifton, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Publication number: 20090104770
    Abstract: An electrical device in which an interface layer is disposed between and in contact with a metal and a Si-based semiconductor, the interface layer being of a thickness effective to depin of the Fermi level of the semiconductor while still permitting current to flow between the metal and the semiconductor. The interface layer may include a layer of a passivating material (e.g., made from nitrogen, oxygen, oxynitride, arsenic, hydrogen and/or fluorine) and sometimes also includes a separation layer. In some cases, the interface layer may be a monolayer of a semiconductor passivating material. The interface layer thickness corresponds to a minimum specific contact resistance of less than or equal to 10?-?m2 or even less than or equal to 1?-?m2 for the electrical device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 25, 2008
    Publication date: April 23, 2009
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Patent number: 7462860
    Abstract: An electrical device in which an interface layer is disposed between and in contact with a metal and a Si-based semiconductor, the interface layer being of a thickness effective to depin of the Fermi level of the semiconductor while still permitting current to flow between the metal and the semiconductor. The interface layer may include a layer of a passivating material (e.g., made from nitrogen, oxygen, oxynitride, arsenic, hydrogen and/or fluorine) and sometimes also includes a separation layer. In some cases, the interface layer may be a monolayer of a semiconductor passivating material. The interface layer thickness corresponds to a minimum specific contact resistance of less than or equal to 10 ?-?m2 or even less than or equal to 1 ?-?m2 for the electrical device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 13, 2005
    Date of Patent: December 9, 2008
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly
  • Patent number: 7382021
    Abstract: A transistor includes one or more channel taps containing a stack consisting at least in part of a semiconductor an interfacial III-VI layered compound and a conductor. The III-VI compound consists primarily of atoms from Groups IIIA-B and from Group VIA of the Periodic Table of the Elements in an approximate 1:1 ratio. These materials may be formed as layers of covalently bonded elements from Groups IIIA-B and covalently bonded Group VIA elements, adjacent and respective planes of which may be bonded by Van der Waals forces (e.g., to form a single bilayer consisting of a single plane of atoms from Groups IIIA-B and a single plane of Group VIA atoms). One particular III-VI material from which the interfacial layer is made, especially for p-channel transistors, is GaSe. Other III-VI compounds, whether pure compounds or alloys of pure compounds, may also be used.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 9, 2004
    Date of Patent: June 3, 2008
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Carl Faulkner, Daniel J. Connelly, Daniel E. Grupp
  • Patent number: 7176483
    Abstract: An electrical junction that includes a semiconductor (e.g., C, Ge, or an Si-based semiconductor), a conductor, and an interface layer disposed therebetween. The interface layer is sufficiently thick to depin a Fermi level of the semiconductor, yet sufficiently thin to provide the junction with a specific contact resistance of less than or equal to approximately 1000 ?-?m2, and in some cases a minimum specific contact resistance.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 7, 2004
    Date of Patent: February 13, 2007
    Assignee: Acorn Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel E. Grupp, Daniel J. Connelly