Patents by Inventor Dennis Garbis

Dennis Garbis 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).

  • Patent number: 6248651
    Abstract: Transient voltage suppressor semiconductor devices and other semiconductor devices having rigorous requirements for the diffusion and depth of impurities to produce P-N junctions can be fabricated at surprisingly low costs without sacrifice of functional characteristics by subjecting the substrate to a grinding process resulting in a surface short of polishing perfection, thereby to eliminate the time-consuming and hence costly conventional polishing operation, and then diffusing the desired impurity into the substrate from a solid impurity source.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 24, 1998
    Date of Patent: June 19, 2001
    Assignee: General Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Jack Eng, Joseph Chan, Gregory Zakaluk, John Amato, Dennis Garbis
  • Patent number: 5882986
    Abstract: Starting with a semiconductor wafer of known type including an internal, planar p-n junction parallel to major surfaces of the wafer, one of the wafer surfaces is covered with a masking layer of silicon nitride. A plurality of intersecting grooves are then sawed through the masking layer for forming a plurality of mesas having sloped walls with each mesa including a portion of the planar p-n junction having edges which intersect and are exposed by the mesa walls. The groove walls and exposed junction edges are glass encapsulated in a process including heating the wafer. The masking layers are then removed in a selective etching process not requiring a patterned etchant mask, and the now exposed silicon surfaces at the top of the mesas, as well as the opposite surface of the wafer, are metal plated. The wafer is then diced along planes through the grooves for providing individual chips each having a glass passivated mesa thereon.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 30, 1998
    Date of Patent: March 16, 1999
    Assignee: General Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Jack Eng, Joseph Y. Chan, Willem G. Einthoven, John E. Amato, Sandy Tan, Lawrence LaTerza, Gregory Zakaluk, Dennis Garbis
  • Patent number: 5640043
    Abstract: A high voltage silicon rectifier includes a substrate portion and an epitaxial mesa portion that is a frustrum of a pyramid with a substantially square cross section and side walls that make a forty five degree angle with the substrate portion. The mesa portion includes three germanium doped layers that introduce strain to speed up recombination of charge carriers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 20, 1995
    Date of Patent: June 17, 1997
    Assignee: General Instrument Corporation of Delaware
    Inventors: Jack Eng, Joseph Chan, Lawrence Laterza, Gregory Zakaluk, Jun Wu, John Amato, Dennis Garbis, Willem Einthoven
  • Patent number: 5635414
    Abstract: Significant reduction in the cost of fabrication of shallow junction, Schottky or similar semiconductor devices without sacrifice of functional characteristics, while at the same time achieving the advantages is achieved, after the non-polishing cleaning step is essentially performed, by subjecting the substrate to conditions which move disadvantageous factors within said substrate into a space substantially at said surface, followed by substantially removing said factor-containing space from said substrate chemical removal step, followed etching and vapor deposition steps. Although these new steps add time, and therefore cost, to the overall process, the devices under discussion when produced by known industry processes require yet more time, and involve yet more expense, so that the total process represents a substantial reduction in the cost of their manufacture while producing devices which are the equivalent or superior in electrical performance to such devices which are made by known industry processes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 28, 1995
    Date of Patent: June 3, 1997
    Inventors: Gregory Zakaluk, Dennis Garbis, Willem Einthoven, Joseph Chan, Jack Eng, Jun Wu, John Amato
  • Patent number: 5571329
    Abstract: To minimize contamination of gas flow lines and reactor surfaces from high impurity concentrations present in the CVD reactor, control of the dopant gas supply is located closely adjacent to the reactor input port and the dopant gas supply line is separately vented. First and second dopant gas supplies and a diluent gas supply are connected to branch lines which converge to form the dopant supply line. A solenoid valve is situated in the main dopant supply line as close to the input port as possible. A vent line is connected to the dopant supply line, prior to the solenoid valve. The etchant and silicon gas supplies are each connected to the reactor input by a separate supply line. The etchant and silicon gas supply lines are vented separately from the dopant gas supply line.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 28, 1995
    Date of Patent: November 5, 1996
    Assignee: GI Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Chan, Dennis Garbis, John Sapio, John Latza
  • Patent number: 5432121
    Abstract: An all epitaxial process performed entirely in a CVD reactor is employed to grow epitaxial layers with accurately controlled successively low and high dopant concentrations over a heavily doped substrate, eliminating the need for a separate diffusion, even for high purity concentrations. After purging the reactor system, the heavily doped silicon substrate is "capped" by growing two successive very thin silicon sublayers of the same conductivity type. The reactor chamber is subjected to a hydrogen purge to deplete any contaminents after each sublayer is formed. The cap sublayers form a narrow, abrupt intrinsic transition region with the substrate and become an active part of the device structure. A lightly doped epitaxial layer is grown over the "capped" substrate so that a depletion region can be formed in the device under suitable reverse bias. A heavily doped epitaxial layer is then grown over the lightly doped epitaxial layer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 16, 1994
    Date of Patent: July 11, 1995
    Assignee: GI Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Chan, Dennis Garbis, Lawrence Laterza, Gregory Zakaluk
  • Patent number: 5360509
    Abstract: Significant reductions in the cost of fabrication of epitaxial semiconductor devices without sacrifice of functional characteristics is achieved by eliminating the conventional but costly polishing procedure, instead subjecting the substrate to grinding, cleaning and etching processes in which the grinding removes material from the surface to a depth of at least 65 microns and the etching further removes material to a depth of about 6-10 microns, the grinding preferably being carried out in two steps, the first being a coarse step and the second being a fine step, with the rotated grinding elements dwelling at their respective last grinding positions for a short period of time. The result is the equivalent of the prior art polishing procedure which took considerably longer to carry out and which therefore was much more costly.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 8, 1993
    Date of Patent: November 1, 1994
    Assignee: GI Corporation
    Inventors: Gregory Zakaluk, Dennis Garbis, Joseph Y. Chan, John Latza, Lawrence LaTerza
  • Patent number: 5342805
    Abstract: This invention concerns itself with an improved method of producing sharply defined misfit dislocations; (MD) with a new, inexpensive method of doping these misfit dislocations with Au; with invention that a combination of Au and Pt doping in misfit dislocations is superior to any amount of Au and to some specific placements of the misfit dislocations in the device structure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 1, 1993
    Date of Patent: August 30, 1994
    Assignee: G.I. Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Y. Chan, Larry Laterza, Dennis Garbis, William G. Einthoven
  • Patent number: 5324685
    Abstract: An all epitaxial process performed entirely in a CVD reactor is employed to grow heavily doped layer on lightly doped layer on a heavily doped substrate, eliminating the need for separate diffusion, even for high impurity concentrations. The process starts with a heavily doped silicon substrate of carrier concentration typically greater than 1.times.10.sup.19 per cm.sup.3. To minimize outdiffusion, the substrate is "capped" by growing very thin and heavily doped silicon layers which are depleted by hydrogen purges. A first epitaxial layer is grown over the "capped" substrate. This layer is relatively lightly doped, having a resistivity of more than 200 ohm.cm. A second epitaxial layer is then grown over the first epitaxial layer. The second epitaxial layer has a polarity opposite to that of the substrate and is heavily doped to a resistivity of less than 0.005 ohm cm.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 9, 1993
    Date of Patent: June 28, 1994
    Inventors: Reinhold Hirtz, Gregory Zakaluk, Joseph Chan, Dennis Garbis, Lawrence Laterza, Ali Salih
  • Patent number: 5298457
    Abstract: The all epitaxial process starts with a high resistivity silicon substrate. Alternating layers of silicon and silicon-germanium are epitaxially grown on the substrate under conditions which create a region with misfit dislocations. A low resistivity silicon layer is then grown over the region. The material is inverted such that the high resistivity layer can be used to form the base of the device. The thickness of the high resistivity layer is adjusted to equal the width of the base of the semiconductor device to be fabricated.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 1, 1993
    Date of Patent: March 29, 1994
    Assignee: G. I. Corporation
    Inventors: William G. Einthoven, Joseph Y. Chan, Dennis Garbis
  • Patent number: 4522149
    Abstract: A reactor for use in a chemical vapor deposition process occurring in a radiant absorption heater system employs a vertical gas flow reaction vessel and a novel substantially solid susceptor configured as a truncated wedge. The susceptor is characterized by a high utilized area, resulting in a high wafer capacity and low power requirement.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 21, 1983
    Date of Patent: June 11, 1985
    Assignee: General Instrument Corp.
    Inventors: Dennis Garbis, Joseph Y. Chan, Amedeo J. Granata, Robert C. Heller
  • Patent number: 4499354
    Abstract: A susceptor for use in a chemical vapor deposition process in a radiant absorption heating system comprises a heater adapted to absorb radiant energy and a sheath of high purity quartz completely surrounding the heater. The sheath further comprises dimples inside the sheath spacing the sheath from the heater. The heater may be graphite having a substantially pinhole-free outgas-inhibiting outer-coating such as silicon carbide.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 6, 1982
    Date of Patent: February 12, 1985
    Assignee: General Instrument Corp.
    Inventors: Lawrence B. Hill, Dennis Garbis, Robert C. Heller, Amedeo J. Granata
  • Patent number: 4293755
    Abstract: A method of cooling induction-heated vapor deposition apparatus including an electrically grounded deposition enclosure and a RF induction heating coil having essentially electrically uninsulated turns thereof disposed about the deposition enclosure, comprises the step of spraying deionized liquid having a resistivity of at least 14 megohms-om directly onto the apparatus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 14, 1980
    Date of Patent: October 6, 1981
    Assignee: General Instrument Corporation
    Inventors: Lawrence Hill, Dennis Garbis, Robert Heller
  • Patent number: 4284867
    Abstract: The reactor includes an R.F. induction coil, connected to a power supply, and located in proximity to the deposition enclosure. The coil radiates energy, a portion of which is converted by a susceptor situated in the enclosure into heat which is applied to the surface of the wafer adjacent thereto. A concave metallic infrared reflector redirects some of the normally unused radiated energy, in the form of radiant heat, onto the external surface of the wafer to promote even heating and, thus, reduce temperature gradients in the wafer thereby eliminating detrimental dislocation motion or slip. Moreover, the input power requirements of the system are reduced. Preferably, the enclosure is cooled by spraying de-ionized liquid thereon to eliminate unwanted deposition of dopants on the interior surface thereof.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 9, 1979
    Date of Patent: August 18, 1981
    Assignee: General Instrument Corporation
    Inventors: Lawrence Hill, Dennis Garbis, Robert Heller
  • Patent number: 4271235
    Abstract: Polycrystalline silicon is obtained by providing a silicon wafer having disposed over at least one face thereof a base coating of oxide, nitride or oxynitride composition, forming a substantially pinhole-free and scratch-free layer of carbon on said base coating over at least the face, forming on the face of the carbon layer a layer of polycrystalline silicon, and removing the silicon layer from the protective coating. Any of the carbon layer adhering to the silicon layer is easily removable to provide the silicon layer separate from the substrate. The wafer/coating unit is reusable in the procedure. The wafer/coating/carbon layer unit comprises a workpiece useful in the practice of the invention.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 26, 1979
    Date of Patent: June 2, 1981
    Inventors: Lawrence Hill, Dennis Garbis, Robert Heller
  • Patent number: 4238436
    Abstract: Polycrystalline silicon is obtained by providing a silicon wafer having disposed over at least one face thereof a base coating of oxide, nitride or oxynitride composition, forming a substantially pinhole-free and scratch-free layer of carbon on said base coating over at least the face, forming on the face of the carbon layer a layer of polycrystalline silicon, and removing the silicon layer from the protective coating. Any of the carbon layer adhering to the silicon layer is easily removable to provide the silicon layer separate from the substrate. The wafer/coating unit is reusable in the procedure. The wafer/coating/carbon layer unit comprises a workpiece useful in the practice of the invention.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 10, 1979
    Date of Patent: December 9, 1980
    Assignee: General Instrument Corporation
    Inventors: Lawrence R. Hill, Dennis Garbis, Robert Heller