Patents by Inventor James Quinlivan

James Quinlivan 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: 20080014692
    Abstract: A method of fabricating a gate dielectric layer. The method includes: providing a substrate; forming a silicon dioxide layer on a top surface of the substrate; performing a plasma nitridation in a reducing atmosphere to convert the silicon dioxide layer into a silicon oxynitride layer. The dielectric layer so formed may be used in the fabrication of MOSFETs.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 16, 2007
    Publication date: January 17, 2008
    Inventors: Jay Burnham, James Nakos, James Quinlivan, Bernie Roque, Steven Shank, Beth Ward
  • Publication number: 20060281265
    Abstract: A method of fabricating a semiconductor structure. The method includes forming a first feature of a first active device and a second feature of a second active device, introducing a first amount of nitrogen into the first feature of the first active device, and introducing a second amount of nitrogen into the second feature of the second active device, the second amount of nitrogen being different from the first amount of nitrogen.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 16, 2006
    Publication date: December 14, 2006
    Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
    Inventors: Jay BURNHAM, John ELLIS-MONAGHAN, James NAKOS, James QUINLIVAN
  • Publication number: 20050164444
    Abstract: A semiconductor structure includes thin gate dielectrics that have been selectively nitrogen enriched. The amount of nitrogen introduced is sufficient to reduce or prevent gate leakage and dopant penetration, without appreciably degrading device performance. A lower concentration of nitrogen is introduced into pFET gate dielectrics than into nFET gate dielectrics. Nitridation may be accomplished selectively by various techniques, including rapid thermal nitridation (RTN), furnace nitridation, remote plasma nitridation (RPN), decoupled plasma nitridation (DPN), well implantation and/or polysilicon implantation.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 22, 2004
    Publication date: July 28, 2005
    Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
    Inventors: Jay Burnham, John Ellis-Monaghan, James Nakos, James Quinlivan
  • Publication number: 20050110096
    Abstract: Polysilicon electrical depletion in a polysilicon gate electrode is reduced by depositing the polysilicon under controlled conditions so as to vary the crystal grain size through the thickness of the polysilicon. The resulting CMOS transistor may have two or more depth-wise contiguous regions of respective crystalline grain size, and the selection of grain size may be directed to maximize dopant activation in the polysilicon near the gate dielectric and to tailor the resistance of the polysilicon above that first region and more distant from the gate dielectric. A region of polycrystalline silicon may have a varying grain size as a function of a distance measured from a surface of the dielectric film.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 16, 2004
    Publication date: May 26, 2005
    Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
    Inventors: Arne Ballantine, Kevin Chan, Jeffrey Gilbert, Kevin Houlihan, Glen Miles, James Quinlivan, Samuel Ramac, Michael Rice, Beth Ward
  • Publication number: 20050087822
    Abstract: A method for forming a gate dielectric for an integrated circuit device. In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the method includes forming an initial oxynitride layer upon a substrate material, the oxynitride layer having an initial physical thickness. The initial oxynitride layer is then subjected to a plasma nitridation, the plasma nitridation resulting in final oxynitride layer having a final physical thickness.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 5, 2004
    Publication date: April 28, 2005
    Inventors: Mukesh Khare, Christopher D'Emic, Thomas Hwang, Paul Jamison, James Quinlivan, Beth Ward
  • Publication number: 20050070101
    Abstract: A method for removing silicon dioxide residuals is disclosed. The method includes reacting a portion of a silicon dioxide layer (i.e., oxide) to form a reaction product layer, removing the reaction product layer and annealing in an environment to remove oxide residuals. The method finds application in a variety of semiconductor fabrication processes including, for example, fabrication of a vertical HBT or silicon-to-silicon interface without an oxide interface.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 30, 2003
    Publication date: March 31, 2005
    Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
    Inventors: Peter Geiss, Alvin Joseph, Xuefeng Liu, James Nakos, James Quinlivan
  • Publication number: 20050048705
    Abstract: A method of fabricating a gate dielectric layer, including: providing a substrate; forming a silicon dioxide layer on a top surface of the substrate; performing a plasma nitridation in a reducing atmosphere to convert the silicon dioxide layer into a silicon oxynitride layer. The dielectric layer so formed may be used in the fabrication of MOSFETs.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 26, 2003
    Publication date: March 3, 2005
    Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
    Inventors: Jay Burnham, James Nakos, James Quinlivan, Bernie Roque, Steven Shank, Beth Ward
  • Publication number: 20050040480
    Abstract: Methods such as Remote Plasma Nitridation (RPN) are used to introduce nitrogen into a gate dielectric layer. However, these methods yield nitrided layers where the layers are not uniform, both in cross-sectional profile and in nitrogen profile. Subjecting the nitrided layer to an additional NO anneal process increases the uniformity of the nitrided layer.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 2, 2003
    Publication date: February 24, 2005
    Inventors: Jay Burnham, James Nakos, James Quinlivan, Steven Shank, Deborah Tucker, Beth Ward