Patents by Inventor Shashank Sureshchandra Ekbote

Shashank Sureshchandra Ekbote 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: 8748253
    Abstract: An integrated circuit includes logic circuits of NMOS and PMOS transistors, and memory cells with NMOS and PMOS transistors. A common NSD implant mask exposes source and drain regions of a logic NMOS transistor and a memory NMOS transistor. The source and drain regions of the logic NMOS transistor and the memory NMOS transistor are concurrently implanted at a cryogenic temperature with an amorphizing species followed by arsenic. Phosphorus is concurrently implanted in the source and drain regions of the logic NMOS transistor and the memory NMOS transistor. The source and drain regions of the logic NMOS transistor are further implanted with phosphorus at a non-cryogenic temperature while the memory NMOS transistor is covered by a mask which blocks the phosphorus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 24, 2013
    Date of Patent: June 10, 2014
    Assignee: Texas Instruments Incorporated
    Inventor: Shashank Sureshchandra Ekbote
  • Publication number: 20140054710
    Abstract: An integrated circuit and method of fabricating the same utilizing embedded silicon-germanium (SiGe) source/drain regions, and in which the proximity effect of nearby shallow trench isolation structures is reduced. Embedded SiGe source/drain structures are formed by selective epitaxy into recesses etched into the semiconductor surface, on either side of each gate electrode. The SiGe structures overfill the recesses by at least about 30% of the depth of the recesses, as measured from the interface between the channel region and the overlying gate dielectric at the edge of the gate electrode. This overfill has been observed to reduce proximity effects of nearby shallow trench isolation structures on nearby transistors. Additional reduction in the proximity effect can be obtained by ensuring sufficient spacing between the edge of the gate electrode and a parallel edge of the nearest shallow trench isolation structure.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 22, 2012
    Publication date: February 27, 2014
    Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED
    Inventors: Youn Sung Choi, Deborah Riley, Shashank Sureshchandra Ekbote
  • Patent number: 8119470
    Abstract: Sidewall spacers that are primarily oxide, instead of nitride, are formed adjacent to a gate stack of a CMOS transistor. Individual sidewall spacers are situated between a conductive gate electrode of the gate stack and a conductive contact of the transistor. As such, a capacitance can develop between the gate electrode and the contact, depending on the dielectric constant of the interposed sidewall spacer. Accordingly, forming sidewall spacers out of oxide, which has a lower dielectric constant than nitride, mitigates capacitance that can otherwise develop between these features. Such capacitance is undesirable, at least, because it can inhibit transistor switching speeds. Accordingly, fashioning sidewall spacers as described herein can mitigate yield loss by reducing the number of devices that have unsatisfactory switching speeds and/or other undesirable performance characteristics.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 21, 2007
    Date of Patent: February 21, 2012
    Assignee: Texas Instruments Incorporated
    Inventors: Shashank Sureshchandra Ekbote, Borna Obradovic, Lindsey Hall, Craig Huffman, Ajith Varghese
  • Publication number: 20080230815
    Abstract: Sidewall spacers that are primarily oxide, instead of nitride, are formed adjacent to a gate stack of a CMOS transistor. Individual sidewall spacers are situated between a conductive gate electrode of the gate stack and a conductive contact of the transistor. As such, a capacitance can develop between the gate electrode and the contact, depending on the dielectric constant of the interposed sidewall spacer. Accordingly, forming sidewall spacers out of oxide, which has a lower dielectric constant than nitride, mitigates capacitance that can otherwise develop between these features. Such capacitance is undesirable, at least, because it can inhibit transistor switching speeds. Accordingly, fashioning sidewall spacers as described herein can mitigate yield loss by reducing the number of devices that have unsatisfactory switching speeds and/or other undesirable performance characteristics.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 21, 2007
    Publication date: September 25, 2008
    Inventors: Shashank Sureshchandra Ekbote, Borna Obradovic, Lindsey Hall, Craig Huffman, Ajith Varghese