FET Channel Having a Strained Lattice Structure Along Multiple Surfaces
A channel 16 of a FinFET 10 has a channel core 24 and a channel envelope 32, each made from a semiconductor material defining a different lattice structure to exploit strained silicon properties. A gate is coupled to the channel envelope through a gate dielectric. Exemplary materials are Si and SixGe1-x, wherein 78<x<92. The channel core 24 has a top surface 26 of width wc and an upstanding surface 28, 30 of height hc, preferably oriented 90° to one another. The channel envelope 32 is in contact with the top 26 and upstanding surfaces 28, 30 so that the area of interface is increased as compared to contact only along the top surface 26, improving electrical conductivity and gate 18 control over the channel 16. The height hc can be tailored to enable a smaller scale FET 10 within a stabilized SRAM. Various methods of making the channel 16 are disclosed, including a mask and etch method, a handle wafer/carrier wafer method, and a shallow trench method. Embodiments and methods for FinFETs with one to four gates are disclosed.
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These teachings relate generally to field effect transistors (FET) disposed on a semiconductor wafer or chip, in particular, to a layered structure as a channel that connects a source and a drain of a FET, wherein one of the layers is characterized by a strained lattice structure.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONSemiconductors and integrated circuit chips have become ubiquitous within many products due to their continually decreasing cost and size. Miniaturization in general allows increased performance (more processing per clock cycle and less heat generated) at lower power levels and lower cost. Present technology is at or approaching atomic-level scaling of certain micro-devices such as logic gates, FETs, capacitors, etc. Circuit chips with hundreds of millions of such devices are not uncommon. Further size reductions appear to be approaching the physical limit of trace lines and micro-devices that are embedded upon and within their semiconductor substrates. The present invention is directed to such micro-sized FET devices. A FET is a transistor consisting of a source, a gate, and a drain. The action of the FET depends on the flow of majority carriers along a channel between the source and drain that runs past the gate. Current through the channel, which is between the source and drain, is controlled by the transverse electric field under the gate. More than one gate may be used to more effectively control the channel. The length of the gate determines how fast the FET switches and how fast the circuit can operate, and is generally about the same as the length of the channel (i.e., the distance between the source and drain). State of the art gate lengths are today on the order of 50 nm, and are moving toward 10 nm within the next decade. Such size reductions should enable upwards of a billion devices on a single chip. However, such small scaling necessitates greater control over performance issues such as short channel effects, punch-through, and MOS leakage current.
Recently, the size of FETs has been successfully reduced through the use of one or more fin-shaped channels, known as fins. FETs employing fins are known as FinFETs. Previously, complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) devices were substantially planar along the surface of the semiconductor substrate, the exception being the FET gate that was disposed over the top of the channel. Fins break from that paradigm by using a vertical structure in order to maximize surface area of the channel that is exposed to the gate. The gate controls the channel more strongly because it extends over three sides of the fin shaped channel, rather than only across the top of a more traditional planar channel. An example of a FinFET is shown in
One method to enhance fin performance is to fabricate fins in layers of disparate materials. One such exemplary device assigned to the assignee of this invention is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,252,284 B1, “Planarized Silicon Fin Device”, which is directed to controlling short-channel effects.
Often, one of the layers of a multi-layered planarized FET fin is strained silicon. It has been previously discovered that biaxially stretching the crystalline lattice structure of silicon can speed the flow of electrons through a transistor, thereby enhancing performance and decreasing power consumption. There is a natural tendency of atoms in layers of disparate materials to align with one another by stretching and/or compressing their mismatched lattice structures along a planar interface of the mismatch. Varying the respective thickness and chemical composition of the materials aids in controlling the extent of extension and compression in either material. As an example,
This result is achieved as the comparatively greater thickness of the germanium layer yields greater structural integrity and greater resistance to lattice compression. The actual process of lattice stretching may also, or alternatively, entail atoms of Si and Ge intermixed within a lattice structure. This integrates both atoms within a single layer, wherein the larger Ge atoms force the integrated lattice structure to stretch, as compared to a natural (unstretched) silicon lattice structure. The opposite effect from that shown in
Strained silicon disposed along a plane has been used in prior art FinFETs. However, current leakage continues to be a limiting factor in further scaling of FETs toward the atomic limit. Current leakage becomes an ascendant concern as miniaturization progresses because shorter length FET gates, which generally track the channel length, have less ability to control electric charge carriers (holes or electrons).
The unintentional flow of charge carriers when the transistor is off is termed “current leakage.” Current leakage is the primary source of power consumed by an idle transistor. Current leakage may be classified into two types: MOS off current, wherein an unintended current passes through the channel despite the gate attempting to shut off current completely; and gate tunneling leakage current, wherein unintended current follows a parasitic pathway flowing into the channel, diffusions, or silicon body. As FET channel lengths continue to decrease, it is expected that gate tunneling leakage current will become a predominant concern for designers. The fin structure enhances gate control over the channel, but gate control over current is not absolute, even in prior art FinFETs. Compounding the current leakage problem, miniaturization enables ever-lower power levels that require more absolute gate control. Current leakage that escapes the gate's control is less distinguishable from intentional current, particularly at low current levels.
What is needed is a FET that allows small scaling with enhanced performance for both NFETs and PFETs. Preferably, the FET should improve gate control in a fin structure that exhibits enhanced carrier transport properties.
SUMMARY OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTSThe foregoing and other problems are overcome, and other advantages are realized, in accordance with the presently preferred embodiments of these teachings. The present invention concerns a channel for electrically connecting a source and a drain of a field effect transistor (FET), commonly called a fin for a FinFET. The channel includes a channel core and a channel envelope. The channel core is coupled to a substrate such as a SIMOX wafer (a wafer with an upper region separated by implanted oxygen) or bonded wafer. The channel core defines a top surface that is spaced from the substrate, and opposed sidewall surfaces between the substrate and the top surface. The channel core is formed from a first semiconductor material defining a first lattice structure.
The channel envelope is in contact with the opposed sidewall surfaces and the top surface of the channel core. The channel envelope is formed from a second semiconductor material defining a second lattice structure that differs from the first lattice structure. This difference in lattice structure provides enhanced electrical conductivity due to stretching or compressing of the lattice structure. Preferably, the two materials are silicon and a silicon-germanium compound.
In another aspect of the present invention, the channel core defines a top and an adjoining side surface. In a preferred embodiment, the top surface is the horizontal top and the side surface is one of two upstanding sidewalls of the channel core, although two upstanding surfaces extending from the substrate and meeting at a peak, or two sidewalls joined by a third lateral surface may be used. The channel core comprises a first semiconductor material and the channel envelope comprises a second semiconductor material that differs from the first. At least one of the first or second semiconductor materials exhibits enhanced electrical conductivity due to one of a stretched or compressed lattice structure. The channel envelope is in contact with both the top and side surfaces, providing a larger area of interface between the disparate lattice materials, as compared to prior art channels that provide interface only along a top surface. The exemplary materials noted above are operable to provide the stretched or compressed lattice structure.
The present invention also includes methods of making a FET channel. In one such method, a substrate is provided with an overlying layer of a first semiconductor material. A first channel core is defined from the overlying layer, such as by a mask and etch technique. The channel core defines a top surface spaced from the substrate and opposed first and second sidewalls between the substrate and the top surface. The method further includes disposing a layer of second semiconductor material to contact at least two of the surfaces (that is, at least two of the top surface, the first sidewall and the second sidewall). Electrical conductivity through the layer of second semiconductor material, which is different from the first, is enhanced by its contact with the channel core. The layer of second semiconductor material may be deposited via vacuum deposition, or may be grown on a carrier wafer and separated therefrom to contact the appropriate surfaces of the channel core.
Another method of forming the channel includes providing a first layer of a semiconductor material over a substrate. This method includes defining a trench in the overlayer, and the overlayer is then divided into a first section and a second section by the trench. The trench may be filled with a buffer material such as TEOS (also known as tetraethoxysilane, tetraethylorthosilicate, tetraethelorthosilicate, and tetrethoxysilicide). A portion of the second section is then removed to leave a remaining layer of first semiconductor material that has a thickness less than a depth of the trench. This exposes a portion of the trench. The method then includes disposing a layer of a second semiconductor material over the remaining layer and adjacent to the trench. Exemplary semiconductor materials are discussed above. Preferably, the remaining layer is less than about 15 nm. Where the second semiconductor material is SixGe1-x, the relative concentration of germanium may be chosen to promote thermal stability of the channel. Preferably, the germanium content is between about 8% and about 22%, and most preferably between about 10% and about 20%, and a low temperature chemical vapor deposition process is used to form the layer of second semi-conductor material.
Further, disclosed herein is a channel for electrically connecting a source and a drain of a field effect transistor (FET) comprising: a channel core comprising a bottom surface coupled to a substrate and defining a top surface spaced from the substrate and opposed sidewall surfaces between the bottom surface and the top surface, wherein the channel core is formed from a first semiconductor material defining a first lattice structure; and a channel envelope in contact with at least one of the top surface, the bottom surface and one of the sidewall surfaces (or combinations thereof), wherein the channel envelope comprises a second semiconductor material comprising a strained lattice structure that differs from the first lattice structure, the channel envelope being electrically coupled to a gate electrode. Preferably, the channel is formed of a relaxed Si—Ge lattice, and the envelope is formed of a strained Si lattice.
An exemplary circuit SRAM circuit using FinFET in accordance with the teachings herein is disclosed.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSThe foregoing and other aspects of these teachings are made more evident in the following Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments, when read in conjunction with the attached Drawing Figures, wherein:
A sectional view of the channel 16 at section line 4′-4′ is depicted at
A channel envelope 32 is disposed to substantially cover that portion of the channel core 24 that is not in direct contact with the substrate 20 when the channel 16 is viewed in cross section, at least at the portion of the channel 16 crossed by the gate 18. Preferably, the channel envelope 32 is coupled to the top surface 26 and both opposed sidewalls 28, of the channel core 24. The channel envelope 32 is formed from a second semiconductor material that defines a second natural crystalline lattice structure that differs from the first lattice structure. The different natural lattice structures of the first and second semiconductor materials cause either tensile or compressive stresses at least at the boundary of the channel core 24 and the channel envelope 32. This mismatch of natural lattices, herein termed a “heterojunction,” facilitates carrier transport where the gate dielectric contacts the heterojunction stack. However, carrier transport is not necessarily maximized at the heterojunction; the main channel for carrier transport may alternately form within one or the other disparate materials, as known in the art, depending upon several factors. The channel core 24 defines a core width wc and a core height hc. Similarly, the channel envelope 32 defines an envelope width we and an envelope height he. Any, or all, of these dimensions may be selected to optimize or otherwise control the combined surface area of the opposed sidewalls 28, 30 and the top surface 26. Where the channel core 24 and/or envelope 32 are not rectangular shaped (as primarily illustrated herein), such as when the channel core 24 is triangular and the channel envelope 32 is disposed over two sides of the channel core 24, the width and height are deemed to be averages for the particular component. Threshold voltage of a FET 10 using the inventive channel 16 described herein can be selected based on the particular materials of either or both of the first and second semiconductor materials, the presence of a dopant in one or the other, or the core 24 and envelope 32 dimensions.
Preferably for a PFET, the first semiconductor material that comprises the channel core 24 is silicon, and the second semiconductor material that comprises the channel envelope 32 is a compound comprising silicon and germanium, such as Si0.7Ge0.3. For a NFET, the first semiconductor material that comprises the channel core 24 is preferably a compound comprising silicon and germanium that is processed to exhibit a relaxed lattice structure, and the second semiconductor material that comprises the channel envelope 32 is preferably silicon.
The gate 18, which may be formed of poly or metal or other material as known in the art, is disposed over the channel 16 so as to contact the channel envelope 32 through a dielectric layer 33, also termed a gate dielectric, disposed about the channel envelope 32. The dielectric layer 33 may include an oxide, oxynitride, or rare earth oxide (e.g., hafnium oxide). The channel envelope 32 is disposed so as to prevent substantial, and preferably complete, contact between the gate 18 and the channel core 24.
In
An alternative method is depicted in
The material of the channel envelope 32 may be strained or unstrained, depending upon the desired properties of the resultant channel 16. Maximum lattice discontinuity occurs along the lines defined by either of the opposed sidewall surfaces 28, 30 and the bottom surface 27/top surface 26 of the channel core 24.
Preferably, the PFET channel 34 or NFET channel 36 are characterized by a width of about 100-150 Å and a height of about 500-600 Å. These dimensions may change with scaling. Preferably, the strained lattice is disposed along both the sidewalls 28, 30 and the top 26 of the PFET channel 34 or NFET channel 36.
One particular application in which the carrier pathway along the strained sidewall can be exploited is in a FET 10 in a static random access memory (SRAM). SRAM is a type of memory that does not need to be refreshed like dynamic RAM (DRAM), so SRAM is generally much faster (typically about 10 ns for SRAM versus about 60 ns for DRAM) and more reliable. In addition, the cycle time (a measurement of how quickly two back-to-back accesses of a memory chip can be made) of SRAM is much shorter than that of DRAM because it does not need to pause between accesses. The design of SRAMs generally assumes FETs in several fixed sizes (quantized). However, the width of the channel 16 is critical for stability in SRAM, and thereby imposes a tradeoff between size and stability. Rather than select a FET with a quantized channel width that may be larger in the x-y plane (the plane of
Preferably, the second semiconductor material 46 is SiGe of a moderate concentration. For thermally stable fins, 10%-20% Ge concentration is preferable when the thickness of the layer 46 is between about 10-30 nm. It has been found that thicker layers 46 of SiGe, and/or higher concentrations of Ge, will be metastable and may require further thermal processing, though not annealing. Any embodiment of the present invention preferably includes an enveloping layer of gate dielectric or gate oxide. A channel 16 according to the present invention may be part of a FinFET 10, as in
The channel 16 shown in FIGS. 8A-B, is formed of a channel core 24 and is overlain with the channel envelope 32, as is shown in
In
Depositing the strained Si layer on the quadruple gate FinFET 93 and the Pi gate FinFET 94, wherein the FinFET 93, 94 are PFET (and not NFET), improves mobility within the PFET, while preserving beneficial aspects of the PFET and the NFET. Further it is noted that depositing strained Si layers in the PFET in the [110] direction also improves the mobility. The [110] direction is at a 45° angle to the crystalline axes.
While described in the context of presently preferred embodiments, various modifications of and alterations to the foregoing embodiments can be made with normal skill in the art, and all such modifications and alterations remain within the scope of this invention and the ensuing claims. Examples herein are considered to be illustrative and not exhaustive of the teachings of this invention.
Claims
1-22. (canceled)
23. A field effect transistor (FET) comprising:
- a source, a drain, a channel, a gate electrode, and a gate dielectric;
- wherein the channel comprises a channel core defining a bottom surface and a top surface spaced from the bottom surface by laterally opposed sidewall surfaces disposed between the bottom surface and the top surface, wherein the channel core comprises a first semiconductor material defining a first lattice structure; the channel further comprising a channel envelope in contact with at least the top surface of the channel core, wherein the channel envelope comprises a second semiconductor material defining a second lattice structure that differs from the first lattice structure; and,
- wherein the gate electrode is coupled through the gate dielectric to the channel envelope only at surfaces of the channel envelope that are opposed to the top and bottom surfaces of the channel core.
24. The FET of claim 23, wherein the first lattice structure is relaxed relative to the second lattice structure.
25-35. (canceled)
36. The field effect transistor of claim 23, wherein the first lattice structure is compressed relative to the second lattice structure.
37. The field effect transistor of claim 23, wherein the second lattice structure is one of relaxed or stretched.
38. The field effect transistor of claim 23, wherein one of the first and second semiconductor materials comprises silicon and germanium.
39. The field effect transistor of claim 23, wherein the sidewall surfaces are parallel to a direction of current flow and are spaced from one another by a width that is less than or equal to a height of the sidewall surfaces.
40. The field effect transistor of claim 23, wherein the sidewall surfaces are perpendicular to a substrate on which the field effect transistor is disposed.
41. The field effect transistor of claim 23, wherein the channel envelope is in contact with the top surface and the bottom surface of the channel core and not in contact with the sidewall surfaces of the channel core.
42. The field effect transistor of claim 41 disposed on a substrate such that the sidewalls of the channel core extend from a surface of the substrate, and wherein the channel envelope that is in contact with the bottom surface of the channel core lies below the surface of the substrate.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 7, 2008
Publication Date: May 8, 2008
Applicant:
Inventors: Rajiv Joshi (Yorktown Heights, NY), Richard Williams (Essex Junction, VT)
Application Number: 11/970,011
International Classification: H01L 29/78 (20060101);