SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES, CMOS IMAGE SENSORS, AND METHODS OF MANUFACTURING SAME
A semiconductor device includes: a trench device isolating region formed in a substrate to define a photodiode active region; a channel stop impurity region formed in the substrate contacting the device isolating region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds a bottom and a sidewall of the device isolating region; and a photodiode formed within the photodiode active region.
This is a divisional application of co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 11/517,238 filed Sep. 7, 2006, which claims foreign priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to Korean Patent Application No. 10-2005-0124112 filed Dec. 15, 2005, which are hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes as if fully set forth herein.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Technical Field
The present disclosure relates to semiconductor devices, image sensors, and methods of manufacturing the same and, more particularly, to semiconductor devices having a trench, CMOS image sensors having a trench, and methods of manufacturing semiconductor devices and the CMOS image sensors.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
Image sensors are semiconductor devices that convert optical images into electrical signals. Image sensors can be classified into Charge Coupled Device (CCD) image sensors and CMOS Image Sensors. A CMOS image sensor includes a photodiode that receives optical signals and a MOS transistor that controls the optical signals within a unit pixel. The CCD image sensor has a complicated driving system and a complicated manufacturing process. Signal processing circuits are difficult to fabricate in one CCD chip. In contrast, the CMOS image sensor can be manufactured by standard CMOS techniques, and can be integrated into a single circuit together with other signal processing circuits.
CMOS image sensor fabrication includes forming a device isolating layer on a silicon substrate to define the photodiode active regions and MOS transistor active regions. A CMOS image sensor may exhibit crystalline defects such as dangling bond at an interfacial surface between the device isolating layer and the substrate of the photodiode active region. For example, when the device isolating layer has a Shallow Trench Isolation (STI) structure, such as a trench formed by etching the substrate and filled with an insulating layer, crystalline defects may occur when etching the substrate. The crystalline defects, which act as traps capturing electrons, may become defect or noise components of each pixel, increasing the dark current, i.e., the current that continues to flow in the photodiode when there is no incident light. Thus the crystalline defects of the device isolation region can degrade the imaging characteristics of the CMOS image sensor.
Forming an impurity region within a lower portion of the trench using ion implantation is difficult. Because the ion beam used for ion implantation has forward directivity, the impurity region is mostly formed under the trench without surrounding the sides of the trench. The ion beam or substrate may be tilted during the implantation process so that the impurity region is formed on the sides of the trench, but with no impurity region formed under the trench. A crystalline defect occurring in the interfacial surface of a trench that is not surrounded by an impurity region may generate the dark current. As semiconductor devices become ever more highly integrated, the trenches are further deepened and narrowed. In such case, it becomes more difficult to form the impurity region by ion implantation to surround the trench. As a result, the dark current may be increased.
Moreover, because ion implantation is performed under a relatively high energy condition, the impurity region is generally thickly formed. This is apt to shrink the depletion region of the photodiode formed adjacent to the trench, which may decrease the saturation current of the photodiode.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccording to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device includes: forming a trench in a substrate to define a photodiode active region; doping an impurity into a bottom and a sidewall of the trench to form a channel stop impurity region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the trench; forming a trench device isolating region by forming a gap-filling material layer into the impurity-doped trench; and forming a photodiode in the photodiode active region. The doping step may be performed by plasma doping.
The plasma doping may be performed using at least one of a dopant gas or a dilution gas.
The trench may be comprised of a deep trench configuration. The substrate may include a base substrate and an epitaxial layer formed on the base substrate, and the trench may be formed to penetrate through the epitaxial layer.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a method of manufacturing an image sensor includes: forming a circuit trench within a peripheral circuit region to define a circuit active region, and forming a pixel trench within the pixel region to define a photodiode active region; doping an impurity into a bottom and a sidewall of the pixel trench to form a channel stop impurity region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the pixel trench; forming a gap-filling material layer into the circuit trench to form a circuit trench device isolating region; forming a gap-filling material layer into the impurity-doped pixel trench to form a pixel trench device isolating region; and forming a photodiode within the photodiode active region.
The depth of the pixel trench may be deeper than depth of the circuit trench. The substrate may include a base substrate and an epitaxial layer formed on the base substrate, the circuit trench may be formed within the epitaxial layer, and the pixel trench may be formed to penetrate through the epitaxial layer.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a semiconductor device includes: a trench device isolating region formed in a substrate to define a photodiode active region; a channel stop impurity region formed in the substrate contacting the device isolating region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds a bottom and a sidewall of the device isolating region; and a photodiode formed within the photodiode active region.
An impurity density within the channel stop impurity region may be continuously decreased away from the device isolating region.
The thickness of the channel stop impurity region on the side of the device isolating region may have a ratio of 0.5 to 1 with respect to a thickness of the channel stop impurity region under the device isolating region.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, an image sensor includes: a substrate having a pixel region and a peripheral circuit region; a circuit trench device isolating region formed in the peripheral circuit region to define a circuit active region; a pixel trench device isolating region formed in the pixel region to define a photodiode active region; a channel stop impurity region formed in the substrate contacting the pixel trench device isolating region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds a bottom and a sidewall of the pixel trench device isolating region; and a photodiode formed in the substrate of the photodiode active region.
The depth of the pixel trench device isolating region may be greater than the depth of the circuit trench device isolating region. The substrate may include a base substrate and an epitaxial layer formed on the base substrate, the pixel trench device isolating region may be formed within the epitaxial layer, and the pixel trench device isolating region may be formed to penetrate through the epitaxial layer.
The present invention will become readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art when descriptions of exemplary embodiments thereof are read with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Hereinafter, exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. It will be understood that when an element such as a layer, film, region, or substrate is referred to as being “on” another element, it can be directly on the other element, or intervening elements may also be present. Like reference numerals refer to similar or identical elements throughout the description of the figures.
Referring to
The first and second photodiodes 140 and 150 are respectively connected to sources of the first and second transfer transistors 120 and 130. Drains of the transfer transistors 120 and 130 commonly share a floating diffusion region FD that is a floating node. The reset transistor 160, the select transistor 180, and the drive transistor 170 are serially connected to the floating node FD. The floating node FD is also connected to a gate of the drive transistor 170. A power source Vdd is connected to a node between the reset transistor 160 and the select transistor 180.
Hereafter, driving a unit pixel PX, according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, will be described with reference to
When a transfer signal Tx1 is supplied to a gate of either one of the transfer transistors 120 or 130, it is turned on. For example, if the transfer signal Tx1 is supplied to the first transfer transistor 120, the first transfer transistor 120 is turned on. In such case, the signal charges trapped to the first photodiode 140 are transferred to the floating node FD to change the potential of the floating node FD. The gate bias of the drive transistor 170 is changed, and thus current drivability of the drive transistor 170 is determined. At this time, a select signal SEL is supplied to a gate of the select transistor 180, and the select transistor 180 is turned on. As the result, a current corresponding to the potential of the floating node FD flows through the drive transistor 170, which is supplied as an output voltage Vout. Here, Tx2 denotes a transfer signal supplied to a gate of the second transfer transistor 130.
As described above, the unit pixel includes at least two photodiodes, and the transistors are commonly shared to provide the signals from the photodiodes, and the unit pixel area is decreased, allowing for both higher integration and increased fill factor. It is to be understood that the unit pixel may have a single photodiode or at least three photodiodes, and arrangement and number of the transistors may be modified appropriately.
Referring to
A first transfer gate electrode 123, the second transfer gate electrode 133, a reset gate electrode 163, a select gate electrode 183, and a drive gate electrode 173 are arranged on the first and second active regions 110 and 115. The first and second transfer gate electrodes 123 and 133 traverse over the transfer transistor active region 110_3 in a manner of being respectively adjacent to the first and second photodiode active regions 110_1 and 110_2. A floating diffusion region FD is formed in the transfer transistor active region 110_3 exposed between the first and second transfer gate electrodes 123 and 133. The reset gate electrode 163 traverses over the reset transistor active region 110_4, and is adjacent to the floating diffusion region FD. Also, the select gate electrode 183 and the drive gate electrode 173 traverse over the second active region 115.
Interconnects (not shown) are disposed on the gate electrodes 123, 133, 163, 173 and 183. For example, an interconnect allows an active region opposite to the floating diffusion region FD out of the reset transistor active region 110_4 adjacent to the reset gate electrode 163 to be electrically connected to the second active region 115 exposed to one side of the select gate electrode 183, and is connected to the power source (Vdd of
On the other hand, intervals Wa and Wb between the photodiodes 140 and 150 may be reduced to decrease the area of the unit pixel PX and increase the fill factor. To prevent crosstalk from occurring between the photodiodes 140 and 150, the trench device isolating region between the first and second photodiode active regions 110_1 and 110_2 may be further deepened.
Referring to
A pad insulating layer 103 and a hard mask layer 104 are sequentially stacked on the substrate 100′. The hard mask layer 104 is used as a hard mask, e.g., a silicon nitride layer, when forming a trench that will be described later. The pad insulating layer 103, e.g., a silicon oxide layer, relieves stress applied to the substrate 100′ when stacking the hard mask layer 104.
A photoresist pattern (not shown) is formed on the hard mask 104. Using the photoresist pattern as a mask, the hard mask layer 104 and the pad insulating layer 103 is etched, thereby partially exposing the substrate 100′. Then, the photoresist pattern is removed.
The hard mask layer 104 is used as a mask to etch an exposed area of the substrate 100′. The trenches 100a and 100b are formed in the substrate 100′. In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the trenches 100a and 100b are formed in the epitaxial layer 101 and define the active regions. For example, the pixel trench 100a, formed in the substrate 100′ of the pixel region, defines a pixel active region. The circuit trench 100b, defines a circuit active region formed in the substrate 100′ of the peripheral circuit region. The pixel active region includes the first and second photodiode active regions 110_1 and 110_2 of
Referring to
Using the photoresist pattern 109 as a mask, the exposed buffer insulating layer 105 is etched. Therefore, the buffer insulating layer 105 within the pixel trench 100a is thoroughly etched, and a bottom of the pixel trench 100a is exposed. Then, the bottom of the exposed pixel trench 100a is etched to form a deep pixel trench 100a′ as illustrated in
While the deep pixel trench 100a′ is formed, the photoresist pattern 109 may be etched, and an upper surface of the buffer insulating layer 105 may be partially etched. The buffer insulating layer 105 acts as an etch buffer layer that does not expose the hard mask layer 104 while forming the deep pixel trench 100a′ as described above.
Referring to
Both the deep pixel trench 100a′ and the circuit trench 100b may be formed within the epitaxial layer 101. It is to be understood that the circuit trench 100b may be formed within the epitaxial layer 101 and the deep pixel trench 100a′ may penetrate through the epitaxial layer 101.
Thereafter, an impurity is doped into the bottom and the sidewall of the pixel trench 100a′ to form a channel stop impurity region 106 that surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the pixel trench 100a′. When the channel stop impurity region 106 completely surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the pixel trench 100a′, the exposure of an interfacial surface of the pixel trench 100a′ is prevented. In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the channel stop impurity region 106 conformally surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the pixel trench 100a′, and the dark current and noise caused by an interfacial surface defect of the pixel trench 100a′ can be decreased.
The impurity doping may be a plasma doping process. For example, the substrate 100 having the pixel trench 100a′ is placed within a plasma doping chamber (not shown), and dopant gas as a source gas is induced into the chamber. Then, the dopant gas is used to generate plasma, and a voltage is supplied to the substrate 100 to dope ions of the plasma into the substrate 100, e.g., the inside of the pixel trench 100a′. In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the plasma forms the channel stop impurity region 106 that surrounds the bottom and sidewall of the pixel trench 100a′. For example, when the pixel trench 100a′ is formed as a deep trench configuration as described above, plasma doping may effectively form the channel stop impurity region 106 that surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the deep trench. When plasma doping is used, the impurity is distributed by concentrating on a portion in contact with the pixel trench 100a′, and a density of the impurity is continuously decreased away from the pixel trench 100a′. The channel stop impurity region 106 may be thinly formed and a depletion region of the photodiode that will be formed later is not reduced, and the decrease of the saturation current may be prevented.
The dopant gas may comprise, for example, BF3, B2H6, BCl3 or any combinations thereof. Boron may be doped into the channel stop impurity region 106. The source gas may include a dilution gas together with the dopant gas. The dilution gas may comprise, for example, H2, N2, O2, F2, He, Ar, Xe, or any combinations thereof. The dilution gas may be evenly dispersed in a density of plasma, distributing the channel stop impurity region 106 throughout the bottom and the sidewall of the pixel trench 100a′. In exemplary embodiments of the present invention, the channel stop impurity region 106 surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the deep trench. For example, the thickness of the channel stop impurity region 106 on the side of the pixel trench 100a′ may have a ratio of 0.5 to 1 with respect to the thickness of the channel stop impurity region 106 under the pixel trench 100a′.
Before doping the impurity, an oxide layer 108 may be formed within the pixel trench 100a′. The oxide layer 108 may block an inflow of a material besides boron when performing plasma doping. The oxide layer 108 may be a thermal oxide layer. When forming the thermal oxide layer, damages such as a lattice defect occurring within the trench 100a′ may be relieved. For example, plasma doping may be performed with an energy in a range of about 1 kV to 7 kV, and may prevent the dark current and prevent the decrease of the saturation current.
In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, plasma doping is performed with a dose in a range of about 0.1E13 atoms/cm2 to about 1.0E18 atoms/cm2.
Referring to
As illustrated in
An impurity having a second conductivity type is implanted within the substrate 100′ of the peripheral circuit region, thereby forming a well 102 having the second conductivity type. For example, the second conductivity type may be an N-type. Thereafter, a gate insulating layer 119 is formed on the substrate 100′, and a gate conductive layer is formed on the gate insulating layer 119. The gate conductive layer may be a doped polysilicon layer. The gate conductive layer is patterned to form a first transfer gate electrode 123 and a second transfer gate electrode 133 on the transfer transistor active region (110_3 of
A first photoresist pattern that exposes the transfer transistor active region 110_3 is formed. Then, using the first photoresist pattern and the first and second transfer gate electrodes 123 and 133 as masks, the impurity having the second conductivity type is implanted to form a floating diffusion region FD.
Thereafter, the first photoresist pattern is removed, and a second photoresist pattern for exposing the circuit active region is formed. Using the second photoresist pattern and the circuit gate electrode 193 as masks, the impurity having the first conductivity type is implanted to form source/drain regions 195.
A third photoresist pattern (not shown) to expose the photodiode active regions (110_1 and 110_2 of
Referring to
The first and second upper impurity regions 145 and 155 may be formed using plasma doping. According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the impurity density within the first and second upper impurity regions 145 and 155 are concentrated on the surface of the substrate 100′, so that the first and second upper impurity regions 145 and 155 may be thinly formed, and the thickness of a depletion region is increased when the photodiodes 140 and 150 are operated, improving photosensitivity of the photodiodes 140 and 150.
Referring to
The CPU 320, the floppy disc drive 330, the CDROM drive 340, the CMOS image sensor 310, the I/O unit 360, and the RAM 350 may be mutually communicated via a bus 370. Hereinafter, examples of experiments are presented to assist in understanding of exemplary embodiments of the present invention.
Dark Current and Random Noise Characteristics of CMOS Image Sensors
<Experiment 1>
An epitaxial layer is formed on a substrate, and a mask pattern comprising a silicon oxide layer and a silicon nitride layer is formed on the epitaxial layer. Using the mask pattern as a mask, the epitaxial layer is etched to a depth of about 0.3 μm to form a trench, defining a photodiode active region. Boron is doped into a bottom and a sidewall of the trench using plasma doping, forming a channel stop impurity region. When performing a plasma doping process, BF3 is used as a source gas. The doping energy is 3 kV and the dose of BF3 is 1.0E15 atoms/cm2. An HDP-CVD oxide layer is buried into the trench doped with boron, and the HDP-CVD oxide layer is planarized by CMP. Thereafter, the silicon nitride layer and the silicon oxide layer are removed to form a trench device isolating region. Phosphorus ions are implanted into the photodiode active region to form a lower impurity region, and boron is implanted to the photodiode active region to form an upper impurity region.
<Experiment 2>
A specimen is manufactured in the same manner as that of Experiment 1, except that BF3 and N2 are used as source gases when performing plasma doping, wherein the fluid quantity ratios of BF3 and N2 are 20% and 80%, respectively.
<Comparison 1>
When doping boron into the trench, plasma doping is not used. Instead, boron is implanted under process conditions of 30 kV and 1.2E13 atoms/cm2, and again implanted under process conditions of 10 kV and 6.0E12 atoms/cm2. All other process conditions and steps are the same as those of Experiment 1.
The measured dark current and random noise characteristics of the specimens according to Experiment 1, Experiment 2, and Comparison 1 are listed in Table 1.
Referring to Table 1, when boron is doped within the trench, the specimens according to Experiments 1 and 2 that use plasma doping have decreased dark current and lower noise than those of the specimen of Comparison 1. Experiment 2, in which N2 is added as a dilution gas, exhibits a noise value less than that of Experiment 1. When an impurity is doped into the bottom and the sidewalls of the trench, the dark current characteristic and the random noise characteristic can be improved when using plasma doping.
When the inside of the trench is doped using plasma doping, a channel stop region completely surrounds the bottom and sidewall of the trench. Such a channel stop impurity region prevents charges which are generated from an interfacial surface of the trench involving a crystalline defect from reaching a photodiode, and the dark current and the noise may be decreased.
Doping Profile of the Bottom and Sidewall of the Trench
Referring to
When BF3 is solely used as the source gas without using the dilution gas (Experiment 1), the thickness of the channel stop impurity region on the side of the trench has a ratio of roughly 0.5 with respect to that under the trench.
When the channel stop impurity region is formed using plasma doping, the thickness of the channel stop impurity region on the side of the trench has a ratio of 0.5 to 1 with respect to that under the trench. When the channel stop impurity region is formed using plasma doping, the channel stop impurity region conformally encloses the sidewall of the trench. When the dilution gas is used during plasma doping, the conformality can be improved.
Doping Profile within the Substrate
A substrate having an epitaxial layer is prepared, and boron is doped into the substrate using plasma doping, thereby forming an impurity region. When performing plasma doping, BF3 and N2 are used as source gases. Also, a fluid quantity ratio of BF3 and N2 are 20% and 80%, respectively. A doping energy is 3 kV and a dose of BF3 is 1.0E15 atoms/cm2.
<Experiment 4>
A specimen is manufactured in the same manner as that of the Experiment 3, except that the doping energy during plasma doping is 1 kV.
<Comparison 2>
A substrate having an epitaxial layer is prepared. Boron is ion implanted under process conditions of 30 kV and 1.2E13 atoms/cm2, and again implanted under conditions of 10 kB and 6.0E12 atoms/cm2, thereby forming a boron-doped impurity region within the substrate.
The process conditions for doping boron into the specimens according to Experiment 3, Experiment 4, and Comparison 2 are listed in Table 2.
Referring to
In view of these experiments, the impurity region formed using ion implantation is thicker than that formed using plasma doping. Although ion implantation performed by tilting an ion beam is used to form a channel stop impurity region into the side of the trench, the impurity region is thickly formed and decreases the depletion region of the photodiode that is adjacent to the side of the trench. In contrast, the channel stop impurity region formed by plasma doping does not affect the depletion region of the photodiode. Therefore, when the channel stop impurity region is formed using plasma doping, the decrease of the saturation current can be prevented.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention an impurity is doped to a bottom and a sidewall of a trench to form a channel stop impurity region that completely surrounds the bottom and the sidewall of the trench, and dark current and noise may be decreased. In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the impurity doping is performed by plasma doping to thinly form the entire channel stop impurity region, preventing the decrease of the saturation current of a CMOS image sensor.
Although the exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings for the purpose of illustration, it is to be understood that the inventive processes and devices should not be construed as limited thereby. It will be readily apparent to those of reasonable skill in the art that various modifications to the foregoing exemplary embodiments can be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims, with equivalents of the claims to be included therein.
Claims
1. A semiconductor device comprising:
- a trench device isolating region formed in a substrate to define a photodiode active region;
- a channel stop impurity region formed in the substrate contacting the device isolating region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds a bottom and a sidewall of the device isolating region; and
- a photodiode formed within the photodiode active region.
2. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein an impurity density within the channel stop impurity region is continuously decreased away from the device isolating region.
3. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein a thickness of the channel stop impurity region on the side of the device isolating region has a ratio of 0.5 to 1 with respect to a thickness of the channel stop impurity region under the device isolating region.
4. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein the trench is comprised of a deep trench configuration.
5. The semiconductor device of claim 4, wherein the depth of the trench is about 1 μm to about 4 μm.
6. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein the substrate comprises a base substrate and an epitaxial layer formed on the base substrate, and wherein the trench penetrates through the epitaxial layer.
7. The semiconductor device of claim 1, wherein the semiconductor device comprises an image sensor.
8. An image sensor comprising:
- a substrate having a pixel region and a peripheral circuit region;
- a circuit trench device isolating region formed in the peripheral circuit region to define a circuit active region;
- a pixel trench device isolating region formed in the pixel region to define a photodiode active region;
- a channel stop impurity region formed in the substrate contacting the pixel trench device isolating region, wherein the channel stop impurity region surrounds a bottom and a sidewall of the pixel trench device isolating region; and
- a photodiode formed in the photodiode active region.
9. The image sensor of claim 8, wherein the depth of the pixel trench device isolating region is greater than the depth of the circuit trench device isolating region.
10. The image sensor of claim 9, wherein the depth of the pixel trench device isolating region is about 1 μm to about 4 μm.
11. The image sensor of claim 8, wherein an impurity density within the channel stop impurity region is continuously decreased away from the pixel trench device isolating region.
12. The image sensor of claim 8, wherein a thickness of the channel stop impurity region on the side of the pixel trench device isolating region has a ratio of 0.5 to 1 with respect to a thickness of the channel stop impurity region under the device isolating region.
13. The image sensor of claim 8, wherein the substrate comprises a base substrate and an epitaxial layer stacked on the base substrate, wherein the pixel trench device isolating region is formed within the epitaxial layer, and wherein the pixel trench device isolating region penetrates through the epitaxial layer.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 25, 2009
Publication Date: Dec 24, 2009
Inventors: DOO-WON KWON (Seongnam-si), JONG-RYEOL YOO (Osan-si), CHANG-ROK MOON (Seoul)
Application Number: 12/547,046
International Classification: H01L 31/02 (20060101);