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  • ✇Semiconductor Engineering
  • Enabling Advanced Devices With Atomic Layer ProcessesKatherine Derbyshire
    Atomic layer deposition (ALD) used to be considered too slow to be of practical use in semiconductor manufacturing, but it has emerged as a critical tool for both transistor and interconnect fabrication at the most advanced nodes. ALD can be speeded up somewhat, but the real shift is the rising value of precise composition and thickness control at the most advanced nodes, which makes the extra time spent on deposition worthwhile. ALD is a close cousin of chemical vapor deposition, initially intr
     

Enabling Advanced Devices With Atomic Layer Processes

Atomic layer deposition (ALD) used to be considered too slow to be of practical use in semiconductor manufacturing, but it has emerged as a critical tool for both transistor and interconnect fabrication at the most advanced nodes.

ALD can be speeded up somewhat, but the real shift is the rising value of precise composition and thickness control at the most advanced nodes, which makes the extra time spent on deposition worthwhile.

ALD is a close cousin of chemical vapor deposition, initially introduced in high volume to the semiconductor industry for hafnium oxide (high-k) gate dielectrics. Both CVD and ALD are inherently conformal processes. Deposition occurs on all surfaces exposed to a precursor gas. In ALD, though, the reaction is self-limiting.

The process works like this: First, a precursor gas (A) is introduced into the process chamber, where it adsorbs onto all available substrate sites. No further adsorption occurs once all surface sites are occupied. An inert purge gas, typically nitrogen or argon, flushes out any remaining precursor gas, then a second precursor (B) is introduced. Precursor B reacts with the chemisorbed precursor A to produce the desired film. Once all of the adsorbed molecules are consumed, the reaction stops. After a second purge step, the cycle repeats.

ALD opportunities expand as features shrink
The step-by-step nature of ALD is both its strength and its weakness. Depositing one monolayer at a time gives manufacturers extremely precise thickness control. Using different precursor gases in different ratios can tune the film composition. Unfortunately, the repeated precursor/purge gas cycles take a lot of time. In an interview, CEA-Leti researcher Rémy Gassilloud estimated that in a single wafer process, two minutes per wafer is the maximum cost-effective process time. But two minutes is only enough time to deposit about a 2nm-thick film.

Some process adjustments can improve throughput. Silicon dioxide ALD often uses large furnaces to process many wafers at once. Plasma activation can ionize reagents and accelerate film formation. Still, Gassilloud estimates that 10nm is the maximum practical thickness for ALD films.

As transistors shrink, though, the number of layers in that thickness range is increasing. Transistor structures also are becoming more complex, requiring deposition on vertical surfaces, into deep trenches, and other places not readily accessible by line-of-sight PVD methods. Replacement gates for gate-all-around transistors, for instance, need a process that can fill nanometer-scale cavities.

As noted above, HfO2 was the first successful application of ALD in semiconductor manufacturing. Its precursors, HfCl4 and water, are both chemically simple small molecules, whose by-products are volatile and easily removed. Such simple chemistries are the exception, though. ALD of silicon dioxide typically uses aminosilane precursors.⁠[1] Metal nitrides often have complex metal-organic precursor gases. Gassilloud noted that ligands might be added to a precursor molecule to change its vapor pressure or reactivity, or to facilitate adhesion to the substrate. In selective deposition processes, discussed below, ligands might improve selectivity between growth and non-growth surfaces. These larger molecules can be difficult to insinuate into smaller features, and byproducts can be difficult to remove. Complex byproducts can also become a contamination source.

One of the advantages of ALD is its very low process temperature, typically between 200°C and 300°C. It is thermally compatible with both transistor and interconnect processes in CMOS, as well as with deposition on plastic and other novel substrates. Even so, Aditya Kumar and colleagues at GlobalFoundries showed that precise temperature control is important.[2] TDMAT (tetrakis- dimethylamino titanium) condensation in a TiN deposition process was a significant source of particle defects. To maintain the desired process temperature, both the precursor and purge gas temperatures matter. Introducing cold purge gas into a warm process chamber can cause rapid condensation.

As ALD has become a mainstream process, the industry has found applications for it beyond core device materials, in a variety of sacrificial and spacer layers. For example, double- and quadruple-patterning schemes often use ALD for “pitch-doubling.” By depositing a spacer material on either side of a patterned “mandrel,” then removing the mandrel, the process can cut the original pitch in half without the need for an additional, more costly lithography step.[3]

Fig. 1: Self-aligned double patterning with ALD spacers. Source: IOPScience

Fig. 1: Self-aligned double patterning with ALD spacers. Source: Creative Commons

Depositing a doped oxide on the vertical silicon fins of a finFET device is a less directional and less damaging alternative to ion implantation.[4]

Selective deposition brings lateral control
These last two examples depend on surface characteristics to mediate deposition. A precursor might adhere more readily to a hard mask than to the underlying material. The vertical face of a silicon fin might offer more (or fewer) adsorption sites than the horizontal face. Selective deposition on more complicated structures may require a pre-deposited growth template, functionalizing substrate regions to encourage or discourage growth. Selective deposition is especially important in interconnect applications. In general, though, a comprehensive review by Rong Chen and colleagues at Huazhong University of Science and Technology explained that selective deposition methods need to replenish the template material as the film grows while needing a mechanism to selectively remove the unwanted material.⁠[5]

For example, tungsten preferentially deposits on silicon relative to SiO2, but the selectivity diminishes after only a few cycles. Researchers at North Carolina State University successfully re-passivated the oxide by incorporating hydrogen into the tungsten precursor.[⁠6] Similarly, a group at Eindhoven University of Technology found that SiO2 preferentially deposited on SiO2 relative to other oxides for only 10 to 15 cycles. A so-called ABC-cycle — adding acetylacetone (“Inhibitor A”) as an inhibitor every 5 to 10 cycles — restored selectivity.⁠[7]

Alternatively, or in addition, atomic layer etching (ALE) might be used to remove unwanted material. ALE operates in the same step-by-step manner as ALD. The first half of a cycle reacts with the existing surface, weakening the bond to the underlying material. Then, a second step — typically ion bombardment — removes the weakened layer. For example, in ALE etching of silicon, chlorine gas reacts with the surface to form various SiClx compounds. The chlorination process weakens the inter-silicon bonds between the surface and the bulk, and the chlorinated layer is easily sputtered away. The layer-by-layer nature of ALE depends on preferential removal of the surface material relative to the bulk (SiClx vs. Si in this case). The “ALE window” is the combination of energy and temperature at which the surface layer is completely removed without damaging the underlying material.

Somewhat counter-intuitively, Keren Kanarik and colleagues at Lam Research found that higher ion energies actually expanded the ALE window for silicon etching. High ion energies with short exposure times delayed the onset of silicon sputtering relative to conventional RIE.[8]

Adding and subtracting, one atomic layer at a time
For a long time, the semiconductor industry has been looking for alternatives to process schemes that deposit material, pattern it, then etch most of it away. Wouldn’t it be simpler to only deposit the material we will ultimately need? Meanwhile, atomic layer deposition has been filling the spaces under nanosheets and inside cavities. Bulk deposition and etch tools are still with us, and will be for the foreseeable future. In more and more cases, though, those tools provide the frame while ALD and ALE processes fill in the details.

Correction: Corrected attribution of the work on ABC cycles and selective deposition of SiO2.

References

  1. Wenling Li, et al., “Impact of aminosilane and silanol precursor structure on atomic layer deposition process,”Applied Surface Science, Vol 621, 2023,156869, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2023.156869.
  2. Kumar, et al., “ALD TiN Surface Defect Reduction for 12nm and Beyond Technologies,” 2020 31st Annual SEMI Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing Conference (ASMC), Saratoga Springs, NY, USA, 2020, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/ASMC49169.2020.9185271.
  3. Shohei Yamauchi, et al., “Extendibility of self-aligned type multiple patterning for further scaling”, Proc. SPIE 8682, Advances in Resist Materials and Processing Technology XXX, 86821D (29 March 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2011953
  4. Kalkofen, et al., “Atomic layer deposition of phosphorus oxide films as solid sources for doping of semiconductor structures,” 2018 IEEE 18th International Conference on Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO), Cork, Ireland, 2018, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/NANO.2018.8626235.
  5. Rong Chen et al., “Atomic level deposition to extend Moore’s law and beyond,” 2020 Int. J. Extrem. Manuf. 2 022002 DOI 10.1088/2631-7990/ab83e0
  6. B Kalanyan, et al., “Using hydrogen to expand the inherent substrate selectivity window during tungsten atomic layer deposition,” 2016 Chem. Mater. 28 117–26 https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.5b03319
  7. Alfredo Mameli et al., “Area-Selective Atomic Layer Deposition of SiO2 Using Acetylacetone as a Chemoselective Inhibitor in an ABC-Type Cycle” ACS Nano 2017, 11, 9, 9303–9311. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b04701
  8. Keren J. Kanarik, et al., “Universal scaling relationship for atomic layer etching,” J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 39, 010401 (2021); doi: 10.1116/6.0000762

The post Enabling Advanced Devices With Atomic Layer Processes appeared first on Semiconductor Engineering.

  • ✇Semiconductor Engineering
  • Enabling Advanced Devices With Atomic Layer ProcessesKatherine Derbyshire
    Atomic layer deposition (ALD) used to be considered too slow to be of practical use in semiconductor manufacturing, but it has emerged as a critical tool for both transistor and interconnect fabrication at the most advanced nodes. ALD can be speeded up somewhat, but the real shift is the rising value of precise composition and thickness control at the most advanced nodes, which makes the extra time spent on deposition worthwhile. ALD is a close cousin of chemical vapor deposition, initially intr
     

Enabling Advanced Devices With Atomic Layer Processes

Atomic layer deposition (ALD) used to be considered too slow to be of practical use in semiconductor manufacturing, but it has emerged as a critical tool for both transistor and interconnect fabrication at the most advanced nodes.

ALD can be speeded up somewhat, but the real shift is the rising value of precise composition and thickness control at the most advanced nodes, which makes the extra time spent on deposition worthwhile.

ALD is a close cousin of chemical vapor deposition, initially introduced in high volume to the semiconductor industry for hafnium oxide (high-k) gate dielectrics. Both CVD and ALD are inherently conformal processes. Deposition occurs on all surfaces exposed to a precursor gas. In ALD, though, the reaction is self-limiting.

The process works like this: First, a precursor gas (A) is introduced into the process chamber, where it adsorbs onto all available substrate sites. No further adsorption occurs once all surface sites are occupied. An inert purge gas, typically nitrogen or argon, flushes out any remaining precursor gas, then a second precursor (B) is introduced. Precursor B reacts with the chemisorbed precursor A to produce the desired film. Once all of the adsorbed molecules are consumed, the reaction stops. After a second purge step, the cycle repeats.

ALD opportunities expand as features shrink
The step-by-step nature of ALD is both its strength and its weakness. Depositing one monolayer at a time gives manufacturers extremely precise thickness control. Using different precursor gases in different ratios can tune the film composition. Unfortunately, the repeated precursor/purge gas cycles take a lot of time. In an interview, CEA-Leti researcher Rémy Gassilloud estimated that in a single wafer process, two minutes per wafer is the maximum cost-effective process time. But two minutes is only enough time to deposit about a 2nm-thick film.

Some process adjustments can improve throughput. Silicon dioxide ALD often uses large furnaces to process many wafers at once. Plasma activation can ionize reagents and accelerate film formation. Still, Gassilloud estimates that 10nm is the maximum practical thickness for ALD films.

As transistors shrink, though, the number of layers in that thickness range is increasing. Transistor structures also are becoming more complex, requiring deposition on vertical surfaces, into deep trenches, and other places not readily accessible by line-of-sight PVD methods. Replacement gates for gate-all-around transistors, for instance, need a process that can fill nanometer-scale cavities.

As noted above, HfO2 was the first successful application of ALD in semiconductor manufacturing. Its precursors, HfCl4 and water, are both chemically simple small molecules, whose by-products are volatile and easily removed. Such simple chemistries are the exception, though. ALD of silicon dioxide typically uses aminosilane precursors.⁠[1] Metal nitrides often have complex metal-organic precursor gases. Gassilloud noted that ligands might be added to a precursor molecule to change its vapor pressure or reactivity, or to facilitate adhesion to the substrate. In selective deposition processes, discussed below, ligands might improve selectivity between growth and non-growth surfaces. These larger molecules can be difficult to insinuate into smaller features, and byproducts can be difficult to remove. Complex byproducts can also become a contamination source.

One of the advantages of ALD is its very low process temperature, typically between 200°C and 300°C. It is thermally compatible with both transistor and interconnect processes in CMOS, as well as with deposition on plastic and other novel substrates. Even so, Aditya Kumar and colleagues at GlobalFoundries showed that precise temperature control is important.[2] TDMAT (tetrakis- dimethylamino titanium) condensation in a TiN deposition process was a significant source of particle defects. To maintain the desired process temperature, both the precursor and purge gas temperatures matter. Introducing cold purge gas into a warm process chamber can cause rapid condensation.

As ALD has become a mainstream process, the industry has found applications for it beyond core device materials, in a variety of sacrificial and spacer layers. For example, double- and quadruple-patterning schemes often use ALD for “pitch-doubling.” By depositing a spacer material on either side of a patterned “mandrel,” then removing the mandrel, the process can cut the original pitch in half without the need for an additional, more costly lithography step.[3]

Fig. 1: Self-aligned double patterning with ALD spacers. Source: IOPScience

Fig. 1: Self-aligned double patterning with ALD spacers. Source: Creative Commons

Depositing a doped oxide on the vertical silicon fins of a finFET device is a less directional and less damaging alternative to ion implantation.[4]

Selective deposition brings lateral control
These last two examples depend on surface characteristics to mediate deposition. A precursor might adhere more readily to a hard mask than to the underlying material. The vertical face of a silicon fin might offer more (or fewer) adsorption sites than the horizontal face. Selective deposition on more complicated structures may require a pre-deposited growth template, functionalizing substrate regions to encourage or discourage growth. Selective deposition is especially important in interconnect applications. In general, though, a comprehensive review by Rong Chen and colleagues at Huazhong University of Science and Technology explained that selective deposition methods need to replenish the template material as the film grows while needing a mechanism to selectively remove the unwanted material.⁠[5]

For example, tungsten preferentially deposits on silicon relative to SiO2, but the selectivity diminishes after only a few cycles. Researchers at North Carolina State University successfully re-passivated the oxide by incorporating hydrogen into the tungsten precursor.[⁠6] Similarly, a group at Argonne National Laboratory found that SiO2 preferentially deposited on SiO2 relative to other oxides for only 10 to 15 cycles. Adding acetylacetone (“Precursor C”) as an inhibitor every 5 to 10 cycles — restored selectivity.⁠[7]

Alternatively, or in addition, atomic layer etching (ALE) might be used to remove unwanted material. ALE operates in the same step-by-step manner as ALD. The first half of a cycle reacts with the existing surface, weakening the bond to the underlying material. Then, a second step — typically ion bombardment — removes the weakened layer. For example, in ALE etching of silicon, chlorine gas reacts with the surface to form various SiClx compounds. The chlorination process weakens the inter-silicon bonds between the surface and the bulk, and the chlorinated layer is easily sputtered away. The layer-by-layer nature of ALE depends on preferential removal of the surface material relative to the bulk (SiClx vs. Si in this case). The “ALE window” is the combination of energy and temperature at which the surface layer is completely removed without damaging the underlying material.

Somewhat counter-intuitively, Keren Kanarik and colleagues at Lam Research found that higher ion energies actually expanded the ALE window for silicon etching. High ion energies with short exposure times delayed the onset of silicon sputtering relative to conventional RIE.[8]

Adding and subtracting, one atomic layer at a time
For a long time, the semiconductor industry has been looking for alternatives to process schemes that deposit material, pattern it, then etch most of it away. Wouldn’t it be simpler to only deposit the material we will ultimately need? Meanwhile, atomic layer deposition has been filling the spaces under nanosheets and inside cavities. Bulk deposition and etch tools are still with us, and will be for the foreseeable future. In more and more cases, though, those tools provide the frame while ALD and ALE processes fill in the details.

References

  1. Wenling Li, et al., “Impact of aminosilane and silanol precursor structure on atomic layer deposition process,”Applied Surface Science, Vol 621, 2023,156869, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2023.156869.
  2. Kumar, et al., “ALD TiN Surface Defect Reduction for 12nm and Beyond Technologies,” 2020 31st Annual SEMI Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing Conference (ASMC), Saratoga Springs, NY, USA, 2020, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/ASMC49169.2020.9185271.
  3. Shohei Yamauchi, et al., “Extendibility of self-aligned type multiple patterning for further scaling”, Proc. SPIE 8682, Advances in Resist Materials and Processing Technology XXX, 86821D (29 March 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2011953
  4. Kalkofen, et al., “Atomic layer deposition of phosphorus oxide films as solid sources for doping of semiconductor structures,” 2018 IEEE 18th International Conference on Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO), Cork, Ireland, 2018, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/NANO.2018.8626235.
  5. Rong Chen et al., “Atomic level deposition to extend Moore’s law and beyond,” 2020 Int. J. Extrem. Manuf. 2 022002 DOI 10.1088/2631-7990/ab83e0
  6. B Kalanyan, et al., “Using hydrogen to expand the inherent substrate selectivity window during tungsten atomic layer deposition,” 2016 Chem. Mater. 28 117–26 https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.5b03319
  7. Yanguas-Gil A, Libera J A and Elam J W, “Modulation of the growth per cycle in atomic layer deposition using reversible surface functionalization,” 2013 Chem. Mater. 25 4849–60 https://doi.org/10.1021/cm4029098
  8. Keren J. Kanarik, et al., “Universal scaling relationship for atomic layer etching,” J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 39, 010401 (2021); doi: 10.1116/6.0000762

The post Enabling Advanced Devices With Atomic Layer Processes appeared first on Semiconductor Engineering.

  • ✇Semiconductor Engineering
  • Building CFETs With Monolithic And Sequential 3DKatherine Derbyshire
    Successive versions of vertical transistors are emerging as the likely successor to finFETs, combining lower leakage with significant area reduction. A stacked nanosheet transistor, introduced at N3, uses multiple channel layers to maintain the overall channel length and necessary drive current while continuing to reduce the standard cell footprint. The follow-on technology, the CFET, pushes further up the z axis, stacking n-channel and p-channel transistors on top of each other, rather than sid
     

Building CFETs With Monolithic And Sequential 3D

Successive versions of vertical transistors are emerging as the likely successor to finFETs, combining lower leakage with significant area reduction.

A stacked nanosheet transistor, introduced at N3, uses multiple channel layers to maintain the overall channel length and necessary drive current while continuing to reduce the standard cell footprint. The follow-on technology, the CFET, pushes further up the z axis, stacking n-channel and p-channel transistors on top of each other, rather than side by side.

In work presented at December’s IEEE Electron Device Meeting, researchers at TSMC estimated that CFETs give a 1.5X to 2X overall size reduction at constant gate dimensions. [1] Those are significant area benefits for any digital logic, but manufacturing these new transistor structures will be a challenge.

Monolithic 3D integration is the simplest integration scheme, and the one likely to see production first. In monolithic 3D integration, the entire structure is assembled on a single piece of silicon. This approach can also be used to fabricate compute-in-memory designs where memory devices are fabricated as part of the metallization layers for a conventional CMOS circuit. While individual layers in monolithic 3D designs can incorporate new technologies — the integration of ReRAM devices, for example — the overall CMOS flow is preserved. All of the materials and processes used must be compatible with that rubric.

Adding more nanosheets for complementary devices
The overall process in this kind of scheme is similar to a stacked nanosheet transistor flow. It starts with a stack of eight or more alternating silicon and silicon germanium layers (four pairs), compared to a stacked nanosheet NFET or PFET, which might have only four such layers (two pairs). In a CFET flow, however, middle dielectric layer is inserted halfway through the stack.

This layer, separating the n-type and p-type transistors, is probably the most important difference from a standard nanosheet transistor flow. To minimize parasitic capacitance, the middle dielectric layer should be as thin as possible, said imec’s Naoto Horiguchi. If it’s too thin, though, edge placement errors can cause isolation failures, landing contacts for the top devices onto bottom devices. [2]

In TSMC’s process, the Si/SiGe superlattice includes a high-germanium SiGe layer as a placeholder for the middle dielectric. After the source/drain etch, a highly selective etch removes this layer and oxidizes the silicon on either side of it to form the middle dielectric.

The inner spacer recess etch, which follows middle dielectric formation in the TSMC process, indents the SiGe layers relative to the silicon nanosheets, defining the gate length and junction overlap.

While TSMC emphasized it has not yet made fully metallized integrated CFET circuits, it did report that more than 90% of the transistors survived.

Fig. 1: TSMC used monolithic integration to stack NFET and PFET devices. [1]
Fig. 1: TSMC used monolithic integration to stack NFET and PFET devices. [1]

Depositing the nanosheet stack is straightforward. Etching it with the precision required is not. A less-than-vertical etch profile will change the relative channel lengths of the top and bottom devices, leading to asymmetric switching characteristics.

Stacking wafers for more flexibility
The alternative, sequential 3D integration is a bit more flexible. While monolithic 3D integration uses a single device layer, sequential 3D integration bonds an additional tier on top of the first. Sequential 3D integration is different from three-dimensional wafer-level packaging and chip stacking, though. In WLP, the component devices are finished, passivated, and tested. The component chips are fully functional as independent circuits. In sequential 3D integration, the two tiers are part of a single integrated circuit.

Often, though not always, the second tier is an unprocessed bare wafer with no devices at all. Ionut Radu, director of research and external collaborations at Soitec, said his company used its SmartCut process to transfer sub-micron silicon layers. [3] One of the advantages of sequential integration, though, is that it opens the door to other possibilities. For example, the second layer could use a different silicon lattice orientation to facilitate stress engineering for improved carrier mobility. It also could use an alternative channel material, such as GaAs or a two-dimensional semiconductor. And up until the transfer occurs, processing of the second wafer has no effect on the thermal budget of the first.

After bonding, the second tier’s process temperature generally must remain below 500° C. Tadeu Mota-Frutuoso, process integration engineer at CEA-Leti, said researchers were able to achieve this benchmark in a conventional CMOS process by using laser annealing for the source/drain activation steps. [4]

While sequential 3D integration can be used to realize CFET devices, the top layers also can contain independent circuitry. Still, as in monolithic integration, the dielectric layer between the two circuit tiers is a critical process step. Analysts at KAIST found that reducing the thickness of the interlayer dielectric improves heat dissipation. It also facilitates the use of a bottom gate to control the top tier devices. On the other hand, the dielectric layer lies at the interface between the original wafer and the transferred layer. Thickness control depends on the polishing step used to prepare the transfer surface. Such precise control is extremely challenging for CMP. [5]

Re-driving wafers without contamination
While the second circuit tier can be added at any point in the process flow, the insertion point constrains not only the first and second tier devices, but also the fab as a whole. When the second layer does not yet contain devices, alignment to the first layer is relatively easy. In contrast, Horiguchi said, aligning one device wafer on top of another imposes an area penalty to accommodate potential overlay error. The total device thickness of sequential 3D structures tends to be greater, as well.

Returning a first-tier wafer with contacts and other metallization to FEOL tools for fabrication of a second transistor layer poses a substantial cross contamination risk. Even if the top surface is well encapsulated, Mota-Frutuoso explained in an interview that the sidewalls and bevels of the bottom tier can still expose metal layers to FEOL processes. CEA-Leti’s proposed bevel contamination wrap (BCW) scheme first cleans the wafer edge, then encapsulates it and the sidewall in a protective oxide layer.

"Fig.

Fig. 2: CEA-Leti’s sequential 3D integration stacked silicon CMOS on an industrial 28nm FDSOI wafer. [4]

Controlling heat dissipation
Heat dissipation is a major challenge for both monolithic and sequential 3D devices. Generalizations are difficult because thermal characteristics depend on the specific integration scheme and even the circuit design. Wei-Yen Woon, senior manager at TSMC, and his colleagues evaluated AlN and diamond as possible thermal dissipation layers. While both have been used in power devices, they are new to CMOS process flows. They achieved good quality columnar AlN films with a low temperature sputtering process, though the columnar structure did impede in-plane heat transport. While diamond offers extremely high thermal conductivity, it also can require extremely high process temperatures. The TSMC group deposited thin films with acceptable quality at BEOL compatible temperatures by using pre-deposited diamond nuclei, but they have not yet attempted to integrate these films with working devices.[6]

What’s next?
In the short term, monolithic 3D integration offers a relatively straightforward path to CFET fabrication, building on existing nanosheet transistor process flows. Even proponents of sequential 3D integration expect the monolithic approach to reach production first. For the longer term, though, the ability to use a completely different material for the second device layer gives device designers many more process optimization knobs.

However it is achieved, the idea that active devices no longer need to confine themselves to a single planar layer has implications far beyond logic transistors. From compute-in-memory modules to image sensors, 3D integration is an important tool for “More than Moore” devices.

References

[1] S. Liao et al., “Complementary Field-Effect Transistor (CFET) Demonstration at 48nm Gate Pitch for Future Logic Technology Scaling,” 2023 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), San Francisco, CA, USA, 2023, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/IEDM45741.2023.10413672.

[2] N. Horiguchi et al., “3D Stacked Devices and MOL Innovations for Post-Nanosheet CMOS Scaling,” 2023 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), San Francisco, CA, USA, 2023, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/IEDM45741.2023.10413701.

[3] I. Radu et al., “Ultimate Layer Stacking Technology for High Density Sequential 3D Integration,” 2023 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), San Francisco, CA, USA, 2023, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/IEDM45741.2023.10413807.

[4] T. Mota-Frutuoso et al., “3D sequential integration with Si CMOS stacked on 28nm industrial FDSOI with Cu-ULK iBEOL featuring RO and HDR pixel,” 2023 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), San Francisco, CA, USA, 2023, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/IEDM45741.2023.10413864.

[5] S. K. Kim et al., “Role of Inter-Layer Dielectric on the Electrical and Heat Dissipation Characteristics in the Heterogeneous 3D Sequential CFETs with Ge p-FETs on Si n-FETs,” 2023 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), San Francisco, CA, USA, 2023, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/IEDM45741.2023.10413845.

[6] W. Y. Woon et al., “Thermal dissipation in stacked devices,” 2023 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), San Francisco, CA, USA, 2023, pp. 1-4, doi: 10.1109/IEDM45741.2023.10413721.

 

The post Building CFETs With Monolithic And Sequential 3D appeared first on Semiconductor Engineering.

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