Title of Invention

VERTICAL FIN-FET DEVICES

Abstract A new class of high-density, vertical Fin-FET devices that exhibit low contact resistance is described. These vertical Fin-FET devices have vertical silicon "fins" (12A) that act as the transistor body. Doped source and drain regions (26A, 28A) are formed at the bottoms and tops, respectively, of the fins (12A). Gates (24A, 24B) are formed along sidewalls of the fins. Current flows vertically through the fins (12A) between the source and drain regions (26A, 28A) when an appropriate bias is applied to the gates (24A, 24B). An integrated process for forming pFET, nFET, multi-fin, single-fin, multi-gate and double-gate vertical Fin-FETs simultaneously is described.
Full Text VERTICAL FIN-FET MOS DEVICES
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to semiconductor devices, more particularly to
MOSFET (Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor) devices, and still more
particularly to vertical MOSFETs.
BACKGROUND
In 1965, Dr. Gordon Moore, then Director of Research and Development for Fairchild
Semiconductor, made the observation that the number of transistor devices per integrated
circuit had been doubling every couple of years since the creation of the first integrated
circuits in the late 1950's and that he expected the trend to continue for the foreseeable
future. This observation was dubbed "Moore's Law" by the trade press. Now almost 40
years later, despite numerous dire predictions of fundamental obstacles, unrelenting industry
efforts towards every-increasing semiconductor density have effectively affirmed Dr.
Moore's prophetic observation, and the trend is still expected to continue unabated for the
foreseeable future. The process of reducing semiconductor device size to increase integrated
circuit density is generally referred to as "scaling".
Ongoing scaling efforts of semiconductor MOS (Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor) devices not
only contribute to higher integrated circuit packing density, but also improve integrated
circuit performance. As the scaling process proceeds towards the physical limits of currently
available MOS technologies and techniques, new technologies and techniques are developed
to further decrease device size and increase device performance. As MOS device size
decreases, tremendous challenges arise in a variety of areas, including source/drain contact
resistance and current carrying capacity. In these two areas at least, extremely small size
tends to work against performance.
One approach that has been employed to improve current carrying capacity of extremely
small-geometry FETs is the creation of "double gate" (also referred to as dual-gate herein)
transistors. In principle, double-gate transistors act something like two transistors in parallel,
thereby improving current flow between source and drain. Two major types of double-gate
transistors have been demonstrated: the planar double-gate transistor and the double-gate Fin-
FET.
The planar double-gate FET is not unlike a conventional single gate transistor in that it has a
horizontal "planar" transistor body with a source and drain at each end and a channel
therebetween. Unlike single-gate transistors, however, the planar double-gate FET has a
second gate below the transistor body effectively creating a second, parallel channel between
the source and drain. However, there is considerable process complexity involved in forming
the second, buried gate and in connecting to it, and the planar double-gate transistor is not
significantly different from conventional planar transistor structures in terms of its ability to
be scaled. Such planar devices are rapidly approaching the physical limits of scaling.
The double-gate Fin-FET employs thin vertical silicon "fins" that act as the transistor body.
Horizontally opposed ends of the fin act as source and drain. The gate structure is formed
around the fin in an inverted "U" configuration such that the fin has parallel gates formed
along both vertical sidewalls thereof. As in the planar double-gate transistor, the double-gate
Fin-FET improves current flow between source and drain by effectively creating parallel
channels therebetween. Current flows horizontally through the fin between source and drain
when the double gate is appropriately biased. Because the transistor body of the Fin-FET is a
thin vertical structure, there can be considerable space savings over similar planar devices.
Series resistance in Fin-FETs is a significant problem, however.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present inventive technique produces high-density, vertical Fin-FET devices with low
contact resistance by means of vertical silicon "fins" that act as the transistor body. Doped
source and drain regions are formed at the bottoms and tops, respectively, of the fins. Gate
structures are formed along sidewalls of the fins, spanning the vertical distance between the
source and drain regions and separated from the fins by thin gate insulators. Current flows
vertically through the channel region between the source and drain regions when an
appropriate bias is applied to the gates. Through the use of selective doping, both nFET and
pFET variants of the inventive vertical Fin-FET device are easily formed on the same
substrate. Preferably, the substrate is an SOI (silicon-on-insulator) wafer, but any suitable
substrate or portion thereof having a silicon layer formed over an insulator layer (e.g., buried
oxide layer - "BOX") could be employed.
The basic structure of the inventive vertical Fin-FET device is characterized by at least one
vertical semiconductor fin disposed on an insulator layer. Doped source and drain regions
are formed in bottom and top portions of the fin(s) and gate conductors are disposed along
vertical sidewalls of the at least one semiconductor fin. The gate conductors are space away
from the fins by thin gate insulators.
According to an aspect of the invention, the gate conductors span a vertical distance between
the source region and drain region of the fin(s). Since gate conductors are disposed on both
sides of the fin(s), the vertical Fin-FET is essentially a dual-gate device. When an
appropriate biasing voltage is applied to the gate conductors, channels form between the
source and drain regions adjacent to each gate, effectively creating parallel channels and
improving the current carrying capacity of the vertical Fin-FET as compared to single-gate
devices.
Generally speaking, source conductors contact the source regions on both sides of the fins.
Source contacts (typically metal) are employed to connect to the source conductors, drain
contacts connect to the drain regions and gate contacts connect to the gate conductors.
According to an aspect of the invention, the gate connections can be made either separately or
in common. Providing separate gate contacts that connect to the gate conductors on opposite
sides of a fin yields a multi-gate vertical Fin-FET whereby each of the gates can be separately
controlled. Connecting to the gate conductors on opposite sides of a fin in parallel with a
single gate contact yields a double-gate vertical Fin-FET with enhanced drive capability.
According to another aspect of the invention, the source contact can connect to the source
conductor on one side of the fin only in a "single-source" variant of the vertical Fin-FET.
Multi-Fin versions of the vertical fin-FET are readily formed by creating multiple fins and
connecting them in parallel such that the source conductors are all connected together, the
drain regions are all connected together and the gate conductors are all connected together.
Alternatively, the gates can be connected such that two gate contacts are provided where one
gate contact connects to all of the gate conductors on one side of each fin and the other gate
contact connects to all of the gate conductors on the other side of each fin.
According to another aspect of the invention, a "fat-drain" variation improves drain contact
resistance. In this variation, the drain contact is "widened" to over extend the fin laterally.
By selective doping, nFET and pFET devices are readily created on the same substrate. For
nFET devices, the source regions, drain regions, gate conductors and source conductors are
all n+ doped. For pFET devices, the source regions, drain regions, gate conductors and
source conductors are all p+ doped.
Any number of pFET and/or nFET devices can be created, and multi-Fin devices can be
created using the same process steps as single-fin devices. This permits any combination of
single-fin and/or multi-fin pFET and/or nFET devices to be formed on a single substrate
using essentially the same process steps. These devices can be parts of CMOS circuits or
non-complementary circuits and can be part of a large integrated circuit device.
One suitable method for forming the vertical fin-FET device can be summarized as a series of
processing steps as follows:
(1) provide a semiconductor substrate having a semiconductor layer disposed over an
insulator layer;
(2) form vertical semiconductor fins on top of the insulator layer by etching parallel trenches
through the semiconductor layer down to the insulator layer;
(3) selectively deposit doped source conductors at the bottoms of the trenches such that the
doped conductors contact bottom portions of the fins;
(4) form source insulators over the doped conductors;
(5) form gate insulators along sidewalls of the trenches;
(6) thermally drive dopants from the doped conductors into bottom portions of the fins to
create source regions;
(7) form gate conductors along vertical sidewalls of the fins spaced away the fins by the gate
insulators;
(8) dope top portions of the fins to form drain regions therein;
(9) form sidewall spacers along exposed sidewalls of the trenches, fins and gate conductors;
(10) etch back the source insulators to expose the underlying doped source conductors;
(11) form silicide in exposed portions of the source and gate conductors;
(12) fill the trenches with an oxide trench-fill and planarize;
(13) form metal source, drain and gate contacts by Damascene processes of selective etching,
metal fill, and chem-mech polishing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and further features of the present invention will be apparent with reference to the
following description and drawing, wherein:
Figures 1-10 are cross-sectional diagrams of a vertical Fin-FET semiconductor structure on
an SOI substrate at a series of sequential processing steps, in accordance with the invention.
Figure 11 is a plan view of a vertical Fin-FET semiconductor structure with source, drain and
gate contacts, in accordance with the invention.
Figures 12-14 are different cross sectional views of the vertical Fin-FET semiconductor
structure of Figure 11, in accordance with the invention.
Figure 15 is a cross-sectional view of a "fat drain" embodiment of a vertical Fin-FET
semiconductor structure, in accordance with the invention.
Figure 16 is a plan view of a "single-side source" embodiment of a vertical Fin-FET
semiconductor structure, in accordance with the invention.
Figure 17 is a plan view of a "multi-gate" embodiment of a vertical Fin-FET semiconductor
structure, in accordance with the invention.
Figure 18 is a cross-sectional view of a "multi-fin" embodiment of a vertical Fin-FET
semiconductor structure, in accordance with the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present inventive technique produces high-density, vertical Fin-FET devices with low
contact resistance by forming tall, thin vertical silicon "fins" that act as the transistor body.
Appropriately doped source and drain regions are formed at the bottoms and tops,
respectively, of the fins and gate structures are formed along sidewalls of the fins,
overlapping the doped source and drain regions, thereby creating a vertical channel region in
the fin between the source and drain regions. Current flows vertically through channels that
form in the channel region adjacent to the gate structures and extending between the source
and drain regions when an appropriate bias is applied to the gates. Through the use of
selective doping, both nFET and pFET variants of the inventive vertical Fin-FET device are
easily formed on the same substrate. Preferably, the substrate is an SOI (silicon-on-insulator)
wafer, but any suitable substrate or portion thereof having a silicon layer formed over an
insulator layer (e.g., buried oxide layer - "BOX") could be employed. Preferably, an SOI
substrate having a nitride layer overlying a silicon layer that in turn overlies a buried oxide
layer (BOX) is employed.
A preferred embodiment of a method for forming vertical Fin-FET semiconductor structures
can be summarized as: (1) Forming tall, thin vertical semiconductor (silicon) "fins" on top of
an insulator layer in a suitable substrate (e.g. SOI), e.g., by etching parallel trenches through
the silicon layer down to the insulator layer (e.g, BOX); (2) selectively depositing n+ and/or
p+ doped polysilicon conductors at the bottoms of the trenches (as appropriate to the type of
FinFET devices being formed: nFET and/or pFET) such that the doped polysilicon
conductors contact bottom portions of the fins; (3) forming an HDP oxide insulating layer
over the polysilicon; (4) effecting appropriate channel doping (in the "fin") using
conventional masking and implantation techniques; (5) forming gate insulators along
sidewalls of the trenches and thermally "driving" the polysilicon dopants into bottom portions
of the fins; (6) forming gate conductors on the sides of the fins (with the gate insulators
separating the gate conductors from the fins); (7) Selectively implanting n+ and/or p+
dopants (as appropriate to the type of FinFET devices being formed: nFET and/or pFET) into
top portions of the fins to form drain regions therein; (8) depositing nitride and etching back
to form sidewall spacers; (9) etching back the HDP oxide to expose the underlying doped
polysilicon source conductors and forming silicide in exposed portions of the source and gate
conductors; (10) filling the trenches with an oxide trench-fill and planarizing via CMP
(chem-mech polishing); and (11) forming metal source, drain and gate contacts by
Damascene processes of selective etching, metal fill, and chem-mech polishing.
It should be noted that in the ensuing detailed description of the preferred embodiment(s) of
the invention, drawing features are not necessarily to scale and should be interpreted as being
merely schematically representative of the relationships between the structures and features
depicted.
Figure 1 is a cross-sectional diagram of an SOI wafer substrate 100 on which n-channel and
p-channel vertical Fin-FETs are to be formed, in accordance with the invention. Preferably,
the wafer substrate structure has a" bulk silicon liiycr 2 over which a buried oxide layer (BOX)
4 is formed. Overlying the buried oxide layer 4 is a single-crystal silicon layer 6. A nitride
dielectric layer (e.g., SiN) 8 overlies the silicon layer 6. Preferably the silicon layer 6 is 50-
200 nanometers (nM - 10" meters) in thickness, but with further device scaling, thinner
layers may be appropriate.
Figure 2 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 200 representative of the wafer
substrate 100 of Figure 1 after etching to form well-defined, parallel trenches 10A, 10B, IOC
and 10D through the nitride layer 8 and silicon layer 6 down to the BOX layer 4. Trenches
10A and 10B define a first fin 12A therebetween, which will become the body of an nFET
transistor (generally indicated in the Figure as "nFET"). The first fin 12A has a nitride "cap"
14A. Trenches IOC and 10D define a second fin 12B therebetween, which will become the
body of a pFET transistor (generally indicated in the Figure as "pFET"). The second fin 12B
also has a nitride "cap" 14B. Trenches 10B and IOC define a spacer structure therebetween
comprising a silicon base 16B with a nitride cap 16A. Preferably, the fins 12A and 12B are
10-20 nM wide, but with further device scaling, smaller widths may be appropriate. The
heights of the fins 12A and 12B are equal to the thickness of the silicon layer 6. preferably
50-200 nM.
Figure 3 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 300 representative of the wafer
substrate 200 of Figure 2 after a process of forming n+ doped polysilicon source conductors
ISA at the bottoms of trenches 10A and 10B, respectively, and forming p+ doped polysilicon
source conductors 18C and 18D at the bottoms of trenches IOC and 10D, respectively.
Preferably, the source conductors 18A and 18B are formed by masking off the inchoate
"pFET" device (generally indicated in the Figure as "pFET") and depositing n+ doped
polysilicon in trenches 10A and 10B (generally associated with the inchoate "nFET" device
generally indicated in the Figure as "nFET") and etching back such that the n+ source
conductors ISA and 18B generally uniformly fill the trenches 10A and 1 OB to a uniform
depth, contacting the fin 12A only at a bottom portion thereof. Then the mask is removed
and source conductors 18C and 18D are formed in similar fashion by masking off the
inchoate "nFET" device and depositing p+ doped polysilicon in trenches IOC and 10D
(generally associated with the inchoate "pFET" device) and etching back such that the p+
source conductors 18C and 18D generally uniformly fill the trenches IOC and 10D to a
uniform depth, contacting the fin 12B only at a bottom portion thereof. Those of ordinary
skill in the art will immediately understand that the order of processing (i.e., "nFET first" as
described herein where n+ source conductors 18A and 18B are fonned first or or "pFET first"
where p+ source conductors 18C and 18D are formed first) is not critical, and the inventive
technique is readily adapted to either order of processing. Further, if only nFET devices or
pFET devices are required, some intermediate steps can be eliminated.
Figure 4 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 400 representative of the wafer
substrate 300 of Figure 3 after forming HDP oxide layers 20A, 20B, 20C and 20D on top of
source conductors ISA, 18B, 18C and 18D, respectively. Preferably, the HDP oxide layers
are formed by an HDP (High-density plasma) oxide deposition process followed by a
sidewall etch. Assuming that the inchoate nFET and pFET transistors (generally indicated in
the Figure as "nFET" and "pFET", respectively) are part of a larger, integrated
semiconductor device, those of ordinary skill in the art will immediate appreciate and
understand that any required gas phase doping and/or well implantation can be performed at
this point using appropriately patterned masks.
Figure 5 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 500 representative of the wafer
substrate 400 of Figure 4 after forming gate insulators 22 and "driving in" source dopants
from the source conductors 18A, 18B, 18C and 18D into the fins 12A and 12B to form source
regions 26A and 26B, respectively, therein. Preferably, the gate insulators 22 are formed on
exposed silicon sidewalls of the trenches 10A, 10B, IOC and 10D (including exposed
sidewalls of the fins 12A and 12B) via a thermal oxide formation process. This same thermal
process causes thermal diffusion "drive in" of the n+ source dopant in source conductors 18A
and 18B into a bottom source-region portion 26A of the first fin 12A and of the p+ source
dopant in source conductors 18C and 18D into a bottom source-region portion of the second
fin 26B. If desired, additional heating can be employed to continue the source "drive in"
thermal diffusion process. As shown in the Figure, the "driven in" source diffusion from
opposite sides of the fins tends to overlap and mix (shown as overlapping curved lines in the
source regions 26A and 26B). The HDP oxide layers 20A, 20B, 20C and 20D should be thin
enough that the drive-in process causes the source-regions 26A and 26B to reach higher in
the fins 12A and 12B than the upper surfaces of the HDP oxide layers 20A, 20B, 20C and
20D. Note that although not shown in the Figure, the source "drive-in" process will also
cause diffusion into the bottom portion of the silicon base 16B of the spacer structure.
Appropriate inter-device isolation will be employed at an earlier or later step to prevent this
extraneous source diffusion from creating any type of cross-coupling between devices.
Figure 6 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 600 representative of the wafer
substrate 500 of Figure 5 after forming polysilicon gate conductors 24A, 24B, 24C and 24D
(gate poly). Gate conductors 24A and 24B are disposed on opposite sides of the first fin 12A
(in trenches 10A and 10B. respectively, and atop HDP oxide layers 22A and 22B,
respectively), in contact with the gate insulators 22, and are n+ doped. Gate conductors 24C
and 24D are disposed on opposite sides of the second fin 12B (in trenches IOC and 10D,
respectively, and atop HDP oxide layers 22A and 22B, respectively), in contact with the gate
insulators 22, and are p- doped. The gate conductors 24A, 24B, 24C and 24D extend
vertically partway up the sides of the fins 12A and 12B. Preferably, the gate conductors 24A
and 24B are created by forming a "pFET" mask that exposes only desired areas of the nFET
device (generally indicated in the Figure as "nFET"), depositing n+ doped polysilicon.
etching back to a suitable depth, masking the desired gate outline (nFET litho), and etching
with a suitable highly directional etching process, e.g., reactive ion etching (RIE). Then a
similar process can be employed to form gate conductors 24C and 24D (i.e., nFET mask, p+
gate poly deposition, etch back, pFET litho, and RIE etch).
As with the formation of the source conductors 18A-D, those of ordinary skill in the art will
immediately appreciate and understand that the order of formation of the gate conductors
24A-D (i.e., n+ first or p- first) is not critical and the inventive technique is readily adapted
to suit either order.
Figure 7 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 700 representative of the wafer
substrate 600 of Figure 6 after implanting drain regions 28A and 28B in top portions of fins
12A and 12B. Preferably, this is accomplished by (1) masking to expose the fin 12A of the
inchoate nFET device (and any other similar fin of any other nFET device(s) being
simultaneously formed on a larger integrated circuit) then n+ implanting through the mask by
any suitable process to form the n+ doped drain region 28A to a depth that extends slightly
lower in the fin 12A than the tops of the gate conductors 24A and 24B, then (2) removing the
mask and re-masking to expose the fin 12B of the inchoate pFET device (and any other
similar fin of any other pFET device(s) being simultaneously formed on a larger integrated
circuit) and p+ implanting through the mask by any suitable process to form the p+ doped
drain region 28B to a depth that extends slightly lower in the fin 12B than the tops of the gate
conductors 24C and 24D. As before, the order of processing (n+ first or p+ first) is not
critical.
Figure 8 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 800 representative of the wafer
substrate 700 of Figure 7 after forming nitride sidewall spacers 30. Preferably, the nitride
spacers are formed by depositing nitride (by any suitable deposition process), then etching
back such that the nitride covers all exposed vertical sidewalls, i.e., the exposed vertical
sidewalls of trenches 10A, 10B, IOC and 10D, gate insulators 22, gate conductors 24A, 24B,
24C and 24D, and nitride caps 14A, 14B and 16A.
Figure 9 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 900 representative of the wafer
substrate 800 of Figure 8 after the formation of silicide gate contact structures 32A, 32B, 32C
and 32D; and silicide source contract structures 34A, 34B, 34C and 34D. Preferably, these
silicide structures are formed by etching through exposed portions of the HDP oxide layers
20A, 20B, 20C and 20D to expose the polysilicon source conductors 18A, 18B, 18C and
18D, then performing any suitable silicidation process to form silicide gate contact structures
32A, 32B, 32C, and 32D in exposed portions of the gate conductors 24A, 24B, 24C and 24D,
respectively and to form silicide source contact structures 34A, 34B, 34C and 34D in the
newly exposed portions of the source conductors ISA, 18B, 18C and 18D, respectively. All
silicide contact structures (32x and 34x) can be formed essentially simultaneously.
Preferably, the silicide contact formation process comprises deposition of the appropriate
metal for silicidation (e.g.. Cobalt for formation of CoSi:), silicidation by any suitable means
(e.g., RTA) and removal of excess metal.
Figure 10 is a cross-sectional diagram of a wafer substrate 1000 representative of the wafer
substrate 900 of Figure 9 after an oxide fill and planarization process. Preferably, a suitable
trench-fill technique is employed to overfill the trenches 10A, 10B, IOC and 10D (see Figs 1-
7) with oxide fill 36. The oxide fill 36 is then planarized via a CMP process.
Figure 11 is a plan view of a wafer substrate 1100 representative of the wafer substrate 1000
of Figure 10 after formation of metal source contacts 38A and 38B, drain contacts 40A and
40B and gate contacts 42A and 42B. Preferably, the source contacts 38A and 38B and gate
contacts 42A and 42B via a Damascene process whereby openings are formed in the oxide
fill extending downward to corresponding silicide contact structures. The openings are filled
(overfilled) with metal via a suitable metal deposition process and the metal is polished flush
using CMP planarization process. The drain contacts 40A and 40B are preferably formed
via a similar Damascene process whereby nitride caps 14A and 14B are selectively etched
away to create openings that expose tops of the doped drain regions 28A and 28B.
respectively of fins 12A and 12B, respectively. Metal deposition and CMP polishing are
used in similar fashion to form the metal drain contacts 40A and 40B. At this same point,
shallow trench isolation 36 is formed around each transistor device using conventional STI
techniques. Note that the source contacts 38A and 38B and gate contacts 42A and 42B
appear bifurcated. This is because the metal gate contact 42A connects to silicide gate
contact structures 32A and 32B on both sides of the fin 12A. Similarly, gate contact 42B and
source contacts 38A and 38B connect to respective silicide contact structures on both sides of
their respective fins. This is shown and described in greater detail hereinbelow with respect
to Figures 12, 13 and 14. Note that the gate contacts 42A and 42B extend only partway
across their respective devices. Similarly the source contacts 38A and 38B extend only
partway across their respective devices. Also note that the drain contacts 40A only extend
laterally a short distance across their respective devices. This facilitates routing of
subsequently formed wiring layers that connect to the devices.
Figure 12 is a cross-sectional view of a wafer substrate 1200 representative of the wafer
substrate 1100 of Figure 11 as seen when sectioned at A-A' through the source contacts 38A
and 38B. In the Figure, the two legs of bifurcated source contact 38A can be seen extending
downward to contact the silicide source contact structures 34A and 34B on either side of fin
12A. Similarly, the two legs of bifurcated source contact 38B are seen extending downward
to contact the silicide source contact structures 34C and 34D on either side of fin 12B.
Figure 13 is a cross-sectional view of a wafer substrate 1300 representative of the wafer
substrate 1100 of Figure 11 as seen when sectioned at B-B' through the drain contacts 40A
and 40B. In the Figure, the drain contacts 40A and 40B can be seen extending downward to
contact respective drain regions 28A and 28B in respective fins 12A and 12B.
Figure 14 is a cross-sectional view of a wafer substrate 1400 representative of the wafer
substrate 1100 of Figure 11 as seen when sectioned at C-C' through the gate contacts 42A
and 42B. In the Figure, the two legs of bifurcated gate contact 42A can be seen extending
downward to contact the silicide gate contact structures 32A and 32B on either side of fin
12A. Similarly, the two legs of bifurcated source contact 42B are seen extending downward
to contact the silicide source contact structures 32C and 32D on either side of fin 12B.
One alternate embodiment of the inventive vertical Fin-FET device employs a "fat drain"
structure that improves drain contact resistance. This is shown and described with respect to
Figure 15.
Figure 15 is a cross-sectional view of a wafer substrate 1500 representative of the wafer
substrate 1100 of Figure 11 as seen when sectioned at B-B' through "fat-drain" contacts 40A
and 40B. In the Figure, the drain contacts 40A and 40B laterally overextend their respective
fins 12A and 12B. The "fat-drain" contacts are preferably formed by masking off the desired
drain contact profiles, performing a controlled nitride/oxide etch, disposing thin Si epitaxial
layers 44A, 44B at the bottoms of the openings thus formed, then forming the metal drain
contacts 40A and 40B by metal deposition and CMP polishing as described hereinabove.
In some applications, it may be desirable for the source contacts to connect only to one side
of their respective fin. Figure 16 is a plan view of a wafer substrate 1600 similar to the wafer
substrate 1100 of Figure 11 except that the source contacts 38A and 38B are formed on only
one side of their respective fins (12A, 12B).
The gate contacts 42A and 42B are bifurcated to connect in common to silicide gate contact
structures on both sides of their respective fins 12 A, 12B (see Figures 11, 14). In some
applications, it may be desirable to provide separate gate contacts to the gate conductors on
each side of the Fin-FET device, thereby creating a Fin-FET with multi-gate voltage control.
This is shown and described with respect to Figure 17.
Figure 17 is a plan view of a wafer substrate 1700 similar to the wafer substrate 1100 of
Figure 11 except that instead of forming bifurcated gate contacts (see 42A, 42B, Fig. 11) the
legs of the gate contacts are kept separate, thereby providing separate gate contacts 42AA,
42AB, 42BA and 42BB connecting to respective silicide gate contact structures 32A, 32B,
32C and 32D (see, e.g., Figs. 10, 14). This permits the gate contacts on each side of their
respective Fin-FET devices to be controlled independently, thereby creating multi-gate
vertical Fin-FETs.
In applications that require higher drive currents, multi-fin versions of the vertical Fin-Fet
structure can be formed. All gate contacts are connected in parallel, all drain contacts are
connected in parallel and all source contacts are connected in parallel, effectively creating an
array of parallel-connected vertical fin-FETs with effective channel width multiplied by the
number of fins employed, and correspondingly improved drive current capability.
Connecting to "left side" and "right side" silicide gate contact structures separately creates a
dual-gate version of the multi-fin vertical fin-FET. A multi-fin vertical Fin-FET device is
shown and described with respect to Figure 18.
Figure 18 is a cross-sectional view of a wafer substrate 1800 on which a multi-fin version of
the vertical Fin-FET device has been formed prior to metal contact formation. Those of
ordinary skill in the art will immediately understand that the processing steps required to
create the multi-fin vertical finFET are essentially the same as those described hereinabove
for creating single-fin devices. Three thin vertical fins 112A, 112B and 112C are formed,
doped polysilicon source conductors 118A, 118B, 118C and 118D are formed alongside the
fins 112A, 112B and 112C. The doping of the source conductors should be appropriate to the
type of device being formed (n+ for nFET, p+ for pFET). HDP oxide insulating layers 120A,
120B, 120C and 120D are formed atop source conductors 118A, 118A, 118C, and 118D,
respectively. Gate insulators, gate conductors and nitride sidewall spacers are all formed in
similar fashion to that described hereinabove. Silicide gate contact structures 132A. 132B,
132C, 132D, 132E and 132F are formed in top surfaces of the gate conductors on each side of
the fins 112A-112C and silicide source contact structures 134A, 134B, 134C, 134D. 134E
and 134F are formed in top surfaces of the source conductors 118A, 118B, 118C, 118D,
118E, and 118F, respectively. An oxide trench fill 136 is deployed and planarized as
described hereinabove. Subsequent processing steps form metal gate, source and drain
contacts in similar fashion to that described hereinabove for single-fin devices.
It is generally assumed that the present inventive vertical Fin-FET device will be applied to
larger CMOS (complementary MOS) circuits. It is fully within the spirit and scope of the
present invention to do so. Accordingly, the descriptions hereinabove with respect Figures 1-
17 have shown nFET and pFET devices side-by-side. Typically these devices will be part of
a CMOS circuit, which may in turn be part of a larger integrated circuit device employing
many such CMOS circuits. Further, individual nFET and pFET versions of the inventive
vertical Fin-FET can be employed in any type of circuit (including non-complementary
circuits) on an integrated device with or without other CMOS circuits. Those of ordinary
skill in the art will understand that through appropriate masking, any desired combination of
nFET and pFET vertical Fin-FET devices can be created.
In the description of the inventive vertical Fin-FET and its various embodiments, specific
reference has been made hereinabove to "drain contacts" and "drain regions" generally
located at top portions of the fins and "source contact structures", "source conductors" and
"source regions" generally located at bottom portions of the fins. Those of ordinary skill in
the art will understand that as with many MOS devices, the designations "source" and "drain"
can be interchanged, thereby reversing the presumed direction of current flow within the
transistor, although performance may or may not be identical in both directions.
Those of ordinary skill in the art will also appreciate and understand that any of the various
aspects and embodiments of the inventive technique can be used alone or in combination
(e.g., dual-gate, single-side source, fat drain, multi-fin, etc.). For example, a dual-gate, multifin
device has already been described. By way of further example, the "fat drain" structure
can also be employed in dual-gate and/or multi-fin variants of the vertical Fin-FET.
Processing steps as described hereinabove have generally been presented in "nFET first
order" whereby nFET structures are formed first, followed by pFET structures. Those of
ordinary skill in the art will immediately understand that the order of processing is not
critical, and that the inventive technique is readily adapted to either order of processing.
Further, if only nFET devices or pFET devices are required, some intermediate steps can be
eliminated.
The vertical Fin-FET device of the present invention provides several advantages in addition
to the high-density advantages that derive from its vertical orientation. The "double-gate"
feature is an inherent feature of the device and provides a significant advantage in offering
improved drive current. Drive current can be further enhanced by creating multiple-fin
versions of the vertical Fin-FET as described hereinabove with respect to Figure 18. The
same process steps can be used to create both single-fin and multi-fin devices, so there is no
processing penalty in mixing them on a single integrated circuit device.
The present invention has been described hereinabove specifically with respect to siliconbased
semiconductor technology. Those of ordinary skill in the art will immediately
understand that similar techniques can be employed to produce equivalent structures having
vertically oriented transistor "fin" bodies with vertical current flow using other
semiconductor technologies. The description in terms of silicon-based semiconductor
technology hereinabove should be viewed as exemplary rather than limiting.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain preferred
embodiment or embodiments, certain equivalent alterations and modifications will occur to
others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the
annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above
described components (assemblies, devices, circuits, etc.) the terms (including a reference to
a "means") used to describe such components are intended to correspond, unless otherwise
indicated, to any component which performs the specified function of the described
componente., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to
the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein illustrated exemplary
embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may
have been disclosed with respect to only one of several embodiments, such feature may be
combined with one or more features of the other embodiments as may be desired and
advantageous for any given or particular application.






We Claim:
1. A vertical Fin-FET device characterized by:
at least one vertical semiconductor fin (12a) disposed on an insulator layer (4);
doped source (26a) and drain regions (28a) in bottom and top portions of the at least one semiconductor fin (12a);
gate conductors (24a, 24b) disposed along vertical sidewalls of the at least one semiconductor fin (12a) and separated therefrom by thin gate insulators (22);
source conductors (18a, 18b) contacting the source region (26a) on opposite sides of the at least one semiconductor fin (12a);
at least one source contact (38a) connecting to at least one source conductor (18a, 18b);
at least one drain contact (40a) connecting to the drain region (28a) of the at least one semiconductor fin (12a);
a vertical channel region in the fin (12a) between the source region (26a) and the drain region (28a); and
at least one gate contact (42A) connecting to at least one gate conductor (24A, 24B).
2.The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one gate contact (42A) connects to two gate conductors (24A, 24B) on opposite sides of the same fin (12A).
3. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, comprising:
two gate contacts (42AA, 42BB), distinct from one another and each connecting to a respective gate conductor (24A, 24B) on opposite sides of the same fin (12A).
4. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one drain contact (40A) connects to at least two source conductors (18A, 18B) on opposite sides of the same fin (12A).
5. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the gate conductors (24A, 24B) span a vertical distance between the source and drain regions (26A, 28A) in the at least one fin (12A).
6. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, comprising at least two vertical fins(112A, 112B Fig. 18).
7. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one drain contact (40A, Fig. 15) laterally overextends the at least one fin (12A).
8. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein:
the source conductors (18A, 18B) are n+ doped;
the gate conductors (24A, 24B) are n+ doped;
the source and drain regions (26A, 26B) are n+ doped; and
the channel is the fin (12A) p" doped or intrinsic.
9. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein:
the source conductors (18A, 18B) are p+ doped;
the gate conductors (24A, 24B) are p+ doped; the source and drain regions (26A, 26B) are p+ doped; the vertical Fin-FET device is an pFET device; and the channel is the fin (12A) p" doped or intrinsic.
10. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the insulator layer (4) is a buried oxide layer (BOX) of a SOI substrate.
11. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the vertical Fin-FET device is part of a CMOS circuit.
12. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the vertical Fin-FET device is part of an integrated circuit device.
13. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, wherein in the channel region, channels form adjacent to the gate insulators (22) and extending between the source region (26A) and drain region (28A) in response to a bias voltage applied to the gate conductors (24A, 24B)
14. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 1, said device characterized by:
a thin vertical silicon fin (12A) formed in a silicon layer (6) of an SOI substrate;
doped source and drain regions (26A, 28A) formed in bottom and top portions, respectively, of the fin;
a pair of gate conductors (24A, 24B) disposed along opposite vertical sidewalls of the fin (12A), separated from the fin by thin gate insulators (22) and spanning a vertical distance between the source and drain regions (26A, 26B);
a pair of source conductors (18A, 18B) disposed alongside of and in contact with the source region (26A) on opposite sides of the fin (12A);
a drain contact (40A) connecting to the drain region (28A);
a source contact (38A) connecting to the source conductors (18A, 18B); and
at least one gate contact (42A) connecting to at least one gate conductor (24A).
15. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 14, wherein the at least one gate contact (42A) connects to both gate conductors (24A, 24B).
16. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 14, wherein:
the at least one gate contact (42AA) connects to one gate conductor (24A); and a second gate contact (42AB) connects to another gate conductor (24B) on the opposite side of the same fin (12A).
17. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 14, wherein:
the drain contact (40A, Fig. 15) laterally overextends the fin 12A.
18. The vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 14, wherein:
the at least one gate contact (42A) connects to the at least one gate conductor (24A) via a respective silicide gate contact structure (32A, 32B); and
the source contact (38A), connects to the source conductors (18A, 18B) via silicide source contact structures 34A, 34B.
19. A method of forming a vertical fin-FET device as claimed in any of the preceding
claims 1 to 18, characterized by the steps of:
providing a semiconductor substrate having a semiconductor layer (6) disposed over an insulator layer (4);
forming vertical semiconductor fins (12A) on top of the insulator layer (4) by etching parallel trenches (10A, 10B) through the semiconductor layer down to the insulator layer (4);
selectively depositing doped conductors (18A, 18B) at the bottoms of the trenches (10A, 10B) such that the doped source conductors contact bottom portions of the fins;
forming source insulators (20A, 20B) over the doped conductors (18A, 18B); forming gate insulators (22) along sidewalls of the trenches;
thermally driving dopants from the doped conductors into bottom portions of the fins (12A) to form source regions (26A) in the fins (12A);
forming gate conductors (24A, 24B) along vertical sidewalls of the fins (12A), spaced away therefrom by the gate insulators (22);
doping top portions of the fins (12A) to form drain regions (28A) therein;
forming sidewall spacers (30) along exposed sidewalls of the trenches (10A, 10B), fins (12A) and gate conductors (24A, 24B);
etching back the source insulators to expose the underlying doped source conductors;
forming silicide in exposed portions of the source and gate conductors;
filling the trenches with an oxide trench-fill and planarizing; and
forming metal source, drain and gate contacts by Damascene processes of selective etching, metal fill, and chem-mech polishing.
20. The method of forming a vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 19, wherein the steps of forming source regions (26A) and drain regions (28A) effectively form channel regions in the fins (12A) extending between the source regions (26A) and drain regions (28A).
21. The method of forming a vertical Fin-FET device as claimed in claim 19, wherein the semiconductor substrate is a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) substrate

Documents:

4723-DELNP-2006-Abstract-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-abstract.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Assignment-(21-10-2010).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-assignments.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Claims-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-claims.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Correspondance Others-(05-02-2015).pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Correspondence Others-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Correspondence-Others-(21-10-2010).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-correspondence-others-1.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-correspondence-others.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-description (complete).pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Drawings-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-drawings.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Form-1-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-form-1.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Form-13-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-form-18.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Form-2-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-form-2.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Form-3-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-form-3.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-form-5.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-GPA-(05-02-2015).pdf

4723-delnp-2006-pct-101.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-pct-105.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-pct-210.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-pct-220.pdf

4723-delnp-2006-pct-237.pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Petition-137-(21-10-2010).pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Petition-137-(25-01-2012).pdf

4723-DELNP-2006-Petition-137-Copy-(05-02-2015).pdf

Petition 137.pdf


Patent Number 265539
Indian Patent Application Number 4723/DELNP/2006
PG Journal Number 10/2015
Publication Date 06-Mar-2015
Grant Date 27-Feb-2015
Date of Filing 17-Aug-2006
Name of Patentee INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
Applicant Address NEW ORCHARD ROAD, ARMONK, NY 10504, USA.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 BEINTNER JOCHEN 27 CLAPP AVENUE, WAPPINGER'S FALLS, NY 12590, USA
2 CHIDAMBARRAO DURESTI 29 OLD MILL ROAD, WESTON CT 06883, USA
3 DIVKARUNI RAMACHANDRA 60 SHERWOOD AVENUE, OSSINING NY 10562, USA
PCT International Classification Number H01L 29/786
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2004/001721
PCT International Filing date 2004-01-22
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 NA