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Silicon Lattice

Transistors are built on a silicon substrate that forms a crystal lattice. Silicon is doped to increase its conductivity - group V dopants add extra electrons for n-type silicon while group III dopants create holes for p-type silicon. A junction between p-type and n-type silicon forms a diode that allows current to flow in one direction. MOS transistors use a metal-oxide-semiconductor structure with a gate, source, and drain that can be turned on or off by the gate voltage. Multiple transistors are combined into logic gates like AND, OR, and inverters using CMOS fabrication on a silicon wafer through photolithography with mask layers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views46 pages

Silicon Lattice

Transistors are built on a silicon substrate that forms a crystal lattice. Silicon is doped to increase its conductivity - group V dopants add extra electrons for n-type silicon while group III dopants create holes for p-type silicon. A junction between p-type and n-type silicon forms a diode that allows current to flow in one direction. MOS transistors use a metal-oxide-semiconductor structure with a gate, source, and drain that can be turned on or off by the gate voltage. Multiple transistors are combined into logic gates like AND, OR, and inverters using CMOS fabrication on a silicon wafer through photolithography with mask layers.

Uploaded by

chaitusudha123
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Silicon Lattice

■ Transistors are built on a silicon substrate


■ Silicon is a Group IV material
■ Forms crystal lattice with bonds to four neighbors

Si Si Si

Si Si Si

Si Si Si

1.2
Dopants
■ Silicon is a semiconductor
■ Pure silicon has no free carriers and conducts poorly
■ Adding dopants increases the conductivity
■ Group V: extra electron (n-type)
■ Group III: missing electron, called hole (p-type)

Si Si Si Si Si Si
- +

+ -
Si As Si Si B Si

Si Si Si Si Si Si

N-type P-type
1.3
P-N Junctions
■ A junction between p-type and n-type
semiconductor forms a diode.
■ Current flows only in one direction
Current flow direction

p-type n-type
Electron flow direction

anode cathode

1.4
NMOS Transistor
■ Four terminals: gate, source, drain, body
■ Gate – oxide – body stack looks like a capacitor
► Gate and body are conductors
► SiO2 (oxide) is a very good insulator
► Called metal – oxide – semiconductor (MOS) capacitor
► Even though gate is no longer made of metal

Source Gate Drain


Polysilicon
SiO2

n+ n+
Body
p bulk Si

Substrate, body or bulk

1.5
NMOS Operation
■ Body is commonly tied to ground (0 V)
■ When the gate is at a low voltage:
► P-type body is at low voltage
► Source-body and drain-body diodes are OFF
► No current flows, transistor is OFF

Source Gate Drain


Polysilicon
SiO2

0
n+ n+
S D
p bulk Si

1.6
NMOS Operation Cont.
■ When the gate is at a high voltage:
► Positive charge on gate of MOS capacitor
► Negative charge attracted to body
► Inverts a channel under gate to n-type
► Now current can flow through n-type silicon from source
through channel to drain, transistor is ON
Source Gate Drain
Polysilicon
SiO2

1
n+ n+
S D
p bulk Si

1.7
PMOS Transistor
■ Similar, but doping and voltages reversed
► Body tied to high voltage (VDD)
► Gate low: transistor ON
► Gate high: transistor OFF
► Bubble indicates inverted behavior

Source Gate Drain


Polysilicon
SiO2

p+ p+

n bulk Si

1.8
Power Supply Voltage
■ GND = 0 V
■ In 1980’s, VDD = 5V
■ VDD has decreased in modern processes
► High VDD would damage modern tiny transistors
► Lower VDD saves power
■ VDD = 3.3, 2.5, 1.8, 1.5, 1.2, 1.0, …

1.9
Transistors as Switches
■ We can view MOS transistors as electrically
controlled switches
■ Voltage at gate controls path from source to
drain
g=0 g=1

d d d
nMOS g OFF
ON
s s s

d d d

pMOS g OFF
ON
s s s

1.10
CMOS Inverter

A Y VDD
0
1

A Y

A Y
GND

1.11
CMOS Inverter

A Y VDD
0
1 0 OFF
A=1 Y=0

ON
A Y
GND

1.12
CMOS Inverter

A Y VDD
0 1
1 0 ON
A=0 Y=1

OFF
A Y
GND

1.13
CMOS NAND Gate

A B Y
0 0
0 1 Y
1 0 A
1 1
B

1.14
CMOS NAND Gate

A B Y
0 0 1 ON ON
0 1 Y=1
A=0
1 0 OFF
1 1
B=0
OFF

1.15
CMOS NAND Gate

A B Y
0 0 1 OFF ON
0 1 1 Y=1
A=0
1 0 OFF
1 1
B=1
ON

1.16
CMOS NAND Gate

A B Y
0 0 1 ON OFF
0 1 1 Y=1
A=1
1 0 1 ON
1 1
B=0
OFF

1.17
CMOS NAND Gate

A B Y
0 0 1 OFF OFF
0 1 1 Y=0
A=1
1 0 1 ON
1 1 0
B=1
ON

1.18
CMOS NOR Gate

A B Y
0 0 1 A
0 1 0
1 0 0 B
1 1 0 Y

1.19
3-input NAND Gate
■ Y pulls low if ALL inputs are 1
■ Y pulls high if ANY input is 0

Y
A
B
C

1.20
CMOS Fabrication
■ CMOS transistors are fabricated on silicon wafer

■ Lithography process similar to printing press

■ On each step, different materials are deposited or


etched

■ Easiest to understand by viewing both top and


cross-section of wafer in a simplified
manufacturing process

1.21
Inverter Cross-section
■ Typically use P-type substrate for NMOS
transistors
■ Requires N-well for body of PMOS transistors
► Silicon dioxide (SiO2) prevents metal from shorting to other
layers

input A
GND VDD
Y SiO2

n+ diffusion

p+ diffusion
n+ n+ p+ p+
polysilicon
n well
p substrate
metal1

nMOS transistor pMOS transistor

1.22
Well and Substrate Taps
■ P-type substrate (body) must be tied to GND
■ N-well is tied to VDD
■ Use heavily doped well and substrate contacts (
taps)
► Establish a good ohmic contact providing low resistance for
bidirectional current flow
A
GND VDD
Y

p+ n+ n+ p+ p+ n+

n well
p substrate

well
substrate tap
tap

1.23
Inverter Mask Set
■ Transistors and wires are defined by masks
► Inverter can be obtained using six masks: n-well,
polysilicon, n+ diffusion, p+ diffusion, contacts and metal
■ Cross-section taken along dashed line

GND VDD

nMOS transistor pMOS transistor


substrate tap well tap

1.24
Detailed Mask Views
■ Six masks
► n-well
n well

► Polysilicon

Polysilicon

► N+ diffusion n+ Diffusion

► P+ diffusion
p+ Diffusion

► Contact
Contact

► Metal

Metal

1.25
Fabrication
■ Chips are built in huge factories called fabs
■ Contain clean rooms as large as football fields

Courtesy of International
Business Machines (IBM) Corporation.
Unauthorized use not permitted.

1.26
Fabrication Steps
■ Start with blank wafer
■ Build inverter from the bottom up
■ First step will be to form the n-well
► Cover wafer with protective layer of SiO2 (oxide)
► Remove layer where n-well should be built
► Implant or diffuse n dopants into exposed wafer
► Strip off SiO2

p substrate

1.27
Oxidation
■ Grow SiO2 on top of Si wafer
► 900 – 1200 Celcius with H2O or O2 in oxidation
furnace

SiO2

p substrate

1.28
Photoresist
■ Spin on photoresist
► Photoresist is a light-sensitive organic polymer
► Softens where exposed to light

Photoresist
SiO2

p substrate

1.29
Lithography
■ Expose photoresist through n-well mask
■ Strip off exposed photoresist

Photoresist
SiO2

p substrate

1.30
Etch
■ Etch oxide with hydrofluoric acid (HF)
■ Only attacks oxide where resist has been exposed

Photoresist
SiO2

p substrate

1.31
Strip Photoresist
■ Strip off remaining photoresist
► Use mixture of acids called piranha etch
■ Necessary so resist doesn’t melt in next step

SiO2

p substrate

1.32
N-well
■ N-well is formed with diffusion or ion implantation
■ Diffusion
► Place wafer in furnace with arsenic gas
► Heat until As atoms diffuse into exposed Si
■ Ion Implantation
► Blast wafer with beam of As ions
► Ions blocked by SiO2, only enter exposed Si

SiO2

n well

1.33
Strip Oxide
■ Strip off the remaining oxide using HF
■ Back to bare wafer with n-well
■ Subsequent steps involve similar series of steps

n well
p substrate

1.34
Polysilicon
■ Deposit very thin layer of gate oxide (SiO2)
► < 20 Å (6-7 atomic layers)
■ Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) of silicon layer
► Place wafer in furnace with Silane gas (SiH4)
► Forms many small crystals called polysilicon
► Heavily doped to be good conductor

Polysilicon
Thin gate oxide

n well
p substrate

1.35
Polysilicon Patterning
■ Use same lithography process to pattern
polysilicon

Polysilicon

Polysilicon
Thin gate oxide

n well
p substrate

1.36
Self-Aligned Process
■ Use oxide and masking to expose where n+
dopants should be diffused or implanted
■ N-diffusion forms NMOS source, drain, and n-
well contact

n well
p substrate

1.37
N-diffusion
■ Pattern oxide and form n+ regions
■ Self-aligned process where gate blocks diffusion
■ Polysilicon is better than metal for self-aligned gates
because it doesn’t melt during later processing

n+ Diffusion

n well
p substrate

1.38
N-diffusion cont.
■ Historically dopants were diffused
■ Usually ion implantation today
■ But regions are still called diffusion

n+ n+ n+

n well
p substrate

1.39
N-diffusion cont.
■ Strip off oxide to complete patterning step

n+ n+ n+

n well
p substrate

1.40
P-Diffusion
■ Similar set of steps form p+ diffusion regions for
pMOS source and drain and substrate contact

p+ Diffusion

p+ n+ n+ p+ p+ n+

n well
p substrate

1.41
Contacts
■ Now we need to wire together the devices
■ Cover chip with thick field oxide
■ Etch oxide where contact cuts are needed

Contact

Thick field oxide


p+ n+ n+ p+ p+ n+

n well
p substrate

1.42
Metallization
■ Sputter on aluminum over whole wafer
■ Pattern to remove excess metal, leaving wires

Metal

Metal
Thick field oxide
p+ n+ n+ p+ p+ n+

n well
p substrate

1.43
Layout
■ Chips are specified with set of masks
■ Minimum dimensions of masks determine
transistor size (and hence speed, cost, and
power)
■ Feature size f = distance between source and
drain
► Set by minimum width of polysilicon
■ Feature size improves 30% every 3 years or so
■ Normalize for feature size when describing
design rules
■ Express rules in terms of l = f/2
► E.g. l = 0.3 mm in 0.6 mm process

1.44
Simplified Design Rules
■ Conservative rules to get you started

1.45
Inverter Layout
■ Transistor dimensions specified as Width / Length
► Minimum size is 4l / 2l, sometimes called 1 unit
► In f = 0.6 mm process, this is 1.2 mm wide, 0.6 mm long

1.46
Summary
■ MOS Transistors are stack of gate, oxide, silicon
■ Can be viewed as electrically controlled switches
■ Build logic gates out of switches
■ Draw masks to specify layout of transistors
■ Now you know everything necessary to start
designing schematics and layout for a simple chip!

1.47

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