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Fabrication

The document summarizes the key fabrication steps for creating a CMOS inverter on a silicon wafer: 1) An n-well is formed on the p-type substrate using diffusion or implantation of n-type dopants. 2) A thin gate oxide and polysilicon layer are deposited, then patterned to form the transistor gates. 3) N-type and p-type dopants are diffused or implanted into the wafer in a self-aligned process to form the source and drain regions. 4) A thick oxide is deposited and contacts are etched to connect the transistors, then metal interconnect layers are added to wire up the inverter.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views39 pages

Fabrication

The document summarizes the key fabrication steps for creating a CMOS inverter on a silicon wafer: 1) An n-well is formed on the p-type substrate using diffusion or implantation of n-type dopants. 2) A thin gate oxide and polysilicon layer are deposited, then patterned to form the transistor gates. 3) N-type and p-type dopants are diffused or implanted into the wafer in a self-aligned process to form the source and drain regions. 4) A thick oxide is deposited and contacts are etched to connect the transistors, then metal interconnect layers are added to wire up the inverter.

Uploaded by

fayaz
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Fabrication

Slide 1
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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 2


Inverter Cross-section
 Typically use p-type substrate for nMOS transistors
 Requires n-well for body of pMOS transistors
A
GND VDD
Y SiO2

n+ diffusion

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

nMOS transistor pMOS transistor

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 3


Well and Substrate Taps
 Substrate must be tied to GND and n-well to VDD
 Metal to lightly-doped semiconductor forms poor
connection called Shottky Diode
 Use heavily doped well and substrate contacts / taps
A
GND VDD
Y

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

n well
p substrate

substrate tap well tap

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 4


Inverter Mask Set
 Transistors and wires are defined by masks
 Cross-section taken along dashed line

GND VDD

nMOS transistor pMOS transistor


substrate tap well tap

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 5


Detailed Mask Views
 Six masks
n well

– n-well
– Polysilicon
Polysilicon

– n+ diffusion
– p+ diffusion n+ Diffusion

– Contact p+ Diffusion

– Metal Contact

Metal

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 6


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 7


Oxidation
 Grow SiO2 on top of Si wafer
– 900 – 1200 C with H2O or O2 in oxidation furnace

SiO2

p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 8


Photoresist
 Spin on photoresist
– Photoresist is a light-sensitive organic polymer
– Softens where exposed to light

Photoresist
SiO2

p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 9


Lithography
 Expose photoresist through n-well mask
 Strip off exposed photoresist

Photoresist
SiO2

p substrate

Slide 10
Etch
 Etch oxide with hydrofluoric acid (HF)
– Seeps through skin and eats bone; nasty stuff!!!
 Only attacks oxide where resist has been exposed

Photoresist
SiO2

p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 11


Strip Photoresist
 Strip off remaining photoresist
– Use mixture of acids called piranah etch
 Necessary so resist doesn’t melt in next step

SiO2

p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 12


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 Implanatation
– Blast wafer with beam of As ions
– Ions blocked by SiO2, only enter exposed Si
SiO2

n well

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 13


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 14


Polysilicon
 Deposit very thin layer of gate oxide
– < 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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 15


Polysilicon Patterning
 Use same lithography process to pattern polysilicon

Polysilicon

Polysilicon
Thin gate oxide

n well
p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 16


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 17


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 18


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

n+ n+ n+
n well
p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 19


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

n+ n+ n+

n well
p substrate

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 20


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 21


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 22


Metalization
 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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 23


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 24


CMOS Inverter

A Y VDD
0
1
A Y

A Y
GND
CMOS VLSI Design Slide 25
CMOS Inverter

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

ON
A Y
GND
CMOS VLSI Design Slide 26
CMOS Inverter

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

OFF
A Y
GND
CMOS VLSI Design Slide 27
CMOS NAND Gate
A B Y
0 0
0 1 Y
1 0 A
1 1
B

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 28


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 29


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 30


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 31


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 32


CMOS NOR Gate
A B Y
0 0 1 A
0 1 0
1 0 0 B
1 1 0 Y

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 33


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

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 34


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

Y
A
B
C

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 35


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  = f/2
– E.g.  = 0.3 m in 0.6 m process

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 36


Simplified Design Rules
 Conservative rules to get you started

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 37


Inverter Layout
 Transistor dimensions specified as Width / Length
– Minimum size is 4 / 2sometimes called 1 unit
– In f = 0.6 m process, this is 1.2 m wide, 0.6 m
long

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 38


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!

CMOS VLSI Design Slide 39

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