Carbon controlled ohmic contact layer for backside ohmic contact on silicon carbide power semiconductor devices
阅读说明:本技术 用于碳化硅功率半导体器件上的背侧欧姆接触的碳受控欧姆接触层 (Carbon controlled ohmic contact layer for backside ohmic contact on silicon carbide power semiconductor devices ) 是由 T·T·P·法姆 朴金硕 A·康斯坦丁诺夫 T·奈尔 于 2019-07-31 设计创作,主要内容包括:本发明题为“用于碳化硅功率半导体器件上的背侧欧姆接触的碳受控欧姆接触层”。本发明公开了一种半导体功率器件,所述半导体功率器件可包括在其第一表面上形成有有源功率器件的碳化硅SiC层。可在所述SiC层的第二相对表面上形成欧姆接触层,所述欧姆接触层包括具有第一硅化物区域的硅化镍NiSix,所述第一硅化物区域包含第一未反应的碳的析出物并且设置在所述SiC层与第二硅化物区域之间。所述第二硅化物区域可设置在所述第一硅化物区域与第三硅化物区域之间,并且可包含第一难熔金属碳化物的析出物和第二未反应的碳的析出物的混合物。所述第三硅化物区域可包含第二难熔金属碳化物的析出物。可在所述欧姆接触层上形成焊料金属层,其中所述第三硅化物区域设置在所述第二硅化物区域与所述焊料金属层之间。(The invention provides a carbon controlled ohmic contact layer for backside ohmic contacts on silicon carbide power semiconductor devices. A semiconductor power device may include a silicon carbide (SiC) layer having an active power device formed on a first surface thereof. An ohmic contact layer can be formed on a second opposing surface of the SiC layer, the ohmic contact layer including nickel silicide NiSix having a first silicide region containing precipitates of first unreacted carbon and disposed between the SiC layer and a second silicide region. The second silicide region may be disposed between the first silicide region and the third silicide region and may include a mixture of precipitates of a first refractory metal carbide and precipitates of a second unreacted carbon. The third silicide region may include precipitates of a second refractory metal carbide. A solder metal layer may be formed on the ohmic contact layer, wherein the third silicide region is disposed between the second silicide region and the solder metal layer.)
1. A semiconductor power device comprising:
a silicon carbide (SiC) layer on a first surface of which a power device is formed;
an ohmic contact layer formed on a second opposing surface of the SiC layer, the ohmic contact layer comprising nickel silicide NiSix having a first silicide region comprising a first unreacted precipitate of carbon and disposed between the SiC layer and a second silicide region disposed between the first silicide region and a third silicide region comprising a mixture of a first refractory metal carbide precipitate and a second unreacted precipitate of carbon, the third silicide region comprising a second refractory metal carbide precipitate; and
at least one solder metal layer formed on the ohmic contact layer, wherein the third silicide region is disposed between the second silicide region and the at least one solder metal layer.
2. The semiconductor power device of claim 1, wherein the first and second refractory metal carbide precipitates comprise at least 25% of the carbon released from the SiC layer during silicidation to form the NiSix.
3. The semiconductor power device of claim 1 wherein a contact resistance between the ohmic contact layer and the SiC layer is less than about 0.1mOhm cm2。
4. The semiconductor power device of claim 1 wherein the first and second unreacted precipitates of carbon comprise carbon released from the SiC layer during silicidation to form the NiSix.
5. The semiconductor power device of claim 1 wherein carbon in the third silicide region is contained within precipitates of the second refractory metal carbide within at least fifty percent contact regions of the third silicide region with the at least one solder metal layer.
6. The semiconductor power device of claim 1, wherein the first refractory metal carbide precipitates and the second refractory metal carbide precipitates are at least partially formed with a refractory metal having carbon affinity and at least partially melted within the NiSix.
7. The semiconductor power device of claim 1 wherein the SiC layer has a thickness of less than 280 μ ι η.
8. A semiconductor power device comprising:
a silicon carbide SiC layer on a first surface of which a device is formed;
an ohmic contact layer formed on a second opposing surface of the SiC layer, the ohmic contact layer comprising nickel silicide NiSix having a first silicide region comprising a first unreacted precipitate of carbon and disposed between the SiC layer and a second silicide region disposed between the first silicide region and a third silicide region comprising a mixture of a first refractory metal carbide precipitate and a second unreacted precipitate of carbon, the third silicide region comprising a second refractory metal carbide precipitate; and
at least one solder metal layer formed on the ohmic contact layer, wherein the third silicide region is disposed between the second silicide region and the at least one solder metal layer, wherein the first and second refractory metal carbide precipitates comprise at least 25% of the carbon released from the SiC layer during silicidation to form the NiSix.
9. The semiconductor power device of claim 8 wherein the third silicide region is substantially free of unreacted carbon released from the SiC layer during silicidation to form the NiSix.
10. The semiconductor power device of claim 8, wherein the first and second refractory metal carbide precipitates are formed with a refractory metal having carbon affinity and at least partially melt within the NiSix.
11. A method of making a semiconductor power device, the method comprising:
depositing a nickel layer on a silicon carbide (SiC) substrate;
depositing a layer of refractory metal on the nickel layer;
performing at least one laser anneal of the nickel layer and the layer of the refractory metal to form a nickel silicide ohmic contact layer comprising refractory metal carbide precipitates; and
depositing at least one solder metal on the nickel silicide ohmic contact layer.
12. The method of claim 11, comprising:
depositing a second nickel layer on the refractory metal.
13. The method of claim 11, comprising:
thinning the SiC substrate to a thickness of less than 280 μm prior to depositing the nickel layer on the SiC substrate.
Technical Field
This specification relates to silicon carbide high power semiconductor devices.
Background
Silicon carbide (SiC) power devices, particularly silicon carbide power devices, offer advantages such as high switching speeds and low power losses. Examples of high efficiency SiC power devices include, but are not limited to, rectifiers, Field Effect Transistors (FETs), and Bipolar Junction Transistors (BJTs). Various physical characteristics give rise to various advantages of silicon carbide high power devices, such as the high critical field of avalanche breakdown thereof.
Thus, for example, high voltages between 800V and 4500V may be blocked within a very thin layer, such as between approximately 4 μm and 35 μm. Mechanical stability considerations dictate typical SiC substrate thicknesses of between at least about 300 to 500 μm during at least some processing environments, but such thicknesses may be higher than desired from the standpoint of electrical device function. That is, for example, the electrical and thermal resistances of an overly thick substrate tend to affect the performance of SiC high power devices.
To mitigate such effects, thinning may be performed on at least a portion of the SiC substrate. As just mentioned, such a thinned SiC substrate may not be preferred or feasible during, for example, a topside semiconductor process for forming active device structures. In particular, a 150mm or larger SiC substrate thinner than about 280 μm may not be compatible with front end SiC device processing in a wafer fabrication environment. Instead, wafer thinning may be performed at the stage where the top-side active structure is completed (or nearly completed). Thus, the wafer processing after thinning may be limited to specific operations, such as ohmic contact formation followed by deposition of solder metal. Annealing of backside contacts to achieve desired ohmic behavior and low contact resistance may be performed in such scenarios using a pulsed energy source, such as a pulsed laser with a pulse duration of several nanoseconds to several hundred nanoseconds. Contact annealing may then be followed by deposition of a solder metal stack.
A particular feature of SiC is that ohmic contact formation typically requires temperatures between about 850C and 1050C. This is particularly true for forming nickel silicide (NiSix) contacts, which provide low resistivity and good process stability. Nickel silicide can be formed on silicon carbide by reacting SiC with metallic nickel in a similar manner as nickel silicide is formed on silicon. On silicon carbide, the reaction is accompanied by the release of excess carbon, a portion of which is trapped at the interface of SiC and NiSix, and a portion of which diffuses into the silicide to form carbon clusters in the bulk of the silicide and on the free surface of the silicide. The carbon trapped at the SiC/NiSix interface is reported to have the structure of multilayer graphene and advantageously forms an interface with a low barrier to SiC. Thus, this low barrier of carbon to SiC is believed to cause or correlate with the desired ohmic properties of NiSix contacts on SiC.
However, excessive carbon generation and its distribution within the silicide can lead to a number of problems and difficulties. For example, such problems and difficulties may include poor metal adhesion (and lack of stability of the resulting contact) of contacts formed by a furnace or by Rapid Thermal Processing (RTP) annealing.
Disclosure of Invention
In the following disclosure, techniques are disclosed that are suitable for achieving reliable formation of pulsed laser annealed backside contact layers of SiC power devices utilizing thinned SiC substrates. As noted, suitability has been verified, for example, by studies of the actual contact composition and reliability testing of fully processed, diced, and packaged SiC power devices.
The present disclosure describes devices that can provide a near theoretical combination of blocking voltage and on-resistance. On-state specific resistance R of vertical non-injection power devicesponThe threshold of (d) is set by the resistance of the drift region. For non-punch-through devices, the value is Rspon=4BV2/(ε*μ*Ec3) Where BV is the breakdown voltage, epsilon is the absolute permittivity of the semiconductor, mu is the carrier mobility, and Ec is the critical field for avalanche breakdown.
Thus a high power rectifier may be understood to include a specific resistance not exceeding Rspon10 times the theoretical value of the device. While devices with higher specific resistance may be highly limited in their use for high power conversion. Specific resistance RsponShall be defined in its conventional definitionIs understood to be, for example, the differential resistance of an on-state rectifier or switch multiplied by the active device area (i.e., multiplied by the total area of the device unit cell).
For high power applications, the rated current may be limited in such scenarios to a domain above a minimum current of between about 4A and 10A. Some high voltage rectifiers can be implemented with lower current ratings, but such small area power devices are often scaled down versions of mainstream power devices. The disclosure also relates to a high blocking voltage device rated at least about 600V.
According to one general aspect, a semiconductor power device may include a silicon carbide (SiC) layer forming a power device, such as an active power device, on a first surface thereof. The semiconductor power device may include an ohmic contact layer formed on a second opposite surface of the SiC layer. The ohmic contact layer may include nickel silicide (NiSix) having a first silicide region containing precipitates of first unreacted carbon and disposed between the SiC layer and the second silicide region. The second silicide region may be disposed between the first silicide region and the third silicide region and may include a mixture of precipitates of the first refractory metal carbide and precipitates of the second unreacted carbon. The third silicide region may include precipitates of a second refractory metal carbide. The semiconductor power device may include at least one solder metal layer formed on the ohmic contact layer, wherein the third silicide region is disposed between the second silicide region and the at least one solder metal layer. In some embodiments, the carbon in the third silicide region is contained within precipitates of the second refractory metal carbide within at least fifty percent of a contact area of the third silicide region with the at least one solder metal layer.
In some embodiments of one or more such semiconductor power devices, the first and second un-reacted precipitates of carbon may comprise carbon released from the SiC layer during silicidation to form NiSix. In addition, the first refractory metal carbide precipitates and the second refractory metal carbide precipitates may include precipitates of the first refractory metal and precipitates of the second refractory metal that are included with the nickel during formation of the ohmic contact layer.
The details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Drawings
Fig. 1A is a schematic cross section of a SiC power device.
Fig. 1B is a first schematic cross-section of a half-processed version of the SiC power device of fig. 1A.
Fig. 1C is a second schematic cross-section of a half-processed version of the SiC power device of fig. 1A.
Fig. 1D is a third schematic cross-section of a half-processed version of the SiC power device of fig. 1A.
Fig. 1E is a fourth schematic cross-section of a half-processed version of the SiC power device of fig. 1A.
Fig. 1F is a fifth schematic cross-section of a half-processed version of the SiC power device of fig. 1A.
Fig. 1G is a sixth schematic cross-section of a half-processed version of the SiC power device of fig. 1A.
Fig. 2 is a graph illustrating forward voltage drop drift after thermomechanical cycles of a reference process as a function of die count.
Fig. 3 is a flow chart illustrating a first exemplary embodiment for forming one or more of the semiconductor power devices of fig. 1A-1G.
Fig. 4 is a flow chart illustrating a second exemplary embodiment for forming one or more of the semiconductor power devices of fig. 1A-1G.
Fig. 5 is a flow diagram illustrating a third exemplary embodiment for forming one or more of the semiconductor power devices of fig. 1A-1G.
Fig. 6 shows the trend lines for the dependence of the average BV on the average VF for the 4 wafers studied.
Fig. 7A shows a schematic cross section of a laser annealed NiSix contact formed according to the referenced process.
Fig. 7B shows an electron micrograph of the laser annealed NiSix contact of fig. 7A formed according to the referenced process.
Fig. 7C shows the composition of the laser annealed NiSix contact of fig. 7A formed according to the referenced process.
Fig. 8A shows an electron micrograph of a laser annealed NiSix contact formed using carbon gettering according to an exemplary embodiment.
Fig. 8B shows the composition of a laser annealed NiSix contact formed using carbon gettering according to the exemplary embodiment of fig. 8A.
Fig. 8C shows elemental contrast scanning transmission electron microscopy images of nickel silicide contacts of nickel, carbon, vanadium, silicon, and titanium for the exemplary embodiment of fig. 8A and 8B.
Fig. 9 shows an electron micrograph of a NiSix contact according to one exemplary embodiment.
Figure 10 shows a high resolution scan of the ohmic contact composition of the embodiment of figure 9.
Detailed Description
Fig. 1A is a SiC power device structure. In fig. 1A, a
In terms, the first surface of
As described in detail below, the backside
In fig. 1A, backside
In addition, the second silicide region 177a includes a mixture 177 of metal carbide precipitates and additional precipitates of unreacted carbon. The metal carbide precipitates of mixture 177 may be formed by the combination of a refractory metal (such as titanium) and carbon that has diffused from
Further to the backside
Thus, the third silicide region 178a provides a surface with excellent adhesion characteristics with respect to the one or more solder metal layers 181. As described in detail below, the one or more solderable metal layers are thus able to withstand a high degree of thermal and mechanical stress while maintaining physical and electrical contact with the backside
The term precipitate is to be understood in terms relating to and including any cluster, dispersion, crystallite or discontinuous distribution of one or more relevant materials. For example, the metal carbide precipitates and the metal carbide precipitates 178 of the mixture 177 may represent a discontinuous distribution of titanium carbide (TiC) formed from (at least partially) molten titanium that has reacted with carbon that has diffused from the
Fig. 1A is included for purposes of illustrating and describing the general structure and some associated features of the SiC semiconductor power device described and claimed herein. It should be appreciated that FIG. 1A is not intended or intended to represent any particular device or type of device, or portion thereof, as being drawn to scale. Specific examples of relevant dimensions, thicknesses, and other physical parameters of the elements of fig. 1A are provided below, or will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
Thus, the general structure of fig. 1A, as well as various techniques for fabricating such structures and related structures (some of which are described herein), may be used, for example, in any related power SiC device. In this specification (including with respect to fig. 1B-1G below), specific examples are provided in the context of a silicon carbide schottky diode rectifier.
Thus, in fig. 1B-1G, such a rectifier can be understood to provide an example of the
Solder metal, which represents an example of one or more
In contrast, laser sintering pure Ni or nickel-vanadium has shown substandard adhesion of solder metal to nickel silicide. For example, failure occurs due to peeling of the solder metal caused by excessive carbon content near the interface of NiSix and solder metal. Thus, a comparison of the processes and structures described herein with reference processes/structures has been demonstrated, showing significant advantages from the reliability point of view of the resulting SiC power devices.
In fig. 1A, the device thickness, which is best or preferred from an electrical standpoint, is between about 8 μm and 50 μm, or in an exemplary embodiment, no more than about 280 μm, which is much less than the thickness of the SiC substrate that may be processed to form
As mentioned above, fig. 1B is a schematic cross-section of a semi-processed device according to an embodiment. A thinning process may be applied to
The mechanical thinning may also be followed by etching. The combination of mechanical grinding and dry etching can achieve a wafer thickness that is much less than that which can be provided by mechanical grinding alone.
In some examples, the wafer is mechanically thinned to a thickness between about 50 μm and 100 μm. Mechanical thinning can result in a certain amount of subsurface damage that can still be present at the wafer backside even if the wafer backside is polished at the last stage of the thinning process. This sub-surface damage may lead to a high risk of wafer breakage, for example during the stage of removing the substrate from the carrier.
A dry plasma etch can be applied to minimize such sub-surface damage by removing at least 5 to 15 μm of material from the SiC backside. The removal of at least the first 5 μm is preferably performed at a medium power level in the etch tool in order to avoid thermal stress at the wafer during plasma etching, which may increase the probability of crack formation in the wafer. Removal of subsurface damage may facilitate thinning of the SiC power device substrate to a thickness substantially below 100 μm without forming cracks in the wafer.
As can be appreciated from the above discussion of fig. 1A, fabrication of the active device 102 (e.g., a power schottky rectifier wafer) may be finalized by forming the backside
For example, as shown in fig. 1D,
Other metal layers can potentially be deposited in the same run. The wafer with the deposited nickel-containing layer is transferred to a laser annealing tool where the layer is exposed by a
The steps of ohmic metal deposition and laser annealing may be repeated one or more times, and a second (or higher)
After the ohmic contact process is completed, a solder metal stack may be deposited. The solder metal stack may be, for example, Ti/Ni/Ag, although other types of solder stacks may be used. A schematic cross-section of the final completed device structure is shown in fig. 1C.
In one aspect, the time for laser assisted NiSix formation may be as little as between nanoseconds and 100-200ns, which is 9 orders of magnitude shorter than the typical duration of an RTP silicidation process. It may also occur that the exact sintering temperature cannot be measured by direct reading, which is difficult on a nanosecond time scale. Thus, the value of the peak temperature of the laser anneal is generally still unknown for typical manufacturing processes.
The peak annealing temperature may be estimated by a combination of certain measurements, such as surface reflectance and computer simulation. The peak nickel silicidation temperature on a silicon wafer may occur at about 1400C (i.e., near the melting point of silicon) and at temperatures much higher than the temperature of RTP silicidation of Ni on silicon (e.g., between 400C and 800C).
For silicon carbide, RTP silicidation of nickel occurs at a higher temperature than Ni on silicon. In general, the peak temperature of the processes disclosed herein may be at least 1400C, and may exceed 1600C, which is about the melting point of Ti (so that titanium may be partially or fully liquefied when processed as described herein). In addition, laser-assisted processes (including chemical reactions and phase transformations) can be further enhanced by laser stimulation.
In another aspect, a power device according to the present description may be a three-terminal silicon carbide power device utilizing a thinned SiC substrate. The three terminal device may be, for example, a silicon carbide field effect transistor, such as a SiC MOSFET or SiC JFET. Alternatively, the three terminal device may be bipolar, such as a BJT or IGBT, or a thyristor formed in SiC. The design and process of the back side contact of the three-terminal SiC power device may be the same as the design and process of the rectifier. It must be clear to the skilled person that more than one front side bond wire to a three terminal device must be present, and that the bond wires can typically be present in more than two, in order to accommodate the high on-state current of the power device without excessive parasitic resistance and to minimize parasitic lead inductance.
In another aspect, silicon carbide power device chips made in accordance with the present description may be mounted as components of a power module. Power modules are typically assembled on Direct Copper Bonded (DCB) substrates, where a copper layer is bonded to an insulating ceramic substrate. The DCB substrate mounts the desired semiconductor chips, which may be attached to its top metal layer by soldering or using diffusion soldering techniques or by another method. The set of semiconductor chips mounted in the module may, for example, consist entirely of thinned silicon carbide power devices fabricated in accordance with the present disclosure.
Alternatively, the silicon carbide power device may be combined with a silicon power device, as well as with other elements that are intended to be part of a power module. The top side power device terminals are wire bonded or connected by some other technique. The power module is then potted using silicone rubber or using EMC to isolate the power device from environmental effects. The power module may also be used as a sub-circuit of the power conversion device.
The improved integrity of thinned SiC power device backside contacts according to the present description will have a positive effect on device reliability. In some embodiments, a low cost power module utilizing a SiC power device according to the present invention may be assembled in an EMC mold module that does not contain a ceramic substrate. The semiconductor devices in such low cost power device modules are attached to a lead frame and the electrical insulation of the required components of the module is provided by EMC.
In one aspect, SiC power device suitability of SiC power devices is verified by a set of qualification tests set by JEDEC (joint electron device engineering council) and/or by AEC (automobile engineering council). The mentioned group includes a number of tests, of which the test most relevant to the backside contact integrity is Thermo Mechanical Cycling (TMCL), as mentioned above. TMCL test content may depend on the package type.
In the remainder of the specification, one or more comparisons of various disclosed embodiments (such as those described above) are provided with reference to a process (referred to as a "POR"), as well as the more specific exemplary processing options of fig. 3-5 below. More specifically, the reference Process (POR) ohmic contact process includes a single cycle of Ni-V deposition and laser annealing to achieve silicidation. Specific exemplary results of the POR process are described and illustrated below, e.g., with respect to fig. 7A-7C.
In general, POR processes have been found to cause TMCL test failures for via packages unless the deposition of solder metal is preceded by prolonged pre-sputtering. The extended pre-sputtering of the annealed NiSix surface prior to solder metal deposition leaves the via package non-faulty. However, the same die mounted in an SMT package failed the TMCL test. Substitution of pure Ni for Ni-V in the ohmic contact layer did not result in a statistically significant improvement.
Fig. 2 shows the distribution of the value of the diode forward voltage drop (VF) at the rated current after pre-processing plus 100 TMCL cycles. The VF values before testing are also shown for comparison. All values of VF are plotted as a function of the number of samples. In fig. 2, four different graphs correspond to five different types of EMC employed in the package. A significant change in VF indicates the onset of die delamination from the heat spreader, which is verified by failure analysis. The amount of failure strongly depends on the type of EMC applied; however, any lot of 77 parts failed to successfully pass the 1000 cycle TMCL test with pre-treatment before, regardless of which type of EMC was used.
A fault analysis is performed to identify the exact location of the delamination and indicates that die delamination occurred just along the interface of the NiSix contact with the solder metal, as established by X-ray emission analysis of the residue on the SiC chip after delamination. Thus, this failure analysis confirms the discussion above with respect to FIG. 1A that, for example, the presence of free carbon near the NiSix/solder metal interface results in a rough surface and poor adhesion characteristics.
Fig. 3 is a flow chart illustrating a first option of a semiconductor manufacturing process according to the present description. In fig. 3, the formation of the top-side power device structure (302) is followed by wafer thinning (304), as described above. The
A first laser anneal is then performed (310), followed by the deposition of a second nickel layer (312). The second laser anneal (314) is followed by the deposition (316) of one or more solder metals. Die singulation (318) may then be performed followed by appropriate packaging (320) of the formed device.
As a more specific example of
After the first anneal, an additional 70nm of Ni-V may be deposited, after which a second laser anneal may be performed. A solder metal stack of Ti/Ni/Ag may then be applied to the back side of the wafer.
A device wafer using the design and process according to
Fig. 4 is a flow chart illustrating a second option of a semiconductor manufacturing process according to the present description, referred to herein as option 2. In option 2, top side power device formation (402), wafer thinning (404), and nickel deposition (406) are directly followed by a first laser anneal (408).
A
As a more specific example with respect to option 2 of fig. 4, the ohmic contact may be formed by depositing a 50nm titanium layer between two nickel layers to be laser annealed. Can deposit 70nm Ni-V layerOnto the backside of the SiC power rectifier wafer, which is mechanically thinned to 100 μm. Laser annealing of the contact may be performed using a green (532nm) pulsed laser having a pulse length of about 140ns with a pulse of 2J/cm2The energy of (a).
After laser annealing, an additional 50nm thick Ti layer and 70nm Ni-V can be deposited in sequence, after which the laser annealing can be repeated. The solder metal stack may be implemented as Ti/Ni/Ag, which may then be applied to the back side of the wafer.
A device wafer using the design and process according to option 2 was diced, packaged in a D2PACK package, and subjected to pre-treatment and a thermo-mechanical cycle (TMCL) of 1000 temperature cycles from-55C to 150C. The test conditions and the lot tested (77 devices) were the same as those applied to devices processed and tested according to the reference process and to devices using
Fig. 5 is a flow chart illustrating a third option of a semiconductor manufacturing process according to the present description, referred to herein as option 3. As shown and described, option 3 of fig. 5 requires only a single laser anneal. In particular, topside power device structure formation 502 is followed by wafer thinning 504, followed by nickel deposition 506 and deposition 508 of an appropriate carbon gettering material. Then, a single laser anneal is performed (510). Solder metal stack deposition 512, die singulation 514, and packaging 516 may then follow.
In the embodiment of option 3 of fig. 5, the ohmic contact may be formed using a single cycle of metal deposition and laser annealing, where a 70nm Ni-V layer and a 50nm Ti layer are sequentially deposited onto the backside of a SiC power rectifier wafer that is mechanically thinned to 100 μm. Laser annealing of the contact may be performed using a green (532nm) pulsed laser having a pulse length of about 140ns and an energy of 2J/cm2Of (2) is performed. A solder metal stack of Ti/Ni/Ag may then be applied to the back side of the wafer.
A device wafer using the design and process according to option 3 was diced, packaged in a D2PACK package, and subjected to pre-treatment and a thermo-mechanical cycle (TMCL) of 1000 temperature cycles from-55C to 150C. The test conditions and the lot tested (77 devices) were the same as those applied to devices processed and tested according to the reference process and to devices using
As described above, performing at least one laser anneal may include performing a first laser anneal after depositing the nickel layer and the refractory metal layer and before depositing the second nickel layer, and performing a second laser anneal after depositing the second nickel layer. In other embodiments, performing at least one laser anneal may include performing a first laser anneal after depositing the nickel layer and before depositing the refractory metal layer and the second nickel layer, and performing a second laser anneal after depositing the refractory metal layer and the second nickel layer.
Thus, nickel silicide contacts formed using laser annealing with carbon gettering (such as described above with respect to fig. 3-5) may form an interface with solder metal with sufficiently strong adhesion to prevent delamination along the solder metal. Two types of tests may be applied to verify such solder metal adhesion, such as die shear tests and tape tests.
In another aspect, SiC power devices (as in fig. 3-5) utilizing laser annealed backside nickel silicide formed with a carbon gettering layer have low contact resistance, which does not significantly contribute to the on-state voltage drop. The exemplary specific contact resistance required to achieve this goal is preferably below 0.1mOhm cm2。
Thus, one requirement for backside contacts for many types of SiC devices is low specific contact resistance. For example, to date, SiC rectifiers with 650V blocking voltage ratings may have less than 1mOhm cm2On-state specific resistance of (d). 0.1mOhm cm2The specific contact resistance of (a) will introduce an additional resistance of more than 10%, which is undesirable. Whereas future SiC devices are expected to have lower values of on-resistance, which requires that the specific resistance is substantially lower than 0.1mOhm cm2Of the contact of (a).
Table 1 shows the results of wafer testing of 4 power rectifier wafers. All dies have a nominal on-state current of 10 amps and a target of 650VReferred to as blocking voltage. The actual blocking voltage is a higher value in order to provide the required safety margin. Wafers W1 and W2 were fabricated using a reference Process (POR). Wafer W3 was performed using new process option 2 of fig. 4, and W4 was performed using
TABLE 1。
Wafer
Average VF (V)
Average BV (V)
W1
1.349
766
W2
1.394
819
W3
1.357
780
W4
1.368
784
In FIG. 6, 4 wafersThe trend line for the dependence of average BV on average VF indicates that the dependence of all 4 wafers tested falls approximately on the same trade-off dependence between average breakdown voltage versus average forward voltage drop. Thus, the process modification has no significant effect on the overall voltage drop of the power rectifier. 0.1mOhm cm for any process option2The contact resistance is 630A/cm2The forward bias at the rated current density is offset by 63mV, which is clearly absent from the trend line in fig. 6. The 63mV shift will exceed the entire span of the voltage axis of the graph shown in fig. 6, which is obviously not the case. The contact resistance of the different process options is therefore substantially below 0.1mOhmcm2. Test data for a rectifier device formed using option 3 of fig. 5 (i.e., a single cycle of metal deposition and laser annealing) also indicates the same low forward voltage drop as
As mentioned above, fig. 7A-7C show the results of a Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) analysis performed to analyze contact cross-sections 702 a-710 a of SiC power devices formed using one of the POR processes. Specifically, fig. 7A-7C show a schematic cross-section (fig. 7A), electron micrograph (fig. 7B), and composition (fig. 7C) of a laser annealed NiSix contact.
As shown in FIG. 7A,
As can be seen in fig. 7B, a large amount of carbon precipitates are present in the bulk of the NiSix ohmic contact metal 704B. Carbon clusters or precipitates are present near the interface of SiC with NiSix, in the bulk of NiSix, and at the top surface of NiSix, i.e., near the interface with the solder metal.
The high peak in carbon content is also seen in the elemental profile of the layer composition near the interface of NiSix and the solder metal, as shown in fig. 7C. As mentioned, the peak is particularly undesirable because it means that the interface is rough and associated stickyThe attachment force is lacking. POR samples with pure Ni as the source of NiSix formation (rather than NiV) showed similar carbon near-interface peaks and similar reliability issues. The NiSix composition is in this case proportional to about 62/38, which corresponds to about Ni3Si2NiSix.
In contrast, fig. 8A is a STEM image generally corresponding to the structure of fig. 1A. Fig. 8A corresponds to a structure formed using
Fig. 8A shows the silicide of the
A mixture of larger carbon precipitates (or clusters) and unreacted carbon is formed in
In contrast Stem images (where the heavier elements show a brighter contrast), such as in fig. 8C (where the corresponding element symbols are included in the upper right hand corner of each image), it can be observed that the bright contrast of carbon is completely related to the contrast of Ti. In such images, the bright contrast of carbon and titanium correlates with the dark contrast of nickel and silicon in
A continuous layer of Ti is no longer present in
The formation of TiC also occurs in the
A TiC-
The use of a gettering Ti layer that is too thick (e.g.,
Furthermore, if the
Thus, the carbon concentration in
Finally, with respect to fig. 8A and 8B, it can be observed that the NiSix composition resulting from
Fig. 9 shows a STEM image of a cross section of the NiSix ohmic contact layer 975 formed using option 2 of fig. 4. The position of the precipitate marked free carbon ("C") in the STEM image and the measured NiSix composition (Ni)3Si2). The composition may be combined with POR (Ni)2Si3) Comparison was made and differs from Process option 1 (Ni)3Si)。
Free carbon is present in the layer below the NiSix layer in
A high resolution scan is performed near the interface of NiSix with solder metal 981 and an example of such a scan is shown in fig. 10. The x-coordinate of the scan in fig. 10 increases in the direction from the ohmic
One conclusion drawn from structural studies of the NiSix ohmic contact layer 175,875,975 was that both a short anneal time of, for example, 140ns and a high temperature about or above the melting point of TiAnd no obstacle is brought to effective absorption and removal of excessive carbon in the laser annealing process. Another conclusion is that the addition of other metals with high affinity for carbon can be used to getter excess carbon in the NiSix laser annealing contact with SiC. Vanadium represents one example of such a metal, as mentioned above. Other metals, such as W, Mo or Ta, may also be used. Silicides of such metals can potentially be used as substitutes for pure metals. Furthermore, the applied refractory metal does not necessarily have to be limited to heavy elements. For example, titanium diboride may be used as a carbon getter. Boron will also react with carbon to form boron carbide B4C。
In one aspect, as described herein, the top surface of the annealed nickel silicide should preferably be free of any free carbon, as free carbon may affect the reliability of the solder metal adhesion. The top surface of the nickel silicide contact may have an increased carbon content; however, such added carbon should preferably be incorporated into the refractory metal carbide, as is the case with the examples of the composition profiles of
It is possible that the second silicide layer 177/877 contains only precipitates of free carbon in its lower portion, e.g., indicating a transition from the first silicide region 876 to the second silicide region 877 (e.g., as may occur in the case of
In various embodiments, there may be a preferred amount of carbon gettering metal and/or a boundary of preferred locations for such metal prior to laser annealing. Some of these boundaries are disclosed above, for example, with respect to the embodiment associated with
Preferably, the gettering metal is separated from the SiC surface by at least 10nm to 20nm of nickel. A small amount of gettering metal of 10% to 15% or less may still be present as an additive to the Ni layer deposited on the SiC surface prior to laser annealing, a possibility evidenced by the effect of vanadium in the 3 process options disclosed above. The above description demonstrates the significance of gettering metal separated by a sufficiently thick layer of nickel.
Thus, carbon gettering material that is too thick and/or placed too close to the SiC/NiSix interface may inhibit the formation of interfacial carbon cluster regions (176a,876a,976a) that at least partially contribute to the ohmic nature of the contact. On the other hand, too low an amount of gettering metal will cause too much free carbon in
In the latter case, the effect of insufficient amount of gettering material can be observed from the effect of vanadium relative to that disclosed in the previous embodiment. That is, as mentioned, vanadium is often added to nickel sputtering targets in semiconductor manufacturing in order to avoid the effects of the nickel-iron magnetic properties of pure nickel, which are not desirable for certain types of metal sputtering tools. The typical concentration of vanadium addition is 7%, as is the Ni-V alloy described in the previous embodiment. However, this concentration of 7% is not sufficient to provide the level of carbon gettering required for stability of the backside contact stack. It can be estimated that the lower bound of the amount of gettering metal in the ohmic metal stack (such as
The stoichiometry rules may be used to determine a minimum amount of nickel-refractory metal (ReM) metal stack to be laser annealed to present ReM. The amount of ReM should be sufficient to adsorb the carbon resulting from the silicidation of nickel with SiC, and there is no agglomeration of precipitates on unreacted carbon at the top side of the nickel silicide.
Substantially all of the nickel deposited on the SiC prior to laser annealing will react to form nickel silicide; thus, on average, each Ni atom will yield 0.33 to 0.67 carbon atoms, depending on the actual nickel silicide composition, which may be in Ni3Si to Ni3Si2May be varied within the range of (1). The amount of refractory metal in the laser annealed metal stack should therefore be sufficient to incorporate at least about 25% of the carbon resulting from the formation of nickel silicide from SiC and Ni. As mentioned above, it is possible that all or almost all of the deposited nickel is silicided because the refractory metal is dispersed and/or non-continuous, so the refractory metal prevents little or no diffusion of silicon through the nickel layer.
Some portion of the released carbon can still be present in the nickel silicide in the form of free carbon precipitates in the bulk of the silicide. Some of these precipitates will be located near the interface of the silicide and SiC, while another portion may still be present in the bulk of the nickel silicide and not reach the top silicide surface, as evidenced in the STEM analysis image of the option 2 process shown in fig. 9. The portion of unreacted carbon in the nickel silicide body may be at most 75% of the total amount released as a result of the reaction of SiC with nickel. The remaining at least 25% of the released carbon may be bonded to the carbide of the refractory metal in order to avoid unreacted carbon at the top surface of the nickel silicide. As an example, the 50nm Ti utilized in Process option 2 would theoretically consume Ni formed by the reaction of nickel with SiC2Si3And up to 38% of the carbon produced. 38 percent ofThe amount of (b) takes into account the 7% fraction of vanadium in the deposited Ni-V layer, since vanadium also participates in the gettering of excess carbon.
The exact minimum amount of refractory metal required will depend on the stoichiometry of the carbide formed by the refractory metal. As an example, for titanium, the stoichiometric coefficient is 1, i.e., 1 Ti atom to 1 carbon atom. If the refractory metal is introduced as a silicide, the silicon released as a result of the refractory metal carbide formation should also be taken into account in the corresponding stoichiometry calculation. The minimum required amount of carbon gettering metal may depend on the exact configuration of the laser annealed metal stack, as is clear from a comparison of
Locating the gettering metal near the SiC surface (as is the case with
In one aspect, the process of backside contact laser annealing is not expected to provide perfect uniformity within the wafer. As one example, available lasers do not provide the possibility of exposing the entire wafer backside at the desired density level. The laser beam is scanned over the wafer area and there is some stitching of the exposure area. The splice region may be exposed to conditions that deviate from optimal conditions, and complete gettering of free carbon may not necessarily occur at the interface of the silicide ohmic contact and the solder metal in such splice regions.
Another possible source of irregularities may be contamination of the SiC surface prior to metal deposition, since the routine of cleaning the backside after wafer thinning may not fully comply with the same standards as applied to the front side process. A region where no such unreacted carbon is observed in the vicinity of the solder metal region in the sample formed according to
Solder metal adhesion may not be significantly affected provided that interfacial carbon near its interface is gettered to form refractory carbides in a substantial portion of the device region, in which case the resulting SiC device may not substantially deviate from the SiC devices taught in this specification. It is expected that the relatively poorly solderable metal-adhered region will form a discontinuous network when its fraction does not exceed about one-third of the total backside contact area, which sets an exemplary upper boundary for the fraction of the defect portions in region 178a that have un-gettered carbon. Preferably, however, the fraction should be kept as low as possible, preferably 0.1 or 0.01, or eliminated altogether.
The laser annealing embodiments disclosed in the above examples were performed using a pulsed visible laser with a wavelength of 532 nm. The laser wavelength is chosen for compatibility considerations of the SiC process with existing processes used for silicon device processing, but other wavelengths may be suitable, such as between 170nm and 10 microns.
Previous disclosures of laser annealing of NiSix ohmic contacts to SiC have been limited to the use of Ultraviolet (UV) laser light having a wavelength between about 360nm and 240 nm. UV laser light may have the advantage that laser light penetrating a portion of the exposed metal layer may be absorbed in SiC. However, this requirement does not necessarily apply to laser annealing of NiSix contacts to SiC. Laser damage to the top-side device features is theoretically possible when annealing with visible light on the backside contact because SiC is transparent to visible laser energy that may penetrate into SiC if the annealed metal contact contains voids. However, for both SiC schottky diode and SiC MOSFET processes, laser damage to the top-side device pattern can be eliminated. This is achieved by application of standard semiconductor process control to avoid large voids in the metal stack to be laser annealed.
The carbon gettering techniques disclosed herein for NiSix laser annealed ohmic contact formation to SiC may also be performed with laser pulses of UV light. A pulsed Infrared (IR) laser may also be utilized for purposes of NiSix ohmic contact annealing. UV laser annealing may be used, for example, when process stability is not good enough to ensure formation of a continuous metal film at the wafer backside that is needed to protect the topside active structure pattern from overexposure to visible laser light. One advantage of using visible and IR laser systems may be their lower equipment cost, since pulsed UV radiation is typically achieved by up-conversion of IR or visible light.
It will be understood that in the foregoing description, when an element such as a layer, region, substrate or component is referred to as being on, connected to, electrically connected to, coupled to or electrically coupled to another element, it can be directly on, connected or coupled to the other element or one or more intervening elements may be present. In contrast, when an element is referred to as being directly on, directly connected to, or directly coupled to another element or layer, there are no intervening elements or layers present. While the terms directly on …, directly connected to …, or directly coupled to … may not be used throughout the detailed description, elements shown as directly on, directly connected, or directly coupled to elements may be referred to in such a manner. The claims of this application, if any, may be amended to recite exemplary relationships that are described in the specification or illustrated in the drawings.
As used in this specification and the claims, the singular form can include the plural form unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. In addition to the orientations shown in the figures, spatially relative terms (e.g., above …, above …, above …, below …, below …, below …, below …, etc.) are intended to encompass different orientations of the device in use or operation. In some embodiments, relative terms above … and below … may include vertically above … and vertically below …, respectively. In some embodiments, the term adjacent can include laterally adjacent or horizontally adjacent.
Some embodiments may be implemented using various semiconductor processing and/or packaging techniques. Some embodiments may be implemented using various types of semiconductor processing techniques associated with semiconductor substrates including, but not limited to, for example, silicon (Si), gallium arsenide (GaAs), gallium nitride (GaN), silicon carbide (SiC), and the like.
While certain features of the described embodiments have been illustrated as described herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes, and equivalents will now occur to those skilled in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the scope of the embodiments. It is to be understood that such modifications and variations are presented by way of example only, and not limitation, and various changes in form and detail may be made. Any portion of the devices and/or methods described herein may be combined in any combination, except mutually exclusive combinations. The embodiments described herein can include various combinations and/or subcombinations of the functions, components and/or features of the different embodiments described.
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