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Ken-ichi GOTO Tatsuya YAMAZAKI Yasuo NARA Tetsu FUKANO Toshihiro SUGII Yoshihiro ARIMOTO Takashi ITO
Using Ti self-aligned silicide (salicide) process, we fabricated subquarter-micron complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) devices, and studied the mechanism of increasing resistivity of TiSi2 on poly-Si gates from 0.075 to 20 µm long and 10 µm wide. In the gates less than 0.1 µm long, we found that agglomeration of TiSi2 takes place during low temperature annealing at 675 for 30 seconds leading to discontinuous TiSi2 lines. The discontinuity of TiSi2 abruptly increases the gate resistance, and remarkably reduces the circuit speed of CMOS ring oscillators. On the other hand, Raman spectroscopy reveals that the phase transition from high-resistivity C49 to low-resistivity C54 occurs in plane TiSi2 by annealing at 800 for 30 seconds, while it does not occur in TiSi2 gates less than 5 µm long. From these results we found that the gate sheet resistance can not be reduced to less than 5 Ω/sq by conventional Ti salicide technology in gates shorter than 0.4 µm due to increase in gate resistance caused by agglomeration and lack of phase transition.
Yasuo NARA Manabu DEURA Ken-ichi GOTO Tatsuya YAMAZAKI Tetsu FUKANO Toshihiro SUGII
This paper describes the fabrication of 0.1 µm gate length CMOS devices and analysis of delay time by circuit simulation. In order to reduce the gate resistance, TiN capped cobalt salicide technology is applied to the fabrication of 0.1 µm CMOS devices. Gate sheet resistance with a 0.1 µm gate is as low as 5 Ω/sq. Propagation delay times of 0.1 µm and 0.15 µm CMOS inverter are 21 ps and 36 ps. Simulated propagation delay time agreed fairly well with experimental results. For gate length over 0.15 µm, intrinsic delay in CMOS devices is the main dalay factor. This suggests that increasing current drivability is the most efficient way to improve propagation delay time. At 0.1 µm, each parasitic component and intrinsic delay have similar contributions on device speed due to the short channel effect. To improve delay time, we used rapid thermal annealing or a high dose LDD structure. With this structure, drain current increases by more than 1.3 times and simulation predicted a delay time of 28 ps is possible with 0.15 µm CMOS inverters.
Manabu KOJIMA Atsushi FUKURODA Tetsu FUKANO Naoshi HIGAKI Tatsuya YAMAZAKI Toshihiro SUGII Yoshihiro ARIMOTO Takashi ITO
We propose a high-speed SOI bipolar transistor fabricated using bonding and thinning techniques. It is important to replace SOI area except for devices with thick SiO2 to reduce parasitic capacitance. A thin SOI film with a thin buried layer helps meet this requirement. We formed a 1-µm-thick SOI film with a 0.7-µm-thick buried layer by ion implantation before wafer bonding pulse-field-assisted bonding and selective polishing. Devices were completely isolated by thick SiO2 using a thin SOI film and the LOCOS process. We fabricated epitaxial base transistors (EBTs) on bonded SOI. Our transistors had a cutoff frequency of 32 GHz.
Naoshi HIGAKI Tetsu FUKANO Atsushi FUKURODA Toshihiro SUGII Yoshihiro ARIMOTO Takashi ITO
We fabricated a 4 GHz thin-base (120 nm) lateral bipolar transistor on bonded SOI by applying our sidewall self-aligning base process. By applying this device to BiCMOS circuits, bipolar transistor base junction capacitance, and MOSFET source and drain capacitance were very small. Furthermore, MOSFET and bipolar transistors are completely isolated from each other. Thus, it is easy to optimize MOS and bipolar processes, and provide protection from latch-up problems and soft errors caused by α-particles. In this paper, we describe device characteristics and discuss the crystal quality degradation introduced by ion implantation, and two dimensional effects of base diffusion capacitance.