Patent Description:
In a vertical transistor device, a vertical channel region is formed in the body region of the device. The gate region is arranged laterally aside, it comprises a gate interlayer dielectric and a gate electrode. By applying a voltage to the gate electrode, the channel formation in the channel region can be controlled. The source and the drain region of the device can be arranged at opposite sides of the semiconductor substrate, for instance the source region at a front side and the drain region at a back side of the substrate.

<CIT> discloses two vertical FETs in a back-to-back configuration, wherein the drain regions of the FETs are connected by metal filled backside trenches.

<CIT> also shows to FETs connected via backside trenches. To reduce a warpage, the backside trenches can only be filled partially.

<CIT> shows two monolithically integrated FETs with a common drain backside electrode.

<CIT> shows a vertical transistor with a backside electrode integrated in trenches which can have a longitudinal or polygonal or circular shape.

It is an object of the present disclosure to provide a semiconductor switch element with improved characteristics, as well as a method of manufacturing such a switch element.

This object is achieved by the switch element of claim <NUM>, and moreover it is achieved by the method of claim <NUM>.

The switch element comprises a first vertical transistor device and a second vertical transistor device formed in the same substrate. The source regions of the transistor devices are arranged on a first side of the substrate, and the drain regions are formed vertically opposite on a second side of the substrate. The drain regions are connected with each other by a conductive element which is arranged on the second side of the substrate. Furthermore, a trench is formed on the second side of the substrate, and at least a part of the conductive element is arranged in this trench and fills only a portion of the trench. Another portion of the trench is filled with a polymeric material that covers the second side of the substrate only partly.

By forming the conductive element in the trench, the conductive material can be arranged closer to the active region of the respective device, e. closer to the drift region. In this way, the "effective thickness" of the substrate can be reduced in terms of the electric resistance, and a lower resistivity can for instance reduce conduction losses. The switch element with the transistor devices, which are arranged in this common drain or "back-to-back" configuration, can for instance be used in a battery management system, wherein the reduced conduction losses can allow for higher charging currents. Vice versa, when the same "effective thickness" would be realized without the trench structure by a homogeneous back side grinding, the remaining substrate thickness would be so small that an excessive wafer bow would result. The wafer bow, which can for instance result from the mismatch in the thermal expansion of the substrate and the metal and can depend on the substrate and metal thickness, could cause handling problems, e. in the subsequent backend processing.

Further embodiments and features are provided in this description and in the dependent claims. Therein, the individual features shall be disclosed independently of a specific claim category, the disclosure relates to apparatus and device aspects, but also to method and use aspects. If for instance a switch element manufactured in a specific way is described, this is also a disclosure of a respective manufacturing process, and vice versa. In general words, an approach of this application is to arrange the drain contact or metallization of a vertical transistor device in a trench.

Seen in a vertical cross-section, the trench is a recess which extends into the substrate to a bottom of the trench. Laterally, it is defined by the sidewalls of the trench. Perpendicularly to such a cross-section, the trench can for instance have an elongated shape, or it can have a hole-like shape, see in detail below. The conductive element can be formed of any conductive material, like for instance doped polysilicon. In particular, the conductive material can be a metal material, e. copper, in particular a copper-based alloy.

In general, the entire conductive element could be arranged in the trench, for instance in case of a single longitudinal trench connecting the transistor devices. Alternatively, only a part of the conductive element can be arranged in the trench, other parts of the conductive element being arranged in other trenches and/or on the surface of the substrate, namely on the second side thereof. A conductive element extending partially on the surface of the substrate can be combined with longitudinal trenches or hole-shaped trenches. In case of hole-shaped trenches, the part of the conductive element arranged on the surface can connect the transistor devices laterally.

The source and the drain region of a respective transistor device can be of a first conductivity type, its body region being of a second conductivity type opposite to the first conductivity type. In the illustrated embodiments, the first conductivity type is n-type and the second conductivity type is p-type. The vertical transistor devices are formed in the same substrate, which can enable a small footprint and low profile package thus (particularly advantageous in e. handheld applications). The substrate can for instance be formed by the initial wafer material, for example silicon wafer material, e. together with one or more epitaxial layers. In the latter, the source and the body regions can be formed. In general words, the substrate is formed of the semiconducting layer(s) of the switch element, which can be or is/are doped. Each transistor device can comprise a plurality of transistor cells, which have a common source contact, a common drain contact and a common gate contact. In contrast thereto, the first and the second transistor device can respectively have an individual gate contact. In other words, the first and the second transistor device can be switched independently of each other.

The "vertical" direction lies perpendicular to a surface of the substrate, for instance a surface of the silicon wafer material and/or a surface of an epitaxial layer. The first and the second side of the substrate lie opposite to each other with respect to the vertical direction. The lateral directions lie perpendicular to the vertical direction, the die area is for instance taken laterally. The trench formed at the second side of the substrate extends vertically into the substrate.

In an embodiment, the trench has a vertical depth of <NUM> at minimum, in particular <NUM> at minimum. Possible upper limits of the trench depth can for instance be <NUM> at maximum, in particular <NUM> at maximum. In this range, a trade-off between for instance a reduction of the remaining effective thickness and an acceptable mechanical stress in the substrate can be achieved.

Between the channel and the drain region, a respective transistor device can comprise a drift region. The drift region and the drain region both are of the first conductivity type, for instance n-type, wherein the doping concentration is lower in the drift region. By arranging the conductive element or material in the trench, it can be brought rather close to the drift region, which lowers the resistivity. In an embodiment, the vertical distance between a bottom of the trench and the drift region is <NUM> at maximum, further upper limits being <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> at maximum. Possible lower limits of the vertical distance can for instance be <NUM> or <NUM>.

In an embodiment, the trench has a lateral width of <NUM> at maximum, further upper limits being for instance <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM> or <NUM> at maximum. Possible lower limits of the lateral width can for instance be <NUM> or <NUM> at minimum. The width is taken at the vertically outer end of the trench, opposite to the bottom of the trench. In particular, the width can be taken in a second lateral direction perpendicular to a first lateral direction (in the first lateral direction, the transistor devices are arranged laterally aside each other, see below).

According to the invention, the conductive material fills only a portion of the trench, wherein no conductive material is arranged in another portion of the trench. The conductive material can cover the bottom and/or sidewalls of the trench, leaving, in a cross-sectional view, a central portion without conductive material. The partial filling of the trench can for instance reduce the mechanical stress in the substrate, as the conductive material, in particular metal, can have more free space to relax.

According to the invention, the other portion of the trench, which is not filled with conductive material, is filled with a polymeric material. Together, the conductive material and the polymeric material can fill up the trench completely. With the polymeric material filler, a void inside the trench can be avoided, which can for instance be advantageous in view of later environmental stress (like humidity and the like). The polymeric material can be an epoxy material, for example an epoxy resin.

Basically, the transistor devices could be connected by a single longitudinal trench. In an embodiment, however, a plurality of trenches are formed on the second side of the substrate, wherein a part of the conductive element is arranged in each of the trenches. Compared to the single trench solution, this can for instance enable a more even distribution of the mechanical stress in the substrate.

In an embodiment, at least some of the trenches are arranged laterally aside each other in a second lateral direction. In a first lateral direction, the transistor devices lie laterally aside each other, wherein the second lateral direction lies perpendicular thereto. As can be seen from the exemplary embodiments, the trenches arranged aside each other can be longitudinal trenches (see <FIG>) or hole-shaped trenches (see <FIG>).

In an embodiment, a plurality of hole-shaped trenches are formed on the second side of the substrate. In a respective hole-shaped trench, the conductive material can for instance have columnar shape, in particular a hollow columnar shape in case of the partial filling described above. Providing hole-shaped trenches can also allow for an even distribution of the wafer bow in both, the first and the second lateral direction.

In an embodiment, a first subset of the hole-shaped trenches is arranged vertically aligned with the first transistor device, and a second subset of the hole-shaped trenches is arranged vertically aligned with the second transistor device. Via the first subset, the current can be collected from the drain region of the first transistor device, and via the second subset, the current can be collected from the drain region of the second transistor device. In other words, the first subset of trenches reduces the effective substrate thickness at the first transistor device, and the second subset of trenches reduces the effective thickness at the second transistor device.

The hole-shaped trenches can be arranged in rows. In each row, some of the trenches can be aligned, in particular on a straight line respectively. The rows are arranged laterally aside each other, e. basically parallel to each other. In an embodiment, the hole-shaped trenches of neighbouring rows are arranged with an offset to each other. In other words, along the row direction, the hole-shaped trenches are arranged alternately in one of the two neighbouring rows respectively. The mechanical stress in the substrate can depend on the distance between neighbouring trenches, namely increase with decreasing distance. Provided that the distance between neighbouring trenches remains unchanged, the offset can allow for a denser packing (e. up to <NUM> %) of the hole-shaped trenches and a lower resistivity without increasing the mechanical stress in the substrate. The offset trenches can for instance be arranged in a hexagonal pattern, e. a honeycomb pattern.

In a horizontal cross-section, a hole-shaped trench can basically have any cross-section, for instance a polygonal cross-section, e. rectangular (possibly with rounded edges). In an embodiment, a respective hole-shaped trench has a circular cross-section. This can allow for a dense packing of the trenches and/or a reduction of the mechanical stress in the substrate due to the round shape.

In an embodiment, the trench is a longitudinal trench and extends laterally from the first to the second transistor device. A middle section of the longitudinal trench can be arranged laterally between the transistor devices, and the end sections of the trench can lie vertically aligned with one of the transistor devices respectively. When a plurality of longitudinal trenches are provided, these can be arranged laterally aside each other in the first lateral direction (see above). In particular, the trenches can extend parallelly to each other. Basically, longitudinal and hole-shaped trenches can be combined in the same switch element. Alternatively, the switch element can be provided either with hole-shaped trenches or with one or more longitudinal trenches.

The application also relates to a switch device which comprises the semiconductor switch element disclosed here and a board, on which the semiconductor switch element is mounted. The board can be a circuit board, for instance a printed circuit board. The switch element can be mounted on the board by flip chip bonding, namely with the first side of the substrate facing the board. On this side of the substrate, metal pads forming source contacts and/or gate contacts can be provided, and these pads can be soldered directly to the board.

The invention also relates to a method of manufacturing a switch element disclosed here, comprising the steps:.

Regarding further manufacturing details, reference is made to the description above.

The invention also relates to a use or method of using a semiconductor switch element, or respective switch device, in a battery management system. A battery management system can for instance ensure that a rechargeable battery remains in safe operating area while avoiding over-current and/or over-voltage stresses. In the battery management system, the switch element or device of this disclosure can be used for connecting and disconnecting the battery to or from a charge or discharge path. With the bidirectional switch element or switch device of the present application, it is possible to allow or block the current flow in both directions.

Below, the switch element and the manufacturing of the same are explained in further detail by means of exemplary embodiments. Therein, the individual features can also be relevant for this application in a different combination.

<FIG> shows a semiconductor switch element <NUM> comprising a first vertical transistor device <NUM> and a second vertical transistor device <NUM>. The transistor devices <NUM>, <NUM> are formed in the same substrate <NUM>. On a first side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM>, a source region <NUM> of the first transistor device <NUM> and a source region <NUM> of the second transistor device <NUM> are arranged. Vertically opposite, on a second side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM>, a drain region <NUM> of the first transistor device <NUM> and a drain region <NUM> of the second transistor device <NUM> are arranged.

On the second side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM>, a conductive element <NUM> is formed. It electrically connects the drain region <NUM> of the first transistor device <NUM> and the drain region <NUM> of the second transistor device <NUM>. A trench <NUM> extends vertically into the substrate <NUM>, and a part <NUM> of the conductive element <NUM> is arranged in the trench <NUM>. Likewise, a vertical distance <NUM> between the conductive element <NUM> and a respective drift region <NUM>, <NUM> of the respective transistor device <NUM>, <NUM> can be reduced (e. to around <NUM>). In consequence, the electrical resistivity is reduced, see the description above in detail.

<FIG> shows an enlarged view of a transistor cell. The first and the second transistor <NUM>, <NUM> have an identical layout, the following description applies for both of them. Vertically between the source region <NUM>, <NUM> and the drain region <NUM>, <NUM>, the body region <NUM>, <NUM> is arranged. Laterally aside the body region <NUM>, <NUM>, a gate region <NUM>, <NUM> is formed, it comprises a gate electrode <NUM>, <NUM> and a gate dielectric <NUM>, <NUM>. By applying a voltage to the gate electrode <NUM>, <NUM>, a channel formation in the body region <NUM>, <NUM> can be controlled.

In this embodiment, the gate region <NUM>, <NUM> is arranged in a gate trench <NUM>, <NUM>. Therein, a field plate <NUM>, <NUM> is formed in the gate trench <NUM>, <NUM> below the gate electrode <NUM>, <NUM>, electrically isolated therefrom. In the cross-section shown here, the electrical contact of the gate electrode <NUM>, <NUM> on the first side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM> is not visible (it is arranged in front of or behind the drawing plane). The source region <NUM>, <NUM> and the body region <NUM>, <NUM> are shorted, they can be contacted via a contact pad <NUM>, <NUM> formed on the first side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM>. A contact plug <NUM>, <NUM> connects the contact pad <NUM>, <NUM> to the source and body region <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>, <NUM>.

<FIG> shows the switch element <NUM> of <FIG> in another sectional plane, perpendicular to the sectional plane of <FIG>. Comparing the different views of <FIG> and <FIG>, it can be seen that three trenches <NUM> are formed in the substrate <NUM>. The trenches <NUM> are longitudinal trenches <NUM> which extend in a first vertical direction <NUM> from the first transistor device <NUM> to the second transistor device <NUM> (<FIG>). In a second lateral direction <NUM>, which lies perpendicular to the first vertical direction <NUM>, the trenches <NUM>, <NUM> are arranged laterally aside each other (<FIG>).

By reducing the vertical distance <NUM> to the drift region <NUM>, <NUM>, the resistivity and switching losses, thus, can be reduced. On the other hand, as can be seen from <FIG>, the silicon material remains between the trenches <NUM>, <NUM>. Consequently, a wafer bow resulting from the mismatch in the thermal expansion of silicon and metal is lower compared to a solution obtained by grinding the entire second side <NUM> down to the vertical distance <NUM>.

In the second lateral direction <NUM>, the trenches <NUM>, <NUM> respectively have a lateral width <NUM> of around <NUM>. A lateral distance <NUM> in between the trenches <NUM>, <NUM> is around <NUM> in this example. Vertically, the trenches <NUM>, <NUM> have a depth <NUM> of around <NUM>.

The embodiment of <FIG> differs from <FIG> in that the conductive material of the conductive element <NUM> fills only a respective portion <NUM> of a respective trench <NUM>. In another portion <NUM> of the respective trench <NUM>, no conductive material is arranged. Likewise, more space to relax is left for the conductive material, e. metal, which can reduce the mechanical stress in the substrate <NUM>.

The embodiment of <FIG> differs from <FIG> in that the other portion <NUM> of the respective trench <NUM> is filled up with a polymeric material <NUM>. The polymeric material <NUM> can for instance be an epoxy resin, it covers the second side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM> partly. It can provide a protection against humidity and the like.

<FIG> shows a schematic top view of a switch element <NUM> comprising a first transistor device <NUM> and a second transistor device <NUM> formed in the same substrate <NUM>. As described above, the first and the second transistor device <NUM>, <NUM> are connected by a conductive element (not shown in <FIG>). Partly, the conductive element is arranged in trenches <NUM>, namely hole-shaped trenches <NUM> in this embodiment. In a vertical cross-section, the hole-shaped trenches <NUM> can have the same design as the trenches <NUM> shown in <FIG>, <FIG> and <FIG>. They can be filled entirely or partly with the conductive material, optionally in combination with a polymeric material.

As can be seen from <FIG>, the hole-shaped trenches are arranged in rows <NUM>. Therein, the hole-shaped trenches of neighbouring rows <NUM>, <NUM> are arranged with an offset <NUM> to each other. Likewise, the packing density of the hole-shaped trenches <NUM> can be increased without reducing the minimum distance between neighbouring hole-shaped trenches <NUM>.

<FIG> shows a switch device <NUM> comprising a switch element <NUM> as described above and a board <NUM>. The switch element <NUM> is mounted on the board <NUM> by flip chip bonding, the first side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM> faces the board <NUM>. The electrical contact to the board <NUM> is formed via the contact pads <NUM>, <NUM>, these are soldered directly to the board <NUM> (not shown in detail).

<FIG> illustrate some manufacturing steps for the switch element <NUM> of <FIG>. For etching the trenches <NUM>, a hard mask <NUM> is deposited on the second side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM> and structured. The hard mask <NUM> defines the locations <NUM> where the trenches <NUM> are etched. After the trench etch, it is removed, and a seed layer <NUM> is deposited (<FIG>), for instance by sputtering. For forming a conductive element <NUM> covering the second side <NUM> only partly, a photoresist mask <NUM> is deposited and structured. The photoresist mask <NUM> defines the location for the metal deposition in the subsequent plating process (<FIG>), for instance copper plating. Subsequently, the photoresist mask <NUM> is removed, leaving the conductive element <NUM> formed in the plating process. The part of the seed layer <NUM> aside the conductive element <NUM> can be removed in a brief etch step.

<FIG> illustrate some manufacturing steps for the switch element <NUM> of <FIG>. In contrast to <FIG>, the metal plating is applied without a photoresist mask, the conductive material <NUM> covers the entire second side <NUM> of the substrate <NUM> (<FIG>). Thereafter, the polymeric material <NUM> is deposited, filling the remaining holes in the trenches <NUM> (<FIG>). The polymeric material <NUM> is structured (<FIG>) and used as a mask for the removal of the conductive material <NUM> arranged laterally at the side (<FIG>). polymeric material <NUM> remains in the trenches <NUM>.

Claim 1:
A semiconductor switch element (<NUM>), comprising
a first vertical transistor device (<NUM>) formed in a substrate (<NUM>), having
a source region (<NUM>) formed on a first side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>) and
a drain region (<NUM>) formed on a second side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>), vertically opposite to the first side (<NUM>),
a second vertical transistor device (<NUM>) formed laterally aside the first vertical transistor device (<NUM>) in the same substrate (<NUM>), having
a source region (<NUM>) formed on the first side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>) and
a drain region (<NUM>) formed on the second side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>),
a conductive element (<NUM>) arranged on the second side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>), electrically connecting the drain regions (<NUM>, <NUM>) of the vertical transistor devices (<NUM>, <NUM>),
wherein a trench (<NUM>) extending vertically into the substrate (<NUM>) is formed on the second side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>),
and wherein at least a part (<NUM>) of the conductive element (<NUM>) is arranged in the trench (<NUM>),
wherein a conductive material, of which the conductive element (<NUM>) is formed, fills only a portion (<NUM>) of the trench (<NUM>),
characterized in that another portion (<NUM>) of the trench (<NUM>) is filled with a polymeric material (<NUM>),
wherein the polymeric material covers the second side (<NUM>) of the substrate (<NUM>) only partly.