Patent ID: 12206030

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Before the present methods, implementations, and systems are disclosed and described, it is to be understood that this invention is not limited to specific synthetic methods, specific components, implementation, or to particular compositions, and as such may, of course, vary. It is also to be understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular implementations only and is not intended to be limiting.

As seen in drawingFIGS.3A-6, the present invention relates to a stacked DSRD with side termination and passivation as built by the following process flow. A heavy doped initial wafer is chosen to serve as a current conductor to the diode; therefore, the doping level is selected to keep Si degenerate, typically 1×1019cm−3 or higher, but still below As solubility limit in Si so as to maintain a defect free Si surface. An arsenic doped wafer can be used because As has about the same atomic size as silicon, thus minimizing defects in epitaxial layer due to difference in lattice constants between the substrate and the epi layer. This is useful here, as a relatively thick epitaxial film is to be grown. Wafers grown by the standard Czochralski (Cz) method are used, preferably with high oxygen content of at least about 20 parts per million atoms (ppma). Both oxygen and arsenic will further serve as internal getters that scavenge metal and other contaminations brought by this and further processing steps. Therefore, high concentrations of both are desired. Notice, in processes known in the art, use of internal getters is not possible, as the prior art is limited to the use of float zone (FZ) wafers; so the prior art process flow is very sensitive to contaminations during manufacturing. Oxygen here plays an additional positive role, as oxygen precipitates serve as dislocation lockers and thus the instant wafers are much more mechanically robust compared to FZ wafers known in the art. The instant wafers do not develop defects as slips upon high temperature processing steps.

The wafer is then loaded into an epitaxial reactor. A regular epitaxial process recipe is used. First, a hydrogen bake is performed to remove native oxide and additionally smoothen the wafer surface. Typically, a first epitaxial layer (such as an n-type layer) is grown in a first reactor using a first (n-type) dopant, and then a second epitaxial layer (such as a p-type layer) is grown thereupon in a second reactor using a second (p-type) dopant.

In particular, the n-type layer may be grown having a gradually decreasing concentration of n-type dopant (such as As) thereacross; such a gradient may be linear or may have any desired exponential curvature. The starting concentration may equal that of any desired doping level, such as the doping level of the initial wafer upon which the epitaxial layer is deposited, and may decrease to any arbitrary doping concentration, including zero. Likewise, the p-type layer may begin at a predetermined low concentration, such as zero, and gradually increase the concentration of p-type dopant (such as B) to some predetermined desired concentration level, such as from 5×1018/cm3and 5×1019/cm3; again, such a gradient may be linear or may have any desired exponential curvature. Such epitaxial layers are typically from 1 micron to 100 microns thick.

Next, the chamber temperature is lowered to a predetermined grow temperature, and the reactor chamber is fed by trichlorosilane and phosphine added to a hydrogen carrier gas. Next, the dopant (phosphine) flow is gradually lowered to obtain a predetermined, desired doping profile.

In the instant technology, stacking wafers first is the preferable method as it replaces many individual/manual operations by a batch processing, thus improving manufacturability, decreasing costs, and the like.

In operation, stacked semiconductor diode may be produced by the method including an initial preparation of heavy doped silicon <100> wafers (such as having an As content between 5×1018/cm3and 5×1019/cm3) for growth of lower doped layers thereupon, with each wafer typically grown according to the Cz process with an oxygen content between 10 ppma and 20 ppma. Blanket n-doped and p-doped layers are sequentially grown on said wafers, such as by epitaxy. Mesas are then formed defining individual diodes where mesa slopes terminate diode sides, such as by etching through apertures (windows) in a mask in TMAH solution. The mask may be any convenient material, such as LPCVD deposited silicon nitride film or the like. Typically, such windows (and thus the mesas) have a width of 10 microns to 500 microns. In some embodiments, the windows have the shape of ‘square bagels’, with the sides oriented along low crystallographic indices of the silicon wafer, with one parallel and another perpendicular to the wafer flat or notch. The width of a given window is typically in excess of 1.4 times the total thickness of the epitaxial layers, and is smaller than the wafer plus epitaxial layers.

Electrically conducting layers are deposited on both sides of the wafer. Such deposition of electrically conducting layers may be accomplished by a two-step process, such as selective metal electroplating on a non-dielectric surface. Typically, such deposition involves the deposition of a high melting point metal (such as copper) followed by the deposition of a lower melting point metal (such as tin) thereover. In this example, the copper layer is at least about three times as thick as the tin layer. The process is repeated to yield a plurality of wafers. Multiple wafers are then stacked and aligned to yield a predetermined, stack having a desired number of wafers for bonding. Next, the wafers defining the stack are bonded together to achieve electrical contact, and the bonded wafer stack is then cut into diode stacks. The side silicon surfaces of each respective diode stack is passivated to yield side termination surfaces. Typically, passivation is performed immediately after forming the mesas, wherein the mesas are formed by anisotropic etching of silicon through a mask by forming V-grooves, where the inner sides of each respective V-groove serves as side termination surfaces of each respective diode. Passivation may be accomplished by thermal oxidation after the etch.

Typically, the blanket n-doped and p-doped epitaxy layers are grown to have defined grading functions.

Typically, the cutting of each respective bonded wafer stack is performed along lines intersecting outer sides of the v-grooves.

Some advantages of the inventive process over the prior art convey in the diode design and include the following. First, the breakout voltage of each of the diodes in the stack is close to the bulk silicon breakdown voltage. This is due to termination surface design with a negative beveled surface <111>. In the known art, mesas are formed to terminate the side surfaces, such as by isotropic silicon etch in HNA. The HNA etch is a catalytic process, thus it is not well controlled. Thus, mesa sizes and angles are nonuniform and have significant distributions. In the instant process, the mesa is formed by an anisotropic etch. The silicon crystal anisotropy gives rise to a high ratio of etch rate above 100:1 for orientations different from <111>. Thus, the silicon surface is faceted by the slowest etch rate surface. It is also the highest atomic density plane and therefore has the highest electrical breakdown value. This process is extensively used in bulk MEMS technology, but has not been applied so far for side mesa termination of power silicon devices.

While the claimed technology has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, the same is to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character. It is understood that the embodiments have been shown and described in the foregoing specification in satisfaction of the best mode and enablement requirements. It is understood that one of ordinary skill in the art could readily make a nigh-infinite number of insubstantial changes and modifications to the above-described embodiments and that it would be impractical to attempt to describe all such embodiment variations in the present specification. Accordingly, it is understood that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the claimed technology are desired to be protected.