Aluminum
for Integrated Circuit Interconnects:
From Materials Science and Engineering By William D. Callister, Jr. (Very good Book)
From Materials Science and Engineering By William D. Callister, Jr. (Very good Book)
The
heart of all computers and other electronic devices is the integrated
circuit (or IC).Each integrated circuit chip is a thin square wafer
having dimensions on the order of 6 mm by 6 mm by 0.4 mm; furthermore,
literally millions of interconnected electronic components and circuits are embedded
in one of the chip faces. The base material for
ICs is silicon, to which has been added very specific and extremely minute and
controlled concentrations of impurities that are confined to very small and
localized regions. For some ICs, the impurities are added using
high-temperature diffusion heat
treatments.
One
important step in the IC fabrication process is the deposition of very thin and
narrow conducting circuit paths to facilitate the passage of current from one
device to another; these paths are called “interconnects,” and several are
shown in Figure 1 (left), a scanning electron micrograph of an IC chip. Of course
the material to be used for interconnects must have a high electrical
conductivity— a metal, since, of all materials, metals have the highest
conductivities. Table 1 cites values for silver, copper, gold, and aluminum,
the most conductive metals.
Metal (Symbol)
|
Electrical Conductivity (Ω-mt)-1(@
room Temp)
|
Silver(Ag)
|
6.8
X 107
|
Copper
(Cu)
|
6.0
X 107
|
Gold
(Au)
|
4.3
X 107
|
Aluminum
(Al)
|
3.8
X 107
|
On
the basis of these conductivities, and discounting material cost, Ag is the
metal of choice, followed by Cu, Au, and Al. Once these interconnects have been
deposited, it is still necessary to subject the IC chip to other heat
treatments, which may run as high as 500 oC. If, during these
treatments, there is significant diffusion of the interconnect metal into the silicon,
the electrical functionality of the IC will be destroyed. Thus, since the
extent of diffusion is dependent on the magnitude of the diffusion coefficient,
it is necessary to select an interconnect metal that has a small value of D in
silicon.
Figure 2. plots the logarithm of D versus 1/T for the
diffusion, into silicon, of copper, gold, silver, and aluminum. Also, a dashed
vertical line has been constructed at 500 oC, from which values of D,
for the four metals are noted at this temperature. Here it may be seen that the
diffusion coefficient for aluminum in silicon (2.5 X 1021 m2/s)
is at least four orders of magnitude (i.e., a factor of 104) lower than
the values for the other three metals. Aluminum is indeed used for
interconnects in some integrated circuits; even though its electrical conductivity
is slightly lower than the values for silver, copper, and gold, its extremely
low diffusion coefficient makes it the material of choice for this application.
An aluminum-copper-silicon alloy (Al-4 wt% Cu-1.5 wt% Si) is sometimes also
used for interconnects; it not only bonds easily to the surface of the chip,
but is also more corrosion resistant than pure aluminum. More recently, copper
interconnects have also been used. However, it is first necessary to deposit a
very thin layer of tantalum or tantalum nitride beneath the copper, which acts
as a barrier to deter diffusion of Cu into the silicon.
No comments:
Post a Comment