Title :
Titanium silicide/silicon nonohmic contact resistance for NFET´s, PFET´s, diffused resistors, and NPN´s in a BiCMOS technology
Author :
Hook, Terence B. ; Mann, Randy W. ; Nowak, Edward J.
Author_Institution :
Microelectron. Div., IBM Corp., Essex Junction, VT, USA
fDate :
4/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Self-aligned titanium silicide is often used to minimize the polysilicon and diffusion sheet resistances. Current is delivered to the channel of FET´s, the body of diffused resistors, and into the active region of NPN´s through the titanium silicide/silicon interface. This contact resistance can represent a significant fraction of the total device resistance for devices of small dimensions, and contributes to a loss in circuit performance. The impedance of this interface is a function of the doping level in the silicon immediately below the interface, and this doping level is a sensitive function of the heat applied to the structure after the formation of the silicide. The correspondence of FET series resistance, emitter resistance, the diffused resistor end effects and the non-ohmic nature of a contact after heat is applied is presented. Use of a rapid thermal anneal to obtain the requisite silicide characteristics while minimizing the impact on the contact resistance is demonstrated for a 0.8-μm BiCMOS technology
Keywords :
BiCMOS integrated circuits; contact resistance; elemental semiconductors; integrated circuit metallisation; rapid thermal annealing; semiconductor-metal boundaries; silicon; titanium compounds; 0.8 micron; BiCMOS technology; FET series resistance; NFETs; PFETs; TiSi2-Si; circuit performance; diffused resistors; doping level; emitter resistance; end effects; nonohmic contact resistance; rapid thermal anneal; total device resistance; Circuit optimization; Contact resistance; Doping; FETs; Immune system; Impedance; Resistors; Silicides; Silicon; Titanium;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on