Title :
A new isolation technology for mixed-mode and general mixed-technology SOC chips
Author :
Liao, C.P. ; Juang, K.C. ; Huang, T.H. ; Duh, D.S. ; Yang, T.T. ; Liu, M.N.
Author_Institution :
Electron. Res. & Service Organ., Ind. Technol. Res. Inst., Chutung, Taiwan
Abstract :
With higher levels of integration in VLSI, the importance of limiting undesirable interactions (i.e. crosstalk) between different circuits fabricated on a common Si substrate is increasing. Such interaction, known as substrate coupling, is more significant in mixed-mode or mixed-technology ICs, particularly in the high frequency regime. In commercial operations, the procedure for mixed-mode (or mixed-technology) device development has always become a laborious cycle of circuit design/simulation, layout, pilot run, and testing, before a final compromised (not necessarily optimized) result is reached. Consequently, the whole process of mixed-technology IC production is very time-consuming, costly and may lead to poor market timing. In this paper, a new isolation method is proposed in which penetrating protons are applied at selected locations on each IC prior to packaging. Experimental results indicated that a 25-30 dB improvement could be achieved by applying a low-fluence proton bombardment to the isolation-intended region of a metal pad pattern on a ~10 Ω-cm Si substrate. In addition, a proton-enhanced alternative-SOI structure from initially lightly doped wafers may be achieved for all SOC (system-on-a-chip) purposes. This option fully exploits the proton treatment, since the resistivity enhancement is most effective in lightly doped silicon. This proton isolation technology should be of interest to any mixed-technology SOC producer longing for the opportunity to break the aforementioned development cycle from the outset into a more familiar development sequence, while still leading to as-designed, optimum products
Keywords :
BiCMOS integrated circuits; VLSI; crosstalk; integrated circuit design; isolation technology; mixed analogue-digital integrated circuits; proton effects; 10 ohmcm; Si; Si substrate; VLSI integration levels; circuit design; circuit layout; circuit simulation; circuit testing; crosstalk; development cycle; high frequency regime; isolation method; isolation technology; isolation-intended region; lightly doped silicon; lightly doped wafers; low-fluence proton bombardment; market timing; metal pad pattern; mixed-mode ICs; mixed-mode SOC chips; mixed-mode device development; mixed-technology IC production; mixed-technology ICs; mixed-technology SOC chips; mixed-technology SOC production; mixed-technology device development; optimum products; packaging; penetrating protons; pilot run; proton isolation technology; proton treatment; proton-enhanced alternative-SOI structure; resistivity enhancement; substrate coupling; system-on-a-chip; Circuit simulation; Circuit synthesis; Circuit testing; Coupling circuits; Crosstalk; Frequency; Isolation technology; Protons; System-on-a-chip; Very large scale integration;
Conference_Titel :
Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology Workshop, 2000
Conference_Location :
Hsinchu
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6374-4
DOI :
10.1109/SMTW.2000.883093