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Multilevel semiconductor device and structure with waveguides

a waveguide and semiconductor technology, applied in the field of monolithic 3d integration, can solve the problems of not being able to achieve the effect of mixing red, blue and green colors to form white light, being much more expensive than pcleds, and being less efficient in forming white ligh

Active Publication Date: 2021-07-08
MONOLITHIC 3D
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  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

The patent text discusses techniques for creating multi-level semiconductor devices using layer transfer schemes such as ion-cut. These devices can include integrated circuits, optical waveguides, displays, and solar cells. The techniques involve bonding the different levels of the device together using oxide layers, which can create strong bonds. The resulting devices have improved performance and efficiency.

Problems solved by technology

While RGB LEDs are more energy-efficient than pcLEDs, they are less efficient in mixing red, blue and green colors to form white light.
They also are much more costly than pcLEDs.
While this solves light mixing problems, this RGB-LED is still much more costly than a pcLED solution since three LEDs for red, blue, and green color need to be packaged.
However, red LEDs are not efficient when constructed with GaN-based material systems, and that hampers usefulness of this implementation.
It is not possible to deposit defect-free AlInGaP / InGaP for red LEDs on the same substrate as GaN based blue and green LEDs, due to a mismatch in thermal expansion co-efficient between the various material systems.
Unfortunately, this bonding process requires 600° C. temperatures, causing issues with mismatch of thermal expansion co-efficients and cracking.
Bonding is done at the die level after dicing, which is more costly than a wafer-based approach.
This method has several issues for constructing a RGB LED stack.
First, it is difficult to manufacture a lift-off with a temporary carrier of red LEDs for producing a RGB LED stack, especially for substrates larger than 2 inch.
Scaling this process to 4 inch wafers and bigger is difficult.
Second, it is very difficult to perform the bonding of ITO to semiconductor materials of a LED layer at reasonable temperatures, as described in the patent application Ser. No. 12 / 130,824.
Since the area consumed by the sensing circuits is high, the photodetector cannot see the entire incident light, and image capture is not as efficient.
However, pixel size is reaching the 1 μm range, and successfully processing TSVs in the 1 μm range or below is very difficult.
This is due to alignment issues while bonding.
Unfortunately, transistor process temperatures reach 600° C. or more.
This is not ideal for transistors (that require a higher thermal budget) and photodetectors (that may prefer a lower thermal budget).
While lift-off layer transfer schemes are viable for transmittive displays, they are frequently not used for semiconductor manufacturing due to yield issues.
However, it is not easy to utilize other layer transfer schemes for making transistors in microdisplays.
Unfortunately, hydrogen is implanted through the gate oxide of transferred transistors in the process, and this degrades performance.
Process temperatures are as high as 600° C. in this paper, and this requires costly glass substrates.
There are a few issues with standard multi junction solar cells.
Therefore, the choice of materials used to build junctions for multi junction solar cells is limited.
As a result, most multi junction solar cells commercially available today cannot capture the full solar spectrum.
Furthermore, multi junction solar cells today suffer from high cost of the substrate above which multiple junctions are epitaxially grown.
The process uses two Germanium substrates, and is therefore expensive.
When that happens, cracking and defects can be produced due to mismatch of co-efficients of thermal expansion between various layers in the stack.
Furthermore, semiconductor layers are bonded together, and the quality of this bond not as good as oxide-to-oxide bonding, especially for lower process temperatures.
On the other hand, in a CMOS sensor, the photodiodes in each cell have to share space with the control and readout circuits adjacent to them, and so their size and light sensitivity are therefore limited.
The main issue with CCD technology is this sequential shifting of image information from cell to cell is slow and limits the speed and cell density of CCD image sensors.
The concept of HDR however, is not new.
The issue with this is that multiple exposures are performed over some period of time, and if there is movement of the camera or target during the time of the exposures, the final HDR image will reflect this by loss of sharpness.
Moreover, multiple images may lead to large data in storage devices.
Other methods use software algorithms to extract HDR information from a single exposure, but as they can only process information that is recordable by the sensor, there is a permanent loss of some details.
However, wires (interconnects) that connect together transistors degrade in performance with “scaling”.

Method used

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  • Multilevel semiconductor device and structure with waveguides
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Embodiment Construction

[0061]Embodiments of the present invention are now described with reference to FIGS. 1-11, it being appreciated that the figures illustrate the subject matter not to scale or to measure.

[0062]A smart layer transfer may be defined as one or more of the following processes:[0063]Ion-cut, variations of which are referred to as smart-cut, nano-cleave and smart-cleave: Further information on ion-cut technology is given in “Frontiers of silicon-on-insulator,” J. Appl. Phys. 93, 4955-4978 (2003) by G. K. Celler and S. Cristolovean (“Celler”) and also in “Mechanically induced Si layer transfer in hydrogen-implanted Si wafers,” Appl. Phys. Lett., vol. 76, pp. 2370-2372, 2000 by K. Henttinen, I. Suni, and S. S. Lau (“Hentinnen”).[0064]Porous silicon approaches such as ELTRAN: These are described in “Eltran, Novel SOI Wafer Technology,” JSAP International, Number 4, July 2001 by T. Yonehara and K. Sakaguchi (“Yonehara”).[0065]Bonding a substrate with single crystal layers followed by Polishing...

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Abstract

A multi-level semiconductor device, the device including: a first level including integrated circuits; a second level including a structure designed to conduct electromagnetic waves in a confined manner, where the second level is disposed above the first level, where the first level includes crystalline silicon, where the second level includes crystalline silicon; and an oxide layer disposed between the first level and the second level, where the second level is bonded to the oxide layer, and where the bonded includes oxide to oxide bonds.

Description

CROSS-REFERENCE OF RELATED APPLICATION[0001]This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17 / 121,726 filed on Dec. 14, 2020; which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17 / 027,217 filed on Sep. 21, 2020, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,943,934 to be issued on Mar. 9, 2021; which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16 / 860,027 filed on Apr. 27, 2020, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,833,108 issued on Nov. 11, 2020; which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15 / 920,499 filed on Mar. 14, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,679,977 issued on Jun. 9, 2020; which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14 / 936,657 filed on Nov. 9, 2015, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,941,319 issued on Apr. 10, 2018; which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13 / 274,161 filed on Oct. 14, 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,197,804 issued on Nov. 24, 2015; and this application is a continuation-in-part of U.S...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): H01L23/00H01L27/146H01L33/58H01L31/054
CPCH01L24/29H01L27/14625H01L33/58H01L2224/29188H01L31/054H01L2924/12041H01L2224/32245H01L24/32G02F1/017H01L21/2007H01L21/76254H01L21/76275H01L25/167H01L27/1211H01L27/14689H01L27/14694H01L27/153G02F2202/108H01L21/84H01L27/12H01L31/02327H01L27/156H01L25/16H01L25/18H01L29/78654H01L29/66772Y02E10/52H01L27/0688H01L27/0617H01L27/14601
Inventor OR-BACH, ZVISEKAR, DEEPAK C.CRONQUIST, BRIAN
Owner MONOLITHIC 3D