Semi-insulating Silicon substrates for high frequency integrated circuits

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Materials

Abstract

Semi-insulating silicon substrates would be very attractive as handle wafers in Silicon On Insulator (SOI) technologies because they would provide very low-absorption substrates for RF and monolithic microwave integrated circuits. Two of the investigators have previously theoretically analysed the effect of different deep level impurities on silicon resistivity and shown that a resistivity of nearly 100kOhm.cm should be achievable by dopant compensation. This theoretical work has been supported by our recently published experimental feasibility study that has delivered a very promising resistivity value of 12kohm.cm using Mn as the deep level impurity. This proposal aims to study the science and engineering of high resistivity silicon substrates for high frequency integrated circuits. The team encompasses expertise on the materials science of deep level impurities (University of Oxford), on the physics and technology of high frequency silicon devices (University of Southampton), on silicon wafer growth (MEMC) and on the design and fabrication of high frequency integrated circuits (Zarlink). The project aims to better understand the diffusion and doping vs resistivity relations of appropriate deep level impurities (including Mn), and hence to maximise the resistivity of the silicon handle wafer. Contamination issues arising from the deep level impurities will be addressed by investigating diffusion barriers and also by developing a back-end processing approach that takes advantage of the high diffusivity of some deep level impurities. The recent incorporation of Cu metallization into back-end silicon production processes suggests that other deep level impurities would not be seen by industry as a major contamination issue in back-end processing. Finally, SOI wafers will be fabricated on semi-insulating silicon substrates and detailed high frequency characterisation carried out.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description These were described in the final report I submitted to EPSRC approx 5 years.
Exploitation Route We have formed a spinout to commercialize the results arising from this award.
Sectors Electronics

 
Description This was described in the Final report written approx 5 years ago.
 
Description University of Oxford
Amount £62,898 (GBP)
Funding ID Knowledge Transfer Secondment 
Organisation University of Oxford 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2011 
End 08/2012
 
Description University of Southampton
Amount £23,000 (GBP)
Funding ID Knowledge Transfer Secondment 
Organisation University of Southampton 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2011 
End 06/2012