he invention of the bipolar transistor and later the MOS transistor evolution into wide applications for ESD protection in the semiconductor technologies was previously published in the January 2023 issue of this magazine. In this second and final part of the article, we discuss the MOS transistor in the role of ESD protection for high-voltage applications and take a look into a possible future of ESD protection devices for high-performance computing applications.
High voltage technologies show some specific characteristics which make them unique. First of all, the ESD design window is narrower and narrower. Especially for high voltage components, such as devices rated above 40V, the ESD window actually tends to vanish completely. So, it is challenging to have the right space to allow snapback-based ESD protections. Moreover, the high clamping voltage requires a normally large device with a remarkable area occupation. Then, we need to consider that typical high voltage components are potentially weak and ballasting is not so effective as for CMOS technologies. Finally, these technologies are showing several implants with a large number of parasitic transistors, both NPN and PNP. So, Latch-up risk is a serious threat.
Bipolar-based ESD solutions are widely used in HV Technologies, but several approaches can be adopted, taking into account the specific needs of the applications to be addressed and the device portfolio available in the different technologies. One relatively simple approach implies the usage of several Low Voltage ESD protections (such as, for example, series of grounded gate NMOS or GGNMOS devices). As reported in Figure 1, stacking a suitable number of elementary components, higher trigger and holding voltage levels can be reached. The exact number of the protections can be defined based on the application voltage requirements. The main drawback of this solution is that triggering and holding voltages cannot be independently modulated, but they will be a multiple of the initial value. Precise tuning of these values in case of narrow ESD windows can be, therefore, a very challenging task.
To increase performance, the DTCO trend is pushing the transistor evolution towards the gate-all-around type of architecture, like the nanosheet transistor. This enables stronger channel control and, therefore, better performance in terms of a digital circuit design – lower power consumption and faster response. With this evolution, most, if not all, of the transistor current will flow through a channel surrounded by the gate. The substrate silicon is not truly needed for the digital circuit, so it becomes a parasitic channel. With this, the parasitic bipolar transistor that is very useful in ESD protection designs becomes a secondary effect – a parasitic effect of a parasitic channel.
The furthest concept on this roadmap is the CFET [1]. Here the n-FET is completely isolated from the substrate silicon. Only the p-FET remains in contact with the substrate. Therefore, it becomes impossible to form the parasitic bipolar transistor. This is indeed good news for the designers who worry about the unwanted latch-up effect. Unfortunately, the ESD protection designers might feel quite the opposite. The impact of technology scaling on the ESD protection designs has been described in a more detailed way in [2].
However, the future is not so dark for the ESD protection designers. The roadmap in Figure 3 is for the core transistor, but we also have the thick-oxide input-output (I/O) transistor (not shown in the figure). Naturally, the IO devices also must follow the core transistor roadmap as they use the same fabrication process. However, they usually need a few different steps, for example, to form the thicker gate dielectric. For the nanosheet FET, this difference might be to skip the etch step that releases the nanosheets and use the superlattice finFET as the I/O device instead (described for a nanowire device in [4]). This enables better contact to the substrate silicon and therefore brings the parasitic bipolar effect back to the front seat.
Thinning down the semiconductor substrate until it reaches the p-wells and n-wells will reduce the current gain of the bipolar transistor. The well depth depends on the used technology, of course. Still, the bottom of the implant well can be reached and the effects on the bipolar transistor can be measured [6] for wafer thicknesses of 500 nm and below. This is good news for avoiding the unwanted latch-up effect but perhaps not the best news for ESD protection circuits.
It should be highlighted, a vertical bipolar transistor can be made with one or two electrodes in the usual frontside together with the MOSFETs and the remaining electrodes on the backside of the wafer with the backside metal layers. Such a vertical bipolar transistor might indeed be an interesting opportunity for ESD protection designers.
- S. Subramanian et al., “First Monolithic Integration of 3D Complementary FET (CFET) on 300mm Wafers,” 2020 IEEE Symposium on VLSI Technology, pp. 1-2.
- Shih-Hung Chen, “Next to FinFET, How Will ESD Suffer?”, In Compliance Magazine, July 2021.
- J. Ryckaert et al., “Enabling Sub-5nm CMOS Technology Scaling Thinner and Taller!” 2019 IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), pp. 29.4.1-29.4.4.
- G. Hellings et al., “Si/SiGe superlattice I/O finFETs in a vertically-stacked Gate-All-Around horizontal Nanowire Technology,” 2018 IEEE Symposium on VLSI Technology, pp. 85‑86.
- G. Van der Plas, E. Beyne, “Design and Technology Solutions for 3D Integrated High Performance Systems,” 2021 Symposium on VLSI Circuits. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9492421
- K. Serbulova et al., “Impact of Sub-µm Wafer Thinning on Latch-up Risk in STCO Scaling Era,” 2021 43rd Annual EOS/ESD Symposium (EOS/ESD), pp. 1-6.
- K. Serbulova et al., “Enabling Active Backside Technology for ESD and LU Reliability in DTCO/STCO,” 2022 IEEE Symposium on VLSI Technology and Circuits (VLSI Technology and Circuits), pp. 431-432.
- T. H. Lai et al., “Design of Modified ESD Protection Structure with Low-Trigger and High-Holding Voltage in Embedded High-Voltage CMOS Process,” IRPS Proc., 2011, pp. 392-395.
- J. H Lee et al., “The Influence of The Layout On The ESD Performance Of HV-LDMOS,” ISPSD Proc., 2010, pp. 303-306.
- W. Y. Chen et al., “Improvement on ESD Robustness of Lateral DMOS in High-Voltage CMOS ICs by Body Current Injection,” ISCAS Proc., 2009, pp. 385-38.
Dr. Ir. Dolphin Abessolo-Bidzo is Senior Principal RF ESD & Latch-Up Design Engineer at NXP Semiconductors.
Dr. Mirko Scholz is a Principal Engineer ESD Development at Infineon Technologies AG in Neubiberg/Germany.
Marko Simicic is part of the ESD team in imec, Belgium, with the focus on researching ESD solutions for devices and circuits.