Title :
A metal-insulator-silicon junction seal
Author :
Schneer, G.H. ; Gelder, W. Van ; Hauser, Victor E. ; Schmidt, Paul F.
Author_Institution :
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Allentown, Pa.
fDate :
5/1/1968 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Most semiconductor devices today have a costly vacuum-tight encapsulation that provides a microenvironment for high reliability and electrical connections to the circuit in which it is used. A junction seal consisting of a metal-insulator-silicon (MIS) system of materials has been developed to replace the vacuum-tight encapsulation. The MIS junction seal, consisting of platinum silicide-titanium-platinum-gold contacts and a Silicon nitride overcoat, provides the necessary encapsulation for high reliability. Electrical and mechanical connections are provided by gold beam-deads. During fabrication, the contact windows are opened in the deposited silicon nitride layer either by etching with boiling phosphoric acid using SiO2as a mask or by anodically converting the silicon nitride in the windows to a soluble oxide. The multilayer contact is then applied to complete the junction seal. The initial characteristics of sealed-junction transistors fabricated by the above methods were similar to those of the unsealed transistors. The reliability of the sealed-junction transistors determined by accelerated aging after an intentional sodium contaminafion of 1017atoms/cm2surpassed that of the standard silicon planar transistors sealed in a vacuum-tight enclosure.
Keywords :
Circuits; Contacts; Encapsulation; Inorganic materials; Metal-insulator structures; Sealing materials; Seals; Semiconductor device reliability; Semiconductor devices; Silicon;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/T-ED.1968.16180