Recherche Images Maps Play YouTube Actualités Gmail Drive Plus »
Recherche avancée dans les brevets | Historique Web | Connexion

Brevets

Numéro de publicationUS20010001075 A1
Type de publicationDemande
Date de publication10 mai 2001
Date de dépôt20 déc. 2000
Date de priorité
25 mars 1997
Autre référence de publication
Numéro de publication
US 2001/0001075 A1
US2001/0001075A1
Inventeurs
Cessionnaire d'origine
Classification aux États-Unis
Classification internationale
Classification coopérative
Classification européenne
H01L29/66M6T6F17
H01L29/423D2B2
H01L27/115F4
Références
Liens externes
Process for fabricating semiconductor memory device with high data retention including silicon nitride etch stop layer formed at high temperature with low hydrogen ion concentration
US 20010001075 A1
Résumé

A semiconductor memory device such as a flash Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory (Flash EEPROM) includes a floating gate with high data retention. A tungsten damascene local interconnect structure includes a silicon nitride etch stop layer which is formed using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) at a temperature of at least 480° C. such that the etch stop layer has a very low concentration of hydrogen ions. The minimization of hydrogen ions, which constitute mobile positive charge carriers, in the etch stop layer, minimizes recombination of the hydrogen ions with electrons on the floating gate, and thereby maximizes data retention of the device.

Dessins(4)
Previous page
Next page
Revendications
We claim:

1. A process for fabricating a semiconductor structure having a local interconnect, comprising the steps of:

(a) providing a semiconductor substrate;

(b) forming a semiconductor device having an interconnect area on a surface of the substrate;

(c) forming a silicon nitride etch stop layer over the surface of the substrate and the device at a temperature of at least approximately 480° C.;

(d) forming an insulator layer over the etch stop layer;

(e) etching a first hole through the insulator layer to the etch stop layer in alignment with the interconnect area;

(f) etching a second hole through the etch stop layer to the interconnect area; and

(g) filling the first and second holes with an electrically conductive material which ohmically contacts the interconnect area to form the local interconnect.

2. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (e) comprises etching the first hole using Reactive Ion Etching (RIE) with octafluorobutene.

3. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (f) comprises etching the second hole using Reactive Ion Etching (RIE) with fluoromethane.

4. A process as in

claim 1

, in which:

step (a) comprises providing the substrate of silicon; and

step (b) comprises the substeps of:

(b1) forming a layer of a refractory metal silicide material over the interconnect area; and

(b2) reacting the silicide material with underlying silicon to form the interconnect area as a silicide.

5. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (g) comprises filling the first and second holes with tungsten to form the local interconnect as a tungsten damascene.

6. A process as in

claim 1

, in further comprising the step, performed between steps (d) and (e), of:

(h) planarizing the insulator layer using chemical mechanical polishing.

7. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (d) comprises forming the insulator layer of tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) glass.

8. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (c) comprises forming the etch stop layer at a temperature of approximately 500° C.

9. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (c) comprises forming the etch stop layer at a temperature in the range of approximately 470° C. to 550° C.

10. A process as in

claim 9

, in which:

step (c) comprises forming the etch stop layer using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) with:

an SiH4 flow rate of approximately 55± 5 sccm;

an NH3 flow rate of approximately 12± 2 sccm; and

an RF power of approximately 375± 10 watts.

11. A process as in

claim 10

, in which step (c) further comprises forming the etch stop layer with an N2 flow rate of approximately 4,000 sccm.

12. A process as in

claim 10

, in which step (c) further comprises forming the etch stop layer at a pressure of approximately 3.5± 0.2 torr.

13. A process as in

claim 10

, in which step (c) further comprises forming the etch stop layer with a spacing between a PECVD shower head and the surface of the substrate of approximately 9.5 millimeters.

14. A process as in

claim 1

, in which step (c) comprises forming the etch stop layer to a thickness of approximately 800±50 Å.

15. A process for fabricating a semiconductor structure, comprising the steps of:

(a) providing a semiconductor substrate;

(b) forming a semiconductor device on a surface of the substrate; and

(c) forming a silicon nitride layer over the surface of the substrate and the device at a temperature of at least approximately 480° C.

16. A process as in

claim 15

, in which step (c) comprises forming the silicon nitride layer at a temperature of approximately 500° C.

17. A process as in

claim 15

, in which step (c) comprises forming the silicon nitride layer at a temperature in the range of approximately 470° C. to 550° C.

18. A process as in

claim 17

, in which:

step (c) comprises forming the silicon nitride layer using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) with:

an SiH4 flow rate of approximately 55± 5 sccm;

an NH3 flow rate of approximately 12± 2 sccm; and

an RF power of approximately 375± 10 watts.

19. A process as in

claim 18

, in which step (c) further comprises forming the silicon nitride layer with an N2 flow rate of approximately 4,000 sccm.

20. A process as in

claim 18

, in which step (c) further comprises forming the silicon nitride layer at a pressure of approximately 3.5± 0.2 torr.

21. A process as in

claim 18

, in which step (c) further comprises forming the silicon nitride layer with a spacing between a PECVD shower head and the surface of the substrate of approximately 9.5 millimeters.

22. A process as in

claim 15

, in which step (c) comprises forming the silicon nitride layer to a thickness of approximately 800± 50 Å.

23. A semiconductor structure, comprising:

a semiconductor substrate;

a semiconductor device formed on a surface of the substrate; and

a silicon nitride layer formed over the surface of the substrate and the device at a temperature of at least approximately 480° C.

24. A structure as in

claim 23

, in which:

the device comprises an interconnect area;

the silicon nitride layer is an etch stop layer; and

the structure further comprises:

an insulating layer formed over the etch stop layer;

a first hole formed through the insulator layer to the etch stop layer in alignment with the interconnect area;

a second hole formed through the etch stop layer to the interconnect area; and

an electrically conductive material which fills the first and second holes and ohmically contacts the interconnect area to form a local interconnect.

25. A structure as in

claim 23

, in which the device comprises a memory cell having a floating element.

26. A structure as in

claim 25

, in which:

the memory cell comprises a Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS) transistor; and

the floating element comprises a floating gate.

27. A structure as in

claim 23

, in which the silicon nitride layer is formed at a temperature of approximately 500° C.

28. A structure as in

claim 23

, in which the silicon nitride layer is formed at a temperature in the range of approximately 470° C. to 550° C.

29. A structure as in

claim 28

, in which the silicon nitride layer is formed using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD), with:

an SiH4 flow rate of approximately 55± 5 sccm;

an NH3 flow rate of approximately 12± 2 sccm; and

an RF power of approximately 375±10 watts.

30. A structure as in

claim 29

, in which the silicon nitride layer is formed with an N2 flow rate of approximately 4,000 sccm.

31. A structure as in

claim 29

, in which the silicon nitride layer is formed at a pressure of approximately 3.5± 0.2 torr.

32. A structure as in

claim 29

, in which the silicon nitride layer is formed with a spacing between a PECVD shower head and the surface of the substrate of approximately 9.5 millimeters.

33. A structure as in

claim 23

, in which the silicon nitride layer has a thickness of approximately 800±50 Å.

34. A structure as in

claim 23

, in which:

the structure is a flash Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory (flash EEPROM); and

the device comprises an erasable memory cell having a floating element.

35. A structure as in

claim 34

, in which:

the memory cell comprises a Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS) transistor; and

the floating element comprises a floating gate.

Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. 1. Field of the Invention

2. The present invention generally relates to the art of microelectronic integrated circuits, and more specifically to a process for fabricating a semiconductor memory device with high data retention including a silicon nitride etch stop layer formed at high temperature with a low hydrogen ion concentration.

3. 2. Description of the Related Art

4. A flash or block erase Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory (Flash EEPROM) semiconductor memory includes an array of cells which can be independently programmed and read. The size of each cell and thereby the memory are made small by omitting select transistors which would enable the cells to be erased independently. All of the cells are erased together as a block.

5. A memory of this type includes individual Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS) memory cells, each of which includes a source, drain, floating gate and control gate to which various voltages are applied to program the cell with a binary 1 or 0, or erase all of the cells as a block.

6. Tungsten damascene is a process for fabricating local interconnects which can be advantageously applied to semiconductor devices including flash EEPROMs. The process includes forming an insulator layer of, for example, tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) glass over the memory cells, and using Reactive Ion Etching (RIE) to form vertical interconnect holes through the glass down to interconnect areas (source, drain, etc.) of the cells. The holes are filled with tungsten which ohmically contacts the interconnect areas to form the local interconnects.

7. The TEOS etch is conventionally performed using octafluorobutene (C4F8) etchant, which also has a high etch rate for silicon. For this reason, a mechanism must be provided for performing the TEOS etch without allowing the etchant to act on the silicon of the underlying interconnect areas.

8. Such a mechanism includes forming a silicon nitride etch stop layer underneath the TEOS layer, and performing the etch in two stages. The first stage is the octafluorobutene etch through the TEOS layer, which terminates at the etch stop layer since octafluorobutene has a low etch rate for silicon nitride.

9. Then, a second RIE etch is performed using fluoromethane (CH3F), which forms holes through the portions of the etch stop layer that are exposed through the holes in the TEOS layer, down to the interconnect areas of the devices. This is possible because fluoromethane has a high etch rate for silicon nitride, but a low etch rate for TEOS.

10. The structure can be further facilitated by using a silicide technique to increase the conductivity of the interconnect areas of the cells. Siliciding is a fabrication technique that enables electrical interconnections to be made that have reduced resistance and capacitance.

11. The silicide process comprises forming a layer of a refractory metal silicide material such as tungsten, titanium, tantalum, molybdenum, etc. on a silicon interconnect area (source or drain diffusion region) or on a polysilicon gate to which ohmic contact is to be made, and then reacting the silicide material with the underlaying silicon material to form a silicide surface layer having much lower resistance than heavily doped silicon or polysilicon. A silicide surface layer formed on a polysilicon gate is called “polycide”, whereas a silicide surface layer formed on silicon using a self-aligned process is called “salicide”.

12. A problem which has remained unsolved in the fabrication of flash EEPROM memories and other semiconductor device structures is data retention. A flash EEPROM cell is programmed by creating a negative charge (electrons) on the floating gate. The charge should remain until it is deliberately removed by erasing the cell.

13. However, the charge on a conventional flash EEPROM cell which is fabricated using a silicon nitride etch stop layer that is conventionally formed at a temperature of approximately 350° C. has been found to decrease substantially with time. This problem has remained unsolved in the art.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

14. The present invention overcomes the drawbacks of the prior art by overcoming the problem of unsatisfactory data retention in semiconductor devices such as flash EEPROMs which include silicon nitride etch stop layers.

15. In accordance with the present invention, a semiconductor memory device such as a flash Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory (Flash EEPROM) includes a floating gate with high data retention.

16. A tungsten damascene local interconnect structure includes a silicon nitride etch stop layer which is formed using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) at a temperature of at least 480° C. such that the etch stop layer has a very low concentration of hydrogen ions.

17. The minimization of hydrogen ions, which constitute mobile positive charge carriers, in the etch stop layer, minimizes recombination of the hydrogen ions with electrons on the floating gate, and thereby maximizes data retention of the device.

18. These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, taken together with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

19. FIGS. 1 to 10 are simplified sectional views illustrating steps of a process for fabricating a semiconductor device according to the present invention; and

20.FIG. 11 is a simplified diagram illustrating a Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) apparatus for practicing the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

21. The present inventors have discovered that a major cause of poor data retention in semiconductor devices such as flash EEPROMs as presented above is a high concentration of hydrogen ions in the silicon nitride etch stop layers of the devices. These hydrogen ions are highly mobile positive charge carriers which migrate to the floating gates of memory cells to recombine with electrons thereon and dissipate the charges on the floating gates.

22. The present invention overcomes these problems, and provides a semiconductor structure including a silicon nitride layer having a low concentration of hydrogen ions. Although the present invention is especially suited to a memory device including a floating gate in which data retention is a problem, the present invention is not so limited, and can be advantageously applied to a large variety of semiconductor devices which may or may not include floating gates or other charge retention elements. For example, the invention may be applied to semiconductor structures which include silicon nitride encapsulation layers.

23. FIGS. 1 to 10 are simplified sectional diagrams illustrating a process for fabricating a portion of a flash EEPROM semiconductor memory device according to the present invention. The detailed configuration of the device is not the particular subject matter of the invention, and only those elements which are necessary for understanding the invention will be described and illustrated.

24. As viewed in FIG. 1, a flash EEPROM memory 10 includes a silicon semiconductor substrate 12. Two erasable memory cells 14 are formed on a surface 12 a of the substrate 12, each including a MOS transistor structure having a source 14 a, drain 14 b, gate oxide layer 14 c, and channel 14 d underlying the gate oxide layer 14 c. The cells 14 are physically and electrically isolated from each other by field oxide regions 16.

25. A polysilicon control gate 14 e is formed over each gate oxide layer 14 c, and a polysilicon floating gate 14 f is formed underneath the control gate 14 e in the gate oxide layer 14 c.

26. Although the gate oxide layers 14 c are shown as being integral, they may comprise two or more sublayers. For example, portions of the gate oxide layers 14 c which underlie the floating gates 14 f may be separate tunnel oxide layers. Further shown in the drawing are electrically insulating gate sidewall spacers 14 g.

27. The construction and operation of the memory 10 are not the particular subject matter of the invention and will not be described in detail. Furthermore, the reference numerals designating the individual elements of the memory cells will be omitted in FIGS. 2 to 10 except as required for understanding the invention to avoid cluttering of the drawings.

28.FIG. 1 illustrates the initial steps of the present process, which consist of providing the substrate 12, and forming semiconductor devices such as the erasable memory cells 14 on the surface 12 a of the substrate 12.

29.FIG. 2 shows how interconnect areas are formed for the elements of the cells using a silicide technique to increase the electrical conductivity. The process comprises forming a layer of a refractory metal silicide material such as tungsten, titanium, tantalum, molybdenum, etc. on the source, 14 a, drain 14 b, and control gate 14 e to which ohmic contact is to be made, and then reacting the silicide material with the underlaying silicon material to form silicide source interconnect areas 18 a, drain interconnect areas 18 b, and control gate interconnect areas 18 c respectively.

30.FIG. 3 illustrates how a silicon nitride (S3N4) etch stop layer 20 is formed over the surface 12 a of the substrate 12 and the devices 14 in accordance with the present invention. The etch stop layer 20 is preferably formed using Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) at a temperature of at least approximately 480° C. to a thickness of approximately 800± 50 Å.

31. Basic Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) is a technique which normally requires a substrate temperature of at least 600° C. to achieve epitaxial deposition of a silicon nitride layer. PECVD improves on basic CVD by creating a glow discharge or plasma in the reaction chamber which enables a silicon nitride layer to be formed at a much lower temperature on the order of 350° C. to 400° C.

32. Conventional silicon nitride etch stop layers are typically formed at about 350° C.-400° C., and have high concentrations of hydrogen ions which migrate to the floating gates of EEPROM cells to recombine with electrons thereon and thereby dissipate charge. This causes poor data retention as discussed above.

33. The present step of forming the silicon nitride etch stop layer 20 at a higher temperature of at least approximately 480° C. results in a substantially lower concentration of hydrogen ions in the layer 20 than in a conventional silicon nitride etch stop layer which is formed at low temperature, thereby providing substantially improved data retention.

34. A PECVD reaction chamber 22 for forming the silicon nitride layer 20 is illustrated in FIG. 11, and includes a container 24. An electrically grounded susceptor 26 is suspended in the container 24. A silicon wafer 30 including one or more dies on which semiconductor structures such as the memories 10 as illustrated in FIG. 2 are formed is supported on the susceptor 26. Lift pins 28 are provided for placing the wafer 30 on the susceptor 26. The wafer 30 is heated to a temperature of approximately 470° C. to 550° C., preferably 500° C., by a heater 32.

35. A gas discharge nozzle which is known in the art as a shower head 34 is mounted in the container 24 above the wafer 30. A gas mixture 36 which is used to form the silicon nitride layer 20 is fed into the shower head 34 through an inlet conduit 38 and discharged downwardly toward the wafer 30 through orifices 34 a. The gas 36 preferably includes NH3, SiH4, and N2.

36. Radio Frequency (RF) power is applied to the shower head 34 through a power lead 40. A blocker plate 34 b is provided at the upper end of the shower head 34 to prevent gas from escaping upwardly.

37. The RF power applied to the shower head 34 creates an alternating electrical field between the shower head 34 and the grounded susceptor 26 which forms a glow or plasma discharge in the gas 36 therebetween. The plasma discharge enables the silicon nitride layer 20 to be formed at the temperature specified above.

38. In addition to a deposition temperature of at least approximately 480° C., other process conditions enhance the formation of a silicon nitride layer 20 with low hydrogen concentration. The present inventors have discovered that the qualities of the silicon nitride layer 20 are improved if the layer has relatively high density and is formed at a relatively low deposition rate.

39. This is achieved by performing deposition with low flow rates of NH3 and SiH4 in the gas 36, and low RF power. Preferred values for these conditions are an SiH4 flow rate of approximately 55± 5 sccm, an NH3 flow rate of approximately 12± 2 sccm, and an RF power of approximately 375± 10 watts.

40. The preferred conditions also include an N2 flow rate of approximately 4,000 sccm, a pressure of 3.5± 0.2 torr, and a spacing S of approximately 375 mils (9.5 millimeters) between the shower head 34 and the surface of the wafer 30.

41. Referring now to FIG. 4, the next step of the process is to form an insulator layer 42′, preferably of tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) glass, over the silicon nitride etch stop layer 20. The TEOS layer 42′ is planarized as illustrated in FIG. 5 using, preferably, chemical-mechanical polishing, and redesignated as 42.

42. The remaining steps result in the formation of a tungsten damascene local interconnect structure for the memory 10. In FIG. 6, a layer of photoresist 44 is formed on the TEOS layer 42, and patterned using photolithography such that holes 44 a, 44 b and 44 c are formed above the silicide interconnect areas 18 a, 18 b and 18 c respectively.

43. In FIGS. 7 and 8, holes are etched through the TEOS layer 42 and silicon nitride layer 20 down to the interconnect areas 18 a, 18 b and 18 c, preferably using a two stage Reactive Ion Etching (RIE) process.

44. In FIG. 7, an RIE etch is performed using octafluorobutene (C4F8) which has a selectively high etch rate for TEOS and a low etch rate for silicon nitride. This results in the formation of vertical holes 46 a, 46 b and 46 c which extend downwardly from the holes 44 a, 44 b and 44 c of the photoresist layer 44 through the TEOS layer 42 and stop on the silicon nitride etch stop layer 20 in alignment with the interconnect areas 18 a, 18 b and 18 c respectively.

45. In FIG. 8, the photoresist layer 44 is stripped away, and a second RIE etch is performed using fluoromethane (CH3F), which has a selectively high etch rate for silicon nitride and a low etch rate for TEOS. This results in the formation of holes 48 a, 48 b and 48 c through the silicon nitride layer 20. The holes 48 a, 48 b and 48 c are extensions of the holes 46 a, 46 b and 46 c through the TEOS layer 42, and terminate at the interconnect areas 18 a, 18 b and 18 c respectively.

46. In FIG. 9, tungsten 50 is deposited over the structure of FIG. 8. The tungsten fills the holes through the TEOS layer 42 and the silicon nitride layer 20 as indicated at 50 a′, 50 b′ and 50 c′, and ohmically contacts the interconnect areas 18 a, 18 b and 18 c respectively. The tungsten further forms on the top of the TEOS layer 42 as indicated at 50 d.

47. In FIG. 10, the top of the structure is planarized, preferably using chemical-mechanical polishing, to remove the tungsten 50 d from the TEOS layer 42. The result is independent local interconnects 50 a, 50 b and 50 c which are formed of tungsten inlaid in the TEOS layer 42 and the silicon nitride layer 20. The local interconnects 50 a, 50 b and 50 c enable the sources 14 a, drains 14 b, and control gates 14 e respectively of the transistors 14 to be electrically accessed from the upper surface of the structure.

48. In summary, the present invention overcomes the drawbacks of the prior art and provides a semiconductor structure including a silicon nitride layer etch stop layer with substantially improved data retention characteristics.

49. Various modifications will become possible for those skilled in the art after receiving the teachings of the present disclosure without departing from the scope thereof.

Référencé par
Brevet citant Date de dépôt Date de publication Déposant Titre
US637635128 juin 200123 avr. 2002Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing CompanyHigh Fmax RF MOSFET with embedded stack gate
US68309639 oct. 200314 déc. 2004Micron Technology, Inc.Fully depleted silicon-on-insulator CMOS logic
US68423704 mai 200411 janv. 2005Micron Technology, Inc.Vertical NROM having a storage density of 1 bit per 1F2
US685358721 juin 20028 févr. 2005Micron Technology, Inc.Vertical NROM having a storage density of 1 bit per 1F2
US68735507 août 200329 mars 2005Micron Technology, Inc.Method for programming and erasing an NROM cell
US687899130 janv. 200412 avr. 2005Micron Technology, Inc.Vertical device 4F2 EEPROM memory
US69069538 oct. 200314 juin 2005Micron Technology, Inc.Vertical NROM having a storage density of 1 bit per 1F2
US695236610 févr. 20044 oct. 2005Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory cell with integrated DRAM
US69774125 sept. 200320 déc. 2005Micron Technology, Inc.Trench corner effect bidirectional flash memory cell
US707221323 juin 20054 juil. 2006Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory cell with integrated DRAM
US707221724 févr. 20044 juil. 2006Micron Technology, Inc.Multi-state memory cell with asymmetric charge trapping
US70758316 avr. 200511 juil. 2006Micron Technology, Inc.Method for erasing an NROM cell
US70758326 avr. 200511 juil. 2006Micron Technology, Inc.Method for erasing an NROM cell
US707877027 sept. 200418 juil. 2006Micron Technology, Inc.Fully depleted silicon-on-insulator CMOS logic
US70851707 août 20031 août 2006Micron Technology, Ind.Method for erasing an NROM cell
US70886191 févr. 20058 août 2006Micron Technology, Inc.Method for programming and erasing an NROM cell
US710219124 mars 20045 sept. 2006Micron Technologies, Inc.Memory device with high dielectric constant gate dielectrics and metal floating gates
US712285030 août 200217 oct. 2006Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.Semiconductor device having local interconnection layer and etch stopper pattern for preventing leakage of current
US715776918 déc. 20032 janv. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Flash memory having a high-permittivity tunnel dielectric
US716121725 juil. 20059 janv. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Trench corner effect bidirectional flash memory cell
US71843154 nov. 200327 févr. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory with self-aligned structural charge separation
US720252317 nov. 200310 avr. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US722101810 févr. 200422 mai 2007Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory with a high-permittivity gate dielectric
US72277871 mai 20065 juin 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Method for erasing an NROM cell
US72308485 mai 200512 juin 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Vertical NROM having a storage density of 1 bit per 1F2
US724498725 août 200517 juil. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US726803111 août 200511 sept. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Memory device with high dielectric constant gate dielectrics and metal floating gates
US727204525 janv. 200618 sept. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Method for programming and erasing an NROM cell
US72740686 mai 200425 sept. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Ballistic direct injection NROM cell on strained silicon structures
US727641325 août 20052 oct. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US727676225 août 20052 oct. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US727732115 nov. 20062 oct. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Method for programming and erasing an NROM cell
US728339425 juil. 200516 oct. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Trench corner effect bidirectional flash memory cell
US728582125 juil. 200523 oct. 2007Micron Technology, Inc.Trench corner effect bidirectional flash memory cell
US729154621 juin 20046 nov. 2007Altera CorporationMethod and apparatus for reducing charge loss in a nonvolatile memory cell
US73196131 mai 200615 janv. 2008Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory cell with integrated DRAM
US732992025 juil. 200512 févr. 2008Micron Technology, Inc.Trench corner effect bidirectional flash memory cell
US735856229 mars 200715 avr. 2008Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US73716299 déc. 200213 mai 2008Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing CompanyN/PMOS saturation current, HCE, and Vt stability by contact etch stop film modifications
US737831629 mars 200727 mai 2008Micron Technology, Inc.Method for fabricating semiconductor vertical NROM memory cells
US747942822 août 200520 janv. 2009Forbes LeonardNROM flash memory with a high-permittivity gate dielectric
US748018611 janv. 200720 janv. 2009Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory with self-aligned structural charge separation
US752803722 août 20055 mai 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Flash memory having a high-permittivity tunnel dielectric
US753505425 juil. 200519 mai 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Trench corner effect bidirectional flash memory cell
US75503398 août 200723 juin 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Memory device with high dielectric constant gate dielectrics and metal floating gates
US756033530 août 200514 juil. 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Memory device transistors
US757702711 mai 200618 août 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Multi-state memory cell with asymmetric charge trapping
US758614419 juin 20068 sept. 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Memory device with high dielectric constant gate dielectrics and metal floating gates
US761648211 mai 200610 nov. 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Multi-state memory cell with asymmetric charge trapping
US763953015 nov. 200629 déc. 2009Micron Technology, Inc.Method for programming and erasing an NROM cell
US768342423 mai 200623 mars 2010Micron Technology, Inc.Ballistic direct injection NROM cell on strained silicon structures
US77048927 sept. 200627 avr. 2010Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.Semiconductor device having local interconnection layer and etch stopper pattern for preventing leakage of current
US77680585 mai 20083 août 2010Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US778132630 sept. 200524 août 2010Applied Materials, Inc.Formation of a tantalum-nitride layer
US783895215 oct. 200723 nov. 2010Seiko Epson CorporationMEMS device and fabrication method thereof
US785904621 août 200728 déc. 2010Micron Technology, Inc.Ballistic direct injection NROM cell on strained silicon structures
US791183719 oct. 200922 mars 2011Micron Technology, Inc.Multi-state memory cell with asymmetric charge trapping
US79156692 juil. 201029 mars 2011Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US797337028 mars 20065 juil. 2011Micron Technology, Inc.Fully depleted silicon-on-insulator CMOS logic
US798655520 nov. 200926 juil. 2011Micron Technology, Inc.Method for programming and erasing an NROM cell
US800403113 juil. 200923 août 2011Micron Technology, Inc.Memory device transistors
US807671411 août 200913 déc. 2011Micron Technology, Inc.Memory device with high dielectric constant gate dielectrics and metal floating gates
US81740813 mai 20118 mai 2012Micron Technology, Inc.Fully depleted silicon-on-insulator CMOS logic
US818362518 mars 201122 mai 2012Micron Technology, Inc.NROM flash memory devices on ultrathin silicon
US829421614 août 200823 oct. 2012Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd.Integrating the formation of I/O and core MOS devices with MOS capacitors and resistors
US83047833 juin 20096 nov. 2012Cree, Inc.Schottky diodes including polysilicon having low barrier heights and methods of fabricating the same
US201003083373 juin 20099 déc. 2010Cree, Inc.Schottky Diodes Including Polysilicon Having Low Barrier Heights and Methods of Fabricating the Same
WO2006065355A126 oct. 200522 juin 2006Lattice Semiconductor CorporationProcess for fabricating a semiconductor device having an rtcvd layer