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UMC's R&D Team Extends
Traditional Nitrided Gate-oxide to
beyond the 65nm node
Nitrogen profile engineering
used to downscale effective oxide thickness towards 1nm to improve
semiconductor performance
HSINCHU, Taiwan, June 16, 2005 -- UMC (NYSE: UMC; TSE: 2303),
a world leading semiconductor foundry, today announced that its
research and development team has achieved a significant engineering
milestone by shrinking the Equivalent Oxide Thickness (EOT) of nitrogen
doped silicon oxide (Oxy-nitride, SiON) gate dielectrics to approximately
1.0 nm using a new nitrogen profile engineering technique. This
accomplishment allows more aggressive scaling of transistors to
enhance overall semiconductor performance without the introduction
of new materials.
"UMC's R&D team is continually developing new and innovative
solutions to overcome ever-emerging challenges brought by advanced
process technology," said S. F. Tzou, director of UMC's Advanced
Module Development Division. "This latest achievement demonstrates
that our nitrogen profile engineering technique can be used to improve
performance at 65nm. This success also gives us confidence in the
viability of extending SiON gate dielectrics for future CMOS applications
beyond 65nm."
The novel SiON gate dielectric processing technique, unveiled by
UMC engineers, enables the precision positioning of the nitrogen
doping profile as well as accurate control of thickness. UMC engineers
used a less than 3% nitrogen atomic concentration layer near the
bottom Si-substrate / SiON interface, while using a higher concentration
of nitrogen at the top interface of the poly silicon gate/SiON gate
dielectric. The newly achieved effective oxide thickness of ~1.0
nm exhibits a gate leakage current of less than 10A/cm2 with improved
PMOS threshold voltage stability, lower interface state density,
and resistance to boron penetration. The enhanced mobility also
signifies higher performance and process reliability at the same
time.
Scaling down the conventional oxy-nitride to below 1.2nm of EOT
typically results in the rapid escalation of gate leakage current.
The use of a heavier nitrogen concentration, a favored method to
reduce leakage, typically induces undesirable side effects such
as mobility degradation and threshold voltage shift. Thus, this
approach is not ideal for practical use. New high-k gate dielectric
materials associated with metal gate electrodes have also been proposed
to alleviate this barrier, though these inevitably come with new
challenges of their own: namely, carrier mobility degradation, unacceptable
threshold voltage instability, and dual work-function metal gate
integration issues, etc. that would require intensive and costly
research efforts to address.
Oxy-nitride, which has been used for decades in semiconductor manufacturing
for legacy process technology generations, has remained a viable
candidate, but only if a proven means could be implemented to suppress
escalation of the gate leakage current while reducing thickness.
Traditionally, increased power consumption due to leakage has been
viewed as a trade-off with lower EOT to gain more speed. UMC has
demonstrated through its new nitrogen profile engineering technique
that existing oxy-nitride can be used to achieve greater transistor
performance without having to sacrifice power consumption.
The details of this technology finding were reported in the Symposia
on VLSI Technology and Circuits held at Kyoto, Japan on June16,
2005.
About UMC
UMC (NYSE: UMC, TSE: 2303) is a leading global semiconductor foundry
that manufactures advanced process ICs for applications spanning
every major sector of the semiconductor industry. UMC delivers cutting-edge
foundry technologies that enable sophisticated system-on-chip (SoC)
designs, including 90nm copper, 0.13um copper, and mixed signal/RFCMOS.
UMC is also a leader in 300mm manufacturing; Fab 12A in Taiwan and
Singapore-based Fab 12i are both in volume production for a variety
of customer products. UMC employs approximately 10,500 people worldwide
and has offices in Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, Europe, and the United
States. UMC can be found on the web at http://www.umc.com.
Note From UMC Concerning Forward-Looking Statements
Some of the statements in the foregoing announcement are forward
looking within the meaning of the U.S. Federal Securities laws,
including statements about future outsourcing, wafer capacity, technologies,
business relationships and market conditions. Investors are cautioned
that actual events and results could differ materially from these
statements as a result of a variety of factors, including conditions
in the overall semiconductor market and economy; acceptance and
demand for products from UMC; and technological and development
risks.
Contacts:
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UMC
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In the USA
KJ Communications
Eileen Elam
(650) 917-1488
eileen@kjcompr.com
UMC In Taiwan:
Alex Hinnawi
(886) 2-2700-6999 ext. 6958
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