|
H. V.
Demir, J.-F. Zheng, V. A. Sabnis, O. Fidaner, J. Hanberg, J. S. Harris,
D. A. B. Miller, "Self-Aligning Planarization and Passivation for
Integration Applications in III–V Semiconductor Devices," IEEE Trans.
Semicond. Manufacturing, 18, No. 1, 182-189 (Feb. 2005)
This paper reports an easy
planarization and passivation approach for the integration of III–V
semiconductor devices. Vertically etched III–V semiconductor devices
typically require sidewall passivation to suppress leakage currents and
planarization of the passivation material for metal interconnection and
device integration. It is, however, challenging to planarize all devices
at once. This technique offers wafer-scale passivation and planarization
that is automatically leveled to the device top in the 1–3-$mu$m
vicinity surrounding each device. In this method, a dielectric hard mask
is used to define the device area. An undercut structure is
intentionally created below the hard mask, which is retained during the
subsequent polymer spinning and anisotropic polymer etch back. The
spin-on polymer that fills in the undercut seals the sidewalls for all
the devices across the wafer. After the polymer etch back, the
dielectric mask is removed leaving the polymer surrounding each device
level with its device top to atomic scale flatness. This integration
method is robust and is insensitive to spin-on polymer thickness,
polymer etch nonuniformity, and device height difference. It prevents
the polymer under the hard mask from etch-induced damage and creates a
polymer-free device surface for metallization upon removal of the
dielectric mask. We applied this integration technique in fabricating an
InP-based photonic switch that consists of a mesa photodiode and a
quantum-well waveguide modulator using benzocyclobutene (BCB) polymer.
We demonstrated functional integrated photonic switches with high
process yield of > 90%, high breakdown
voltage of > 25 V, and low ohmic contact
resistance of < 10 Ω.
To the best of our knowledge, such an integration of a surface-normal
photodiode and a lumped electroabsorption modulator with the use of BCB
is the first to be implemented on a single substrate.
Full text available for
download |