WO2001082382A1 - Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes - Google Patents

Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2001082382A1
WO2001082382A1 PCT/US2001/012972 US0112972W WO0182382A1 WO 2001082382 A1 WO2001082382 A1 WO 2001082382A1 US 0112972 W US0112972 W US 0112972W WO 0182382 A1 WO0182382 A1 WO 0182382A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
layer
substrate
backside
photodiode array
thinning
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2001/012972
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Shulai Zhao
Lars S. Carlson
Alan Mollett
John Sheridan
Original Assignee
Digirad Corporation
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Digirad Corporation filed Critical Digirad Corporation
Priority to JP2001579372A priority Critical patent/JP2004507881A/en
Priority to EP01928739A priority patent/EP1284021A4/en
Publication of WO2001082382A1 publication Critical patent/WO2001082382A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L31/00Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof
    • H01L31/18Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment of these devices or of parts thereof
    • H01L31/1884Manufacture of transparent electrodes, e.g. TCO, ITO
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • H01L27/14Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate including semiconductor components sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation
    • H01L27/144Devices controlled by radiation
    • H01L27/1446Devices controlled by radiation in a repetitive configuration
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • H01L27/14Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate including semiconductor components sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation
    • H01L27/144Devices controlled by radiation
    • H01L27/146Imager structures
    • H01L27/14601Structural or functional details thereof
    • H01L27/14609Pixel-elements with integrated switching, control, storage or amplification elements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • H01L27/14Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate including semiconductor components sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation
    • H01L27/144Devices controlled by radiation
    • H01L27/146Imager structures
    • H01L27/14601Structural or functional details thereof
    • H01L27/1464Back illuminated imager structures
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • H01L27/14Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate including semiconductor components sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation
    • H01L27/144Devices controlled by radiation
    • H01L27/146Imager structures
    • H01L27/14643Photodiode arrays; MOS imagers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • H01L27/14Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate including semiconductor components sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation
    • H01L27/144Devices controlled by radiation
    • H01L27/146Imager structures
    • H01L27/14683Processes or apparatus peculiar to the manufacture or treatment of these devices or parts thereof
    • H01L27/14687Wafer level processing
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L31/00Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof
    • H01L31/02Details
    • H01L31/0224Electrodes
    • H01L31/022408Electrodes for devices characterised by at least one potential jump barrier or surface barrier
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L31/00Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof
    • H01L31/02Details
    • H01L31/0224Electrodes
    • H01L31/022466Electrodes made of transparent conductive layers, e.g. TCO, ITO layers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L31/00Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof
    • H01L31/08Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof in which radiation controls flow of current through the device, e.g. photoresistors
    • H01L31/10Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof in which radiation controls flow of current through the device, e.g. photoresistors characterised by potential barriers, e.g. phototransistors
    • H01L31/101Devices sensitive to infrared, visible or ultraviolet radiation
    • H01L31/102Devices sensitive to infrared, visible or ultraviolet radiation characterised by only one potential barrier
    • H01L31/103Devices sensitive to infrared, visible or ultraviolet radiation characterised by only one potential barrier the potential barrier being of the PN homojunction type
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L31/00Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof
    • H01L31/18Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment of these devices or of parts thereof
    • H01L31/186Particular post-treatment for the devices, e.g. annealing, impurity gettering, short-circuit elimination, recrystallisation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • H01L27/14Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate including semiconductor components sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation
    • H01L27/144Devices controlled by radiation
    • H01L27/146Imager structures
    • H01L27/14601Structural or functional details thereof
    • H01L27/1462Coatings
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L31/00Semiconductor devices sensitive to infrared radiation, light, electromagnetic radiation of shorter wavelength or corpuscular radiation and specially adapted either for the conversion of the energy of such radiation into electrical energy or for the control of electrical energy by such radiation; Processes or apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture or treatment thereof or of parts thereof; Details thereof
    • H01L31/02Details
    • H01L31/0216Coatings
    • H01L31/02161Coatings for devices characterised by at least one potential jump barrier or surface barrier
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E10/00Energy generation through renewable energy sources
    • Y02E10/50Photovoltaic [PV] energy
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P70/00Climate change mitigation technologies in the production process for final industrial or consumer products
    • Y02P70/50Manufacturing or production processes characterised by the final manufactured product
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31652Of asbestos
    • Y10T428/31663As siloxane, silicone or silane

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to electromagnetic radiation detectors, and more specifically to backside-illuminated semiconductor photodiode arrays .
  • a typical photodiode array includes a semiconductor substrate of a first conductivity type, having a front side formed with an array of doped regions of a second, opposite conductivity type, and an opposing back side that includes a heavily-doped bias electrode layer of the first conductivity type.
  • the frontside doped regions are referred to below as gates, independent of their function as anodes or cathodes.
  • the abbreviation BEL is used to denote the backside bias electrode layer.
  • the gate and bias electrode layers are formed internally to the crystalline semiconductor substrate. They are therefore native to and homostructural with the substrate.
  • an external gate contact formed from one or more non-native, heterostructural, conducting layers external to the substrate, is formed over a portion of each of the frontside gates.
  • one or more non-native, heterostructural, external back contacts may be formed over all, or a portion of, the backside bias electrode layer.
  • the gate contacts are usually formed from one or more metals, metal-silicon intermetallic compounds, or deposited, heavily-doped polysilicon, or a combination of a plurality of these materials.
  • silicon photodiode arrays may use the same materials or one or more transparent conducting materials such as indium-tin oxide, which is an amorphous typically non-stoichiometric mixture of indium oxide and tin oxide.
  • an array of readout circuits is also formed on the front surface of the substrate.
  • a potential difference referred to as a reverse bias
  • a reverse bias can be applied between the gate and the bias electrode layer to produce a depletion region within the substrate extending into the substrate from the p-n junction between the gate on the front side and the substrate.
  • a photodiode is effected by the gate, the substrate and the BEL.
  • External gate contacts or back contacts are ancillary elements provided to facilitate electrical connections to the photodiode array, not essential components thereof.
  • Such a photodiode array may be configured either in a frontside-illuminated mode to receive photons from the front side or in a backside-illuminated mode to receive photons from the backside.
  • the frontside- illuminated mode usually results in a lower external quantum efficiency (ratio of photocarriers collected to incident photons) than the backside- illuminated mode, because the conducting elements of the gate contacts and the readout circuits (if provided) reduce the active photosensitive area of the array on the front side. In comparison, the entire back side can be used to collect incoming radiation when properly configured.
  • enhanced photosensitivity results in increased signal-to-noise ratio.
  • enhanced photosensitivity results in improved particle energy resolution.
  • conducting lines and other physical features such as steps in dielectric thickness on the front side can scatter light into the photosensitive areas of adjacent photodiodes, thereby reducing image contrast. Contrast degradation modifies the modulation transfer function of the array and can reduce the useful spatial resolution of the array. Therefore, backside illuminated photodiode arrays are frequently used in imaging applications to improve photosensitivity, signal-to-noise ratio, particle energy resolution and spatial resolution.
  • photocurrent is typically generated by band-to-band absorption. Photons with energy greater than the bandgap of the semiconductor substrate enter the back of the substrate and are absorbed, producing electron-hole pairs. If an electron-hole pair is generated outside the depletion region of a gate, the minority carrier (a hole in the example above) may diffuse to the edge of the depletion region beneath one of the gates . The electric field within the depletion region "collects" the hole by accelerating it towards the gate.
  • the electric field "collects" the hole as above, but accelerates the electron towards the undepleted substrate, or, if the substrate is fully depleted below a gate, towards the backside bias electrode layer. In either case, the photocurrent will flow through the photodiode and the external circuitry that maintains the bias between the gate and the bias electrode layer. If readout circuitry is provided on same semiconductor substrate, the circuit elements associated with each gate will produce a signal that represents a mathematical function of the photocurrent, the quantity of charge caused by the photon absorption, or a combination of both.
  • leakage current is used to denote reverse-bias leakage current .
  • the input optical signal often is in the form of short pulses, a few nanoseconds to a few microseconds in duration.
  • the photodiodes it is highly beneficial for the photodiodes to have short pulse response times, often referred to collectively as transition times or, singly, as rise and fall times, in the rough order of magnitude range of 10 to 100ns or less.
  • the signal processing system associated with the photodiode arrays typically "shapes" the output pulse by integrating the photocurrent generated within a time window of fixed duration in the same order of magnitude as the length of the photopulse.
  • Photodiode arrays with one or more long transition times produce output photocurrent pulses significantly longer than the input photopulse. These long photocurrent pulses produce smaller output pulses from the signal processing electronics than do those from faster photodiode arrays. Therefore, slow photodiode arrays may result in low output signals from the signal processing electronics and therefore degrade the signal- to-noise ratio of the image.
  • the signal processing electronics may respond to the average photocurrent collected by a pixel over a time interval of fixed duration, longer than the duration of a single optical pulse. For these applications, longer transition times than those required for efficient single pulse detection may be acceptable.
  • the bias electrode layer should be thin enough to be transparent to the incident radiation, yet sufficiently conductive to provide an equipotential surface on the back surface of the substrate adequate to maintain uniform depletion over the entire area beneath each gate.
  • the bias electrode layer should also have a low density of crystallographic defects and be free from deep- level impurities. If these criteria are met, the BEL will exhibit long enough minority-carrier lifetimes to minimize recombination of photocarriers generated within the BEL, thereby maximizing the efficiency of collection of photocarriers generated therein The BEL will therefore not be an optical "dead layer.”
  • the pulse response times of the photodiodes can be minimized by using semiconductor substrates of high resistivity in the approximate range of 5 to 25k ⁇ -cm, operated under reverse bias conditions sufficient to fully deplete the substrate under the gates. Under such full- depletion conditions, the electric field of the depletion region extends to the bias electrode layer on the back side .
  • Achieving ultra-low leakage current densities, e.g., below about InA/cm 2 at room temperature, of the individual photodiodes requires reduction of the contributions to the total leakage current by (1) the substrate; (2) the back contact structure (including the bias electrode layer and any additional layers formed thereon) ; (3) the front surface regions between the gate regions and between the outer gates and the surrounding regions; and (4) the edges of the substrate, formed when the substrate is "diced" to form individual photodiode array chips.
  • the bulk generation current of the substrate may be reduced by "gettering, " an elevated-temperature process, typically performed at 1000°C or higher for silicon substrates, in which strained, damaged or heavily- doped layers, singly or in combination, on the back surface of the substrate attract and capture impurities or crystallographic defects. Crystallographic defects may also be annihilated by recombination during the gettering process .
  • Front surface generation currents in silicon photodiode arrays are usually minimized by using silicon dioxide (Si0 2 ) layers thermally grown under conditions known to produce low-leakage surfaces . These oxides are typically grown prior to, or concurrently with, the gettering process. Low-temperature (below 400°C) treatments may be performed after gettering to optimize surface leakage.
  • the bias electrode layer must be thin enough to be transparent. Such thin layers, however, are easily damaged, and damaged regions may generate leakage current very efficiently. Under fully depleted conditions, the bias electrode layer must contain enough electrically active (i.e., charged as opposed to neutral) dopant atoms to allow it to terminate the electric field of the depletion region.
  • the back surface of the crystalline semiconductor substrate, or the interface between the substrate and overlayers formed upon the back surface of the substrate to enhance the backside conductivity or to reduce reflection of incident photons, is a region where the crystal structure of the substrate is imperfectly terminated. Such regions may be capable of generating high leakage currents. If the electric field penetrates the BEL and reaches such an interface, it will efficiently collect the current generated there. Similarly, the electric field will collect leakage current generated by impurities or defects within the BEL.
  • Undepleted regions in the BEL typically are highly-doped and will not be efficient leakage generators. Deep level impurities and defects in depleted regions of the BEL, on the other hand, may generate large leakage currents. If the BEL does not exhibit long minority carrier lifetimes, the BEL may therefore degrade the leakage current of the photodiodes .
  • Edge leakage currents are usually suppressed by providing guard structures surrounding the array of pixels. These structures collect the leakage currents generated at the diced edges before it reaches the pixels themselves .
  • the present invention comprises fabrication of ultra-low leakage current backside-illuminated photodiode arrays wherein the transparent, conducting bias electrode layer is formed so high-temperature processing of the substrate is avoided after the wafer has been gettered.
  • the component of the reverse-bias leakage current associated with strain, crystallographic defects or impurities introduced during elevated temperature processing subsequent to gettering can be kept extremely low.
  • An optically transparent, conductive bias electrode layer, serving as both an optical window and a backside equipotential contact surface for the photodiodes, is fabricated by etching through the polysilicon gettering layer to a thin, heavily-doped crystalline silicon layer formed within the back of the substrate during the gettering process.
  • Photodiode arrays fabricated according to this method, and the bias electrode layers of these arrays, are mechanically, electrically and optically superior to the prior art. Bias electrode layers formed in accordance with this method are internal (native) , monocrystalline, homostructural layers formed within the semiconductor substrate.
  • the interface between the BEL and the adjoining high-resistivity substrate material does not terminate the crystalline lattice of the substrate, as is the case when the BEL is a polycrystalline layer or a thin metal layer.
  • Interfaces produced by the present method are inherently superior to those produced when the BEL is formed by epitaxy; it is impossible to completely eliminate crystallographic defects and interfacial impurities at epitaxial interfaces .
  • Bias electrode layers formed according to the present invention have high minority carrier lifetimes. Photocarriers generated therein may be efficiently collected by the depletion regions beneath the gates . Therefore, these BELs can be far thicker than those fabricated using prior art. BEL thicknesses of rough order of magnitude 0.25 to 1.0 micrometer formed in silicon substrates exhibit high external quantum efficiency and low leakage currents. Such BELs are far less susceptible to damage than those with thicknesses of rough order of magnitude 0.01 micrometer formed using prior techniques. DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS [0023]
  • Figure 1 illustrates a backside-illuminated photodiode structure prior to backside thinning according to one embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 2 illustrates a backside-thinned photodiode array structure according to one embodiment of the invention.
  • the heavily-doped polysilicon gettering layer is etched away at approximately room temperature after wafer gettering has been accomplished. This forms an internal (native), optically transparent, conductive, homostructural bias electrode layer from the crystalline layer, doped by dopant diffusion during the gettering process, that remains within the original substrate.
  • the bias electrode layer thus formed provides a transparent, conductive, internal ohmic contact to the photodiode pixels . Part of the crystalline doped layer may be removed during this process to optimize the sheet resistivity of the contact layer.
  • the low-leakage current backside-illuminated photodiode array structure 100 is formed within a high-resistivity silicon substrate 110 of a first conductivity type.
  • the substrate may be taken to be n-type.
  • an array of heavily- doped gate regions 120 of a second, opposite conductivity type is formed near the front surface 130 of the substrate 110.
  • Additional doped regions 140 each of which may have the same conductivity type as the substrate 110 or the opposite conductivity type, may be formed for purposes other than fabrication of the photodiode array itself.
  • Additional low- or high-temperature process e.g., growth or deposition of oxides or other dielectric layers, chemical or plasma etching, dopant deposition, diffusion, ion implantation
  • a polysilicon layer 150 is deposited on the back surface 160 of the substrate 110.
  • the polysilicon layer 150 may have a thickness in the rough order of magnitude of 0.25 to 1.5 micrometers.
  • the polysilicon layer 150 is heavily doped by incorporation of impurities of the same conductivity type as the substrate 110.
  • Polysilicon doping may be performed in situ during deposition or subsequently by deposition of a dopant source layer (e.g., P0C1 3 for n-type substrates) or other means.
  • a dopant source layer e.g., P0C1 3 for n-type substrates
  • the photodiode structure 100 is then subjected to a high- temperature thermal gettering cycle to transport crystallographic defects and unintentional impurities into the doped polysilicon layer 150.
  • dopant atoms from the polysilicon layer 150 may diffuse into the back regions of the substrate 110, forming a heavily-doped internal (native) , homostructural, crystalline layer 170 within the substrate 110.
  • the backside diffused layer 170 may initially have a thickness of rough order of magnitude 0.5 to 5 micrometers, a maximum carrier concentration of rough order of magnitude lxlO 20 cm -3 , and a sheet resistivity of rough order of magnitude 2 to 20 ⁇ per square.
  • the doped polysilicon layer 150 and part of the backside diffused layer 170 are removed. Removal of the polysilicon gettering layer 150 and the portion of the backside diffused layer 170 may be accomplished by wet-chemical etching, ion-assisted etching (plasma or reactive-ion etching) singly or in combination, or by other means.
  • the backside diffused layer 170 is thinned to a final thickness compatible with high external quantum efficiency, low leakage current, and conductivity adequate to facilitate uniform backside biasing.
  • the backside diffused layer 170 may have a final thickness of rough order of magnitude range of 0.25 to 1.0 micrometers and a sheet resistivity in the approximate range of 50 to 1000 ⁇ per square.
  • the backside-thinned photodiode array structure 200 includes all the frontside layers, interfaces and other features as the unfinished photodiode structure 170 of Figure 1.
  • the backside-thinned photodiode array 200 includes a thinned backside diffused layer 270 that forms the bias electrode layer for the photodiode array structure.
  • the thinning process also creates a new back surface 260 on the substrate 110.
  • one or more additional external (non-native) layers 280 may be formed over the new back surface 260 to decrease the reflectivity of the structure at the optical wavelengths of interest or to enhance the backside conductivity of the structure.
  • the thick, robust bias electrode layers 270 of the backside-thinned structure 200 are sufficiently conductive to render such conductivity enhancement unnecessary. Therefore, a wide choice of single- or multi-layer dielectric anti-reflective coating structures may be used to optimize the external quantum efficiency of the photodiode array.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Condensed Matter Physics & Semiconductors (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Solid State Image Pick-Up Elements (AREA)
  • Light Receiving Elements (AREA)

Abstract

Ultra-low leakage current backside-illuminated semiconductor photodiode arrays are fabricated using a method of formation of a transparent, conducting bias electrode layer that avoids high-temperature processing of the substrate after the wafer has been gettered. As a consequence, the component of the reverse-bias leakage current associated with strain, crystallographic defects or impurities introduced during elevated temperature processing subsequent to gettering can be kept extremely low. An optically transparent, conductive bias electrode layer, serving as both an optical window and an ohmic backside equipotential contact surface for the photodiodes, is fabricated by etching through the polysilicon gettering layer and a portion of the thickness of heavily-doped crystalline silicon layer formed within, and near the back of, the substrate during the gettering process.

Description

Fabrication of Low Leakage-Current Backside Illuminated Photodiodes
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION [0001] This application claims benefit of the priority of U.S. Provisional Application Serial Number 60/198,912 filed April 20, 2000 and entitled "Fabrication of Low Leakage-Current Backside Illuminated Photodiodes."
TECHNICAL FIELD [0002] The present invention relates to electromagnetic radiation detectors, and more specifically to backside-illuminated semiconductor photodiode arrays .
BACKGROUND [0003] A typical photodiode array includes a semiconductor substrate of a first conductivity type, having a front side formed with an array of doped regions of a second, opposite conductivity type, and an opposing back side that includes a heavily-doped bias electrode layer of the first conductivity type. For simplicity, the frontside doped regions are referred to below as gates, independent of their function as anodes or cathodes. Similarly, the abbreviation BEL is used to denote the backside bias electrode layer. [0004] To provide a framework for the discussion below, an example of a photodiode array is used below in which the frontside doped gate regions have p-type conductivity, the substrate is n-type, and the backside bias electrode layer is, accordingly, a heavily-doped n- type layer. All statements and claims herein are equally true if the conductivity types of all the layers are reversed and the corresponding changes are made to the polarities of the charge carriers, applied voltages and electric fields.
[0005] Typically, the gate and bias electrode layers are formed internally to the crystalline semiconductor substrate. They are therefore native to and homostructural with the substrate. In most implementations, an external gate contact, formed from one or more non-native, heterostructural, conducting layers external to the substrate, is formed over a portion of each of the frontside gates. Similarly, one or more non-native, heterostructural, external back contacts may be formed over all, or a portion of, the backside bias electrode layer. In the case of silicon substrates, the gate contacts are usually formed from one or more metals, metal-silicon intermetallic compounds, or deposited, heavily-doped polysilicon, or a combination of a plurality of these materials. In the present context, polysilicon is considered to be both non-native and heterostructural to the crystalline silicon substrate. Similarly, silicon dioxide (Si02) , the amorphous "native oxide" of silicon, is both non-native and heterostructural to the substrate in this context. Back contacts to silicon photodiode arrays may use the same materials or one or more transparent conducting materials such as indium-tin oxide, which is an amorphous typically non-stoichiometric mixture of indium oxide and tin oxide. In many applications, an array of readout circuits is also formed on the front surface of the substrate. [0006] A potential difference, referred to as a reverse bias, can be applied between the gate and the bias electrode layer to produce a depletion region within the substrate extending into the substrate from the p-n junction between the gate on the front side and the substrate. Hence, a photodiode is effected by the gate, the substrate and the BEL. External gate contacts or back contacts are ancillary elements provided to facilitate electrical connections to the photodiode array, not essential components thereof. [0007] Such a photodiode array may be configured either in a frontside-illuminated mode to receive photons from the front side or in a backside-illuminated mode to receive photons from the backside. The frontside- illuminated mode, however, usually results in a lower external quantum efficiency (ratio of photocarriers collected to incident photons) than the backside- illuminated mode, because the conducting elements of the gate contacts and the readout circuits (if provided) reduce the active photosensitive area of the array on the front side. In comparison, the entire back side can be used to collect incoming radiation when properly configured.
All other factors being equal, enhanced photosensitivity results in increased signal-to-noise ratio. In single- particle radiation detection applications using either direct (intrinsic) detection in the substrate or indirect detection (e.g., using scintillators as discussed below), enhanced photosensitivity results in improved particle energy resolution. In addition, conducting lines and other physical features such as steps in dielectric thickness on the front side can scatter light into the photosensitive areas of adjacent photodiodes, thereby reducing image contrast. Contrast degradation modifies the modulation transfer function of the array and can reduce the useful spatial resolution of the array. Therefore, backside illuminated photodiode arrays are frequently used in imaging applications to improve photosensitivity, signal-to-noise ratio, particle energy resolution and spatial resolution. [0008] In a backside-illuminated photodiode, photocurrent is typically generated by band-to-band absorption. Photons with energy greater than the bandgap of the semiconductor substrate enter the back of the substrate and are absorbed, producing electron-hole pairs. If an electron-hole pair is generated outside the depletion region of a gate, the minority carrier (a hole in the example above) may diffuse to the edge of the depletion region beneath one of the gates . The electric field within the depletion region "collects" the hole by accelerating it towards the gate. If, however, a photon is absorbed within the depletion region of a gate, the electric field "collects" the hole as above, but accelerates the electron towards the undepleted substrate, or, if the substrate is fully depleted below a gate, towards the backside bias electrode layer. In either case, the photocurrent will flow through the photodiode and the external circuitry that maintains the bias between the gate and the bias electrode layer. If readout circuitry is provided on same semiconductor substrate, the circuit elements associated with each gate will produce a signal that represents a mathematical function of the photocurrent, the quantity of charge caused by the photon absorption, or a combination of both.
[0009] In low light-level imaging applications such as night photography, nuclear medical imaging, photon medical imaging, x-ray computed tomography and ballistic photon detection, it is critical for photodiode arrays simultaneously to exhibit high external photon conversion efficiency (defined as the ratio of photocarriers collected to photons incident on the back surface of the substrate) and extremely low reverse-bias leakage currents. For brevity, "quantum efficiency" is used below to denote external photon conversion efficiency, and
"leakage current" is used to denote reverse-bias leakage current .
[0010] In low light-level imaging systems, the input optical signal often is in the form of short pulses, a few nanoseconds to a few microseconds in duration. For these applications, it is highly beneficial for the photodiodes to have short pulse response times, often referred to collectively as transition times or, singly, as rise and fall times, in the rough order of magnitude range of 10 to 100ns or less. The signal processing system associated with the photodiode arrays typically "shapes" the output pulse by integrating the photocurrent generated within a time window of fixed duration in the same order of magnitude as the length of the photopulse.
[0011] Photodiode arrays with one or more long transition times produce output photocurrent pulses significantly longer than the input photopulse. These long photocurrent pulses produce smaller output pulses from the signal processing electronics than do those from faster photodiode arrays. Therefore, slow photodiode arrays may result in low output signals from the signal processing electronics and therefore degrade the signal- to-noise ratio of the image. In applications with higher photon flux rates, e.g., x-ray computed tomography, the signal processing electronics may respond to the average photocurrent collected by a pixel over a time interval of fixed duration, longer than the duration of a single optical pulse. For these applications, longer transition times than those required for efficient single pulse detection may be acceptable.
[0012] To achieve high quantum efficiency, the bias electrode layer should be thin enough to be transparent to the incident radiation, yet sufficiently conductive to provide an equipotential surface on the back surface of the substrate adequate to maintain uniform depletion over the entire area beneath each gate. [0013] The bias electrode layer should also have a low density of crystallographic defects and be free from deep- level impurities. If these criteria are met, the BEL will exhibit long enough minority-carrier lifetimes to minimize recombination of photocarriers generated within the BEL, thereby maximizing the efficiency of collection of photocarriers generated therein The BEL will therefore not be an optical "dead layer."
[0014] The pulse response times of the photodiodes can be minimized by using semiconductor substrates of high resistivity in the approximate range of 5 to 25kΩ-cm, operated under reverse bias conditions sufficient to fully deplete the substrate under the gates. Under such full- depletion conditions, the electric field of the depletion region extends to the bias electrode layer on the back side . [0015] Achieving ultra-low leakage current densities, e.g., below about InA/cm2 at room temperature, of the individual photodiodes requires reduction of the contributions to the total leakage current by (1) the substrate; (2) the back contact structure (including the bias electrode layer and any additional layers formed thereon) ; (3) the front surface regions between the gate regions and between the outer gates and the surrounding regions; and (4) the edges of the substrate, formed when the substrate is "diced" to form individual photodiode array chips.
[0016] The bulk generation current of the substrate may be reduced by "gettering, " an elevated-temperature process, typically performed at 1000°C or higher for silicon substrates, in which strained, damaged or heavily- doped layers, singly or in combination, on the back surface of the substrate attract and capture impurities or crystallographic defects. Crystallographic defects may also be annihilated by recombination during the gettering process . The strained, damaged or heavily-doped
"gettering layer" or layers is subsequently removed, thereby removing the absorbed impurities and defects. Once the substrate has been gettered, further high- temperature processes should be avoided, to prevent introduction of new impurities or generation of additional defects. All subsequent chemical processing and handling of the substrate should be scrupulously clean to avoid re-contamination. [0017] Front surface generation currents in silicon photodiode arrays are usually minimized by using silicon dioxide (Si02) layers thermally grown under conditions known to produce low-leakage surfaces . These oxides are typically grown prior to, or concurrently with, the gettering process. Low-temperature (below 400°C) treatments may be performed after gettering to optimize surface leakage. [0018] Minimizing leakage currents associated with the back contact structure requires dealing with a number of contradictory requirements. As discussed above, the bias electrode layer must be thin enough to be transparent. Such thin layers, however, are easily damaged, and damaged regions may generate leakage current very efficiently. Under fully depleted conditions, the bias electrode layer must contain enough electrically active (i.e., charged as opposed to neutral) dopant atoms to allow it to terminate the electric field of the depletion region. The back surface of the crystalline semiconductor substrate, or the interface between the substrate and overlayers formed upon the back surface of the substrate to enhance the backside conductivity or to reduce reflection of incident photons, is a region where the crystal structure of the substrate is imperfectly terminated. Such regions may be capable of generating high leakage currents. If the electric field penetrates the BEL and reaches such an interface, it will efficiently collect the current generated there. Similarly, the electric field will collect leakage current generated by impurities or defects within the BEL.
Undepleted regions in the BEL typically are highly-doped and will not be efficient leakage generators. Deep level impurities and defects in depleted regions of the BEL, on the other hand, may generate large leakage currents. If the BEL does not exhibit long minority carrier lifetimes, the BEL may therefore degrade the leakage current of the photodiodes .
[0019] Edge leakage currents are usually suppressed by providing guard structures surrounding the array of pixels. These structures collect the leakage currents generated at the diced edges before it reaches the pixels themselves .
SUMMARY [0020] The present invention comprises fabrication of ultra-low leakage current backside-illuminated photodiode arrays wherein the transparent, conducting bias electrode layer is formed so high-temperature processing of the substrate is avoided after the wafer has been gettered. As a consequence, the component of the reverse-bias leakage current associated with strain, crystallographic defects or impurities introduced during elevated temperature processing subsequent to gettering can be kept extremely low. An optically transparent, conductive bias electrode layer, serving as both an optical window and a backside equipotential contact surface for the photodiodes, is fabricated by etching through the polysilicon gettering layer to a thin, heavily-doped crystalline silicon layer formed within the back of the substrate during the gettering process. As discussed above, a structure that simultaneously provides a transparent window and a conductive contact over the same area of the substrate, is important in the case of fully depleted photodiodes and photodiode arrays. An electrical contact formed only around the periphery of the pixel area(s) would not be able to conduct the reverse-bias leakage current generated in the interior of the pixel area. It would therefore be unable to maintain full depletion. [0021] Photodiode arrays fabricated according to this method, and the bias electrode layers of these arrays, are mechanically, electrically and optically superior to the prior art. Bias electrode layers formed in accordance with this method are internal (native) , monocrystalline, homostructural layers formed within the semiconductor substrate. The interface between the BEL and the adjoining high-resistivity substrate material does not terminate the crystalline lattice of the substrate, as is the case when the BEL is a polycrystalline layer or a thin metal layer. Interfaces produced by the present method are inherently superior to those produced when the BEL is formed by epitaxy; it is impossible to completely eliminate crystallographic defects and interfacial impurities at epitaxial interfaces .
[0022] Bias electrode layers formed according to the present invention have high minority carrier lifetimes. Photocarriers generated therein may be efficiently collected by the depletion regions beneath the gates . Therefore, these BELs can be far thicker than those fabricated using prior art. BEL thicknesses of rough order of magnitude 0.25 to 1.0 micrometer formed in silicon substrates exhibit high external quantum efficiency and low leakage currents. Such BELs are far less susceptible to damage than those with thicknesses of rough order of magnitude 0.01 micrometer formed using prior techniques. DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS [0023] These and other features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the accompanying drawings .
[0024] Figure 1 illustrates a backside-illuminated photodiode structure prior to backside thinning according to one embodiment of the invention.
[0025] Figure 2 illustrates a backside-thinned photodiode array structure according to one embodiment of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION [0026] In one embodiment of the present invention, the heavily-doped polysilicon gettering layer is etched away at approximately room temperature after wafer gettering has been accomplished. This forms an internal (native), optically transparent, conductive, homostructural bias electrode layer from the crystalline layer, doped by dopant diffusion during the gettering process, that remains within the original substrate. The bias electrode layer thus formed provides a transparent, conductive, internal ohmic contact to the photodiode pixels . Part of the crystalline doped layer may be removed during this process to optimize the sheet resistivity of the contact layer.
[0027] Referring to Figure 1, the low-leakage current backside-illuminated photodiode array structure 100 is formed within a high-resistivity silicon substrate 110 of a first conductivity type. For illustrative purposes, the substrate may be taken to be n-type. Using conventional semiconductor processing techniques, an array of heavily- doped gate regions 120 of a second, opposite conductivity type, is formed near the front surface 130 of the substrate 110. Additional doped regions 140, each of which may have the same conductivity type as the substrate 110 or the opposite conductivity type, may be formed for purposes other than fabrication of the photodiode array itself.
[0028] Additional low- or high-temperature process (e.g., growth or deposition of oxides or other dielectric layers, chemical or plasma etching, dopant deposition, diffusion, ion implantation) may be performed as part of the process of defining the frontside structures of the photodiode array or ancillary devices. [0029] Subsequent to the final high-temperature process, a polysilicon layer 150 is deposited on the back surface 160 of the substrate 110. The polysilicon layer 150 may have a thickness in the rough order of magnitude of 0.25 to 1.5 micrometers. The polysilicon layer 150 is heavily doped by incorporation of impurities of the same conductivity type as the substrate 110. Polysilicon doping may be performed in situ during deposition or subsequently by deposition of a dopant source layer (e.g., P0C13 for n-type substrates) or other means. The photodiode structure 100 is then subjected to a high- temperature thermal gettering cycle to transport crystallographic defects and unintentional impurities into the doped polysilicon layer 150. During the gettering process, which may involve oxidation of the front or back surfaces of the photodiode structure 100, dopant atoms from the polysilicon layer 150 may diffuse into the back regions of the substrate 110, forming a heavily-doped internal (native) , homostructural, crystalline layer 170 within the substrate 110. The backside diffused layer 170 may initially have a thickness of rough order of magnitude 0.5 to 5 micrometers, a maximum carrier concentration of rough order of magnitude lxlO20 cm-3, and a sheet resistivity of rough order of magnitude 2 to 20Ω per square.
[0030] Following the gettering process, the doped polysilicon layer 150 and part of the backside diffused layer 170 are removed. Removal of the polysilicon gettering layer 150 and the portion of the backside diffused layer 170 may be accomplished by wet-chemical etching, ion-assisted etching (plasma or reactive-ion etching) singly or in combination, or by other means.
[0031] The backside diffused layer 170 is thinned to a final thickness compatible with high external quantum efficiency, low leakage current, and conductivity adequate to facilitate uniform backside biasing. The backside diffused layer 170 may have a final thickness of rough order of magnitude range of 0.25 to 1.0 micrometers and a sheet resistivity in the approximate range of 50 to 1000Ω per square. [0032] Referring to Figure 2, the backside-thinned photodiode array structure 200 includes all the frontside layers, interfaces and other features as the unfinished photodiode structure 170 of Figure 1. Additional layers, interfaces or features may be formed upon the front surface 130 of the substrate 110 prior to backside thinning, to provide external contacts to the gates 120 or additional doped layers 140, to provide readout circuits, or for other purposes. The backside-thinned photodiode array 200 includes a thinned backside diffused layer 270 that forms the bias electrode layer for the photodiode array structure. The thinning process also creates a new back surface 260 on the substrate 110.
[0033] Subsequent to backside thinning, one or more additional external (non-native) layers 280 may be formed over the new back surface 260 to decrease the reflectivity of the structure at the optical wavelengths of interest or to enhance the backside conductivity of the structure. In contrast to the ultra-thin backside contact structures employed in the prior art, the thick, robust bias electrode layers 270 of the backside-thinned structure 200 are sufficiently conductive to render such conductivity enhancement unnecessary. Therefore, a wide choice of single- or multi-layer dielectric anti-reflective coating structures may be used to optimize the external quantum efficiency of the photodiode array. Such optimization is not usually possible in the prior art, because there is a very limited selection of transparent conductive layers such as indium-tin oxide [ITO] that can be used to enhance the back surface conductivity. These materials, therefore, afford a similarly limited choice of optical properties to be used in designing conductive, anti- reflective coating structures. In general, photodiode arrays equipped with anti-reflection coating structures formed using transparent conductors will exhibit higher reflectivities than those using properly-designed dielectric anti-reflection coating structures . [0034] The method described herein has been employed to fabricate 16-element (4x4 pixel square) silicon photodiode arrays with approximately 9mm2 (3mm x 3mm) pixel areas used in a commercially available gamma-ray imaging system. These devices exhibit high external quantum efficiencies - over 90% at 560nm wavelength - when equipped with single- or multi-layer dielectric anti-reflection coatings. Production devices routinely exhibit reverse-bias leakage currents below InA/cπf2 at room temperature. [0035] A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims .

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A method of fabricating a low-leakage current photodiode array comprising: defining frontside structures of the photodiode; depositing a heavily-doped getting layer on a back surface of a substrate; gettering the substrate to form a heavily- doped, conductive, crystalline layer within the substrate; thinning the conductive layer to create an optically transparent, conductive bias electrode layer.
2. The method of Claim 1, further comprising performing all high-temperature processes prior to thinning the conductive layer.
3. The method of Claim 1, wherein the gettering layer is a polysilicon layer.
4. The method of Claim 1, further comprising thinning the conductive layer to a thickness of approximately 0.25 to 1.0 micrometers.
5. The method of Claim 1, further comprising etching the conductive layer.
6. The method of Claim 1, wherein the optically transparent, conductive bias electrode has a sheet resistivity of approximately 50 to 1000Ω per square.
7. The method of Claim 1, further comprising forming additional layers over the front surface prior to thinning.
8. The method of Claim 1, further comprising forming additional layers over the back surface subsequent to thinning.
9. A low-leakage current photodiode array comprising: a substrate having a front side and a back side; a plurality of gate regions formed near the front side of the substrate; a backside layer formed within the substrate, near the back side of the substrate, the backside layer being thinned to a thickness of approximately 0.25 to 1.0 micrometers .
10. The photodiode array of Claim 9, wherein the backside layer has a sheet resistivity of approximately 50 to 1000Ω per square following thinning.
11. The photodiode array of Claim 9, wherein the backside layer is thinned by etching.
12. The photodiode array of Claim 9, wherein the backside layer is a crystalline silicon layer.
13. The photodiode array of Claim 9, wherein the backside layer is formed during the final high- temperature process.
14. The photodiode array of Claim 9, wherein the backside layer is thinned after the final high- temperature process.
15. The photodiode array of Claim 9, further comprising additional layers formed over the back side to decrease the backside reflectivity of the photodiode.
PCT/US2001/012972 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes WO2001082382A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2001579372A JP2004507881A (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Manufacture of back-illuminated photodiode with low leakage current
EP01928739A EP1284021A4 (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US19891200P 2000-04-20 2000-04-20
US60/198,912 2000-04-20

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2001082382A1 true WO2001082382A1 (en) 2001-11-01

Family

ID=22735406

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2001/012972 WO2001082382A1 (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (7) US6670258B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1284021A4 (en)
JP (1) JP2004507881A (en)
WO (1) WO2001082382A1 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1532686A2 (en) * 2002-07-11 2005-05-25 Qinetiq Limited Photodetector circuits
US7256386B2 (en) 2000-04-20 2007-08-14 Digirad Corporation Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes
WO2022117804A1 (en) * 2020-12-04 2022-06-09 Vishay Semiconductor Gmbh Method for producing a photodiode

Families Citing this family (77)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8565860B2 (en) 2000-08-21 2013-10-22 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. Radioactive emission detector equipped with a position tracking system
US8909325B2 (en) 2000-08-21 2014-12-09 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. Radioactive emission detector equipped with a position tracking system and utilization thereof with medical systems and in medical procedures
US8489176B1 (en) 2000-08-21 2013-07-16 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Radioactive emission detector equipped with a position tracking system and utilization thereof with medical systems and in medical procedures
DE10132583A1 (en) * 2001-07-05 2003-01-23 Siemens Ag Back-irradiable MSM module
US8686529B2 (en) 2010-01-19 2014-04-01 Osi Optoelectronics, Inc. Wavelength sensitive sensor photodiodes
US7242069B2 (en) 2003-05-05 2007-07-10 Udt Sensors, Inc. Thin wafer detectors with improved radiation damage and crosstalk characteristics
US7057254B2 (en) * 2003-05-05 2006-06-06 Udt Sensors, Inc. Front illuminated back side contact thin wafer detectors
US8120023B2 (en) * 2006-06-05 2012-02-21 Udt Sensors, Inc. Low crosstalk, front-side illuminated, back-side contact photodiode array
US7279731B1 (en) * 2006-05-15 2007-10-09 Udt Sensors, Inc. Edge illuminated photodiodes
US8164151B2 (en) * 2007-05-07 2012-04-24 Osi Optoelectronics, Inc. Thin active layer fishbone photodiode and method of manufacturing the same
US7576369B2 (en) * 2005-10-25 2009-08-18 Udt Sensors, Inc. Deep diffused thin photodiodes
US8035183B2 (en) * 2003-05-05 2011-10-11 Udt Sensors, Inc. Photodiodes with PN junction on both front and back sides
US8519503B2 (en) * 2006-06-05 2013-08-27 Osi Optoelectronics, Inc. High speed backside illuminated, front side contact photodiode array
US7256470B2 (en) 2005-03-16 2007-08-14 Udt Sensors, Inc. Photodiode with controlled current leakage
US7880258B2 (en) * 2003-05-05 2011-02-01 Udt Sensors, Inc. Thin wafer detectors with improved radiation damage and crosstalk characteristics
US7709921B2 (en) 2008-08-27 2010-05-04 Udt Sensors, Inc. Photodiode and photodiode array with improved performance characteristics
US7655999B2 (en) * 2006-09-15 2010-02-02 Udt Sensors, Inc. High density photodiodes
US7656001B2 (en) 2006-11-01 2010-02-02 Udt Sensors, Inc. Front-side illuminated, back-side contact double-sided PN-junction photodiode arrays
US7462553B2 (en) * 2003-06-25 2008-12-09 Semicoa Ultra thin back-illuminated photodiode array fabrication methods
US9470801B2 (en) 2004-01-13 2016-10-18 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Gating with anatomically varying durations
WO2006051531A2 (en) 2004-11-09 2006-05-18 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Radioimaging
WO2007010534A2 (en) 2005-07-19 2007-01-25 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Imaging protocols
US8571881B2 (en) 2004-11-09 2013-10-29 Spectrum Dynamics, Llc Radiopharmaceutical dispensing, administration, and imaging
US7176466B2 (en) 2004-01-13 2007-02-13 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Multi-dimensional image reconstruction
US9040016B2 (en) 2004-01-13 2015-05-26 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. Diagnostic kit and methods for radioimaging myocardial perfusion
US8586932B2 (en) 2004-11-09 2013-11-19 Spectrum Dynamics Llc System and method for radioactive emission measurement
US7968851B2 (en) 2004-01-13 2011-06-28 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Dynamic spect camera
EP1778957A4 (en) 2004-06-01 2015-12-23 Biosensors Int Group Ltd Radioactive-emission-measurement optimization to specific body structures
JP4211696B2 (en) * 2004-06-30 2009-01-21 ソニー株式会社 Method for manufacturing solid-state imaging device
US7898010B2 (en) * 2004-07-01 2011-03-01 Micron Technology, Inc. Transparent conductor based pinned photodiode
WO2006018477A1 (en) * 2004-08-20 2006-02-23 Artto Aurola Semiconductor radiation detector with a modified internal gate structure
WO2006018470A1 (en) * 2004-08-20 2006-02-23 Artto Aurola Semiconductor radiation detector with a modified internal gate structure
US7253458B2 (en) * 2004-09-14 2007-08-07 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. CMOS image sensor
US9943274B2 (en) 2004-11-09 2018-04-17 Spectrum Dynamics Medical Limited Radioimaging using low dose isotope
US8423125B2 (en) 2004-11-09 2013-04-16 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Radioimaging
US9316743B2 (en) 2004-11-09 2016-04-19 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. System and method for radioactive emission measurement
US8615405B2 (en) 2004-11-09 2013-12-24 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. Imaging system customization using data from radiopharmaceutical-associated data carrier
WO2008059489A2 (en) 2006-11-13 2008-05-22 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Radioimaging applications of and novel formulations of teboroxime
JP4667030B2 (en) * 2004-12-10 2011-04-06 キヤノン株式会社 Semiconductor substrate for solid-state imaging device and manufacturing method thereof
FR2887076B1 (en) * 2005-06-10 2007-08-31 Atmel Grenoble Soc Par Actions IMAGINE SEMICONDUCTOR SUBSTRATE IMAGE SENSOR WITH REAR METALLIZATION
US20070001100A1 (en) * 2005-06-30 2007-01-04 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd. Light reflection for backside illuminated sensor
US8837793B2 (en) 2005-07-19 2014-09-16 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. Reconstruction stabilizer and active vision
US7605397B2 (en) * 2005-08-17 2009-10-20 Digirad Corporation Capacitive bypass
WO2007077286A1 (en) 2006-01-05 2007-07-12 Artto Aurola Semiconductor radiation detector detecting visible light
CN100437899C (en) * 2006-01-27 2008-11-26 台湾积体电路制造股份有限公司 Device for reducing the impurity in the processing environment and its method
CN101379615B (en) * 2006-02-01 2013-06-12 皇家飞利浦电子股份有限公司 Geiger mode avalanche photodiode
EP1989700B1 (en) * 2006-02-27 2015-05-20 Smartrac IP B.V. Active-matrix electronic display comprising diode based matrix driving circuit
US7576371B1 (en) 2006-03-03 2009-08-18 Array Optronix, Inc. Structures and methods to improve the crosstalk between adjacent pixels of back-illuminated photodiode arrays
US8704277B2 (en) * 2006-05-09 2014-04-22 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd. Spectrally efficient photodiode for backside illuminated sensor
US7638852B2 (en) * 2006-05-09 2009-12-29 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd. Method of making wafer structure for backside illuminated color image sensor
US8894974B2 (en) 2006-05-11 2014-11-25 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Radiopharmaceuticals for diagnosis and therapy
US7682930B2 (en) * 2006-06-09 2010-03-23 Aptina Imaging Corporation Method of forming elevated photosensor and resulting structure
US7791170B2 (en) * 2006-07-10 2010-09-07 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd. Method of making a deep junction for electrical crosstalk reduction of an image sensor
CN101552280B (en) * 2006-09-20 2012-07-18 富士胶片株式会社 A back lighting imaging device and a manufacturing method thereof, a semiconductor chip and an imaging device
US9178092B2 (en) 2006-11-01 2015-11-03 Osi Optoelectronics, Inc. Front-side illuminated, back-side contact double-sided PN-junction photodiode arrays
US9275451B2 (en) 2006-12-20 2016-03-01 Biosensors International Group, Ltd. Method, a system, and an apparatus for using and processing multidimensional data
JP4479729B2 (en) * 2007-01-11 2010-06-09 ソニー株式会社 Solid-state imaging device, electronic module, and electronic device
WO2008093252A1 (en) * 2007-01-31 2008-08-07 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Radiation sensitive detector
WO2009042642A2 (en) * 2007-09-24 2009-04-02 President And Fellows Of Harvard College Compositions and methods for the treatment and prevention of ulcerative colitis and colon cancer
US7999342B2 (en) 2007-09-24 2011-08-16 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd Image sensor element for backside-illuminated sensor
KR101554755B1 (en) 2007-10-02 2015-09-21 럭스테라, 인코포레이티드 Method and system for optoelectronics transceivers integrated on a cmos chip
US8521253B2 (en) 2007-10-29 2013-08-27 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Prostate imaging
US20100053802A1 (en) * 2008-08-27 2010-03-04 Masaki Yamashita Low Power Disk-Drive Motor Driver
GB2476019B (en) * 2008-09-15 2013-03-13 Osi Optoelectronics Inc Thin active layer fishbone photodiode with a shallow N+ layer and method of manufacturing the same
US8017427B2 (en) * 2008-12-31 2011-09-13 Omnivision Technologies, Inc. Backside-illuminated (BSI) image sensor with backside diffusion doping
US8399909B2 (en) 2009-05-12 2013-03-19 Osi Optoelectronics, Inc. Tetra-lateral position sensing detector
US8338788B2 (en) 2009-07-29 2012-12-25 Spectrum Dynamics Llc Method and system of optimized volumetric imaging
US8409908B2 (en) * 2009-07-30 2013-04-02 General Electric Company Apparatus for reducing photodiode thermal gain coefficient and method of making same
EP2555244A1 (en) 2011-08-03 2013-02-06 austriamicrosystems AG A method of producing a photodiode device and a photodiode device comprising an etch stop layer
US10475663B2 (en) 2012-10-02 2019-11-12 Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Semiconductor device and method for manufacturing semiconductor device
US8912615B2 (en) 2013-01-24 2014-12-16 Osi Optoelectronics, Inc. Shallow junction photodiode for detecting short wavelength light
JP2016009730A (en) * 2014-06-23 2016-01-18 株式会社東芝 Semiconductor device manufacturing method
KR102423108B1 (en) * 2015-06-11 2022-07-22 주성엔지니어링(주) Thin film type solar cell and method for manufacturing the same
JP6065067B2 (en) * 2015-07-15 2017-01-25 三菱電機株式会社 Manufacturing method of semiconductor device
ITUB20159390A1 (en) * 2015-12-24 2017-06-24 Fond Bruno Kessler SEMICONDUCTOR DETECTOR, RADIATION DETECTOR AND RADIATION DETECTION EQUIPMENT.
RU2689972C1 (en) * 2018-09-26 2019-05-29 Акционерное общество "НПО "Орион" Method of producing a silicon photodiode
JP7492388B2 (en) * 2020-07-03 2024-05-29 キヤノンメディカルシステムズ株式会社 Radiation detector and radiation diagnostic device

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4131488A (en) * 1975-12-31 1978-12-26 Motorola, Inc. Method of semiconductor solar energy device fabrication
US4612408A (en) * 1984-10-22 1986-09-16 Sera Solar Corporation Electrically isolated semiconductor integrated photodiode circuits and method
US5923071A (en) * 1992-06-12 1999-07-13 Seiko Instruments Inc. Semiconductor device having a semiconductor film of low oxygen concentration
US6025585A (en) * 1996-11-01 2000-02-15 The Regents Of The University Of California Low-resistivity photon-transparent window attached to photo-sensitive silicon detector

Family Cites Families (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4127932A (en) * 1976-08-06 1978-12-05 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Method of fabricating silicon photodiodes
US4246590A (en) * 1979-01-22 1981-01-20 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Restoration of high infrared sensitivity in extrinsic silicon detectors
JPS56150878A (en) 1980-04-22 1981-11-21 Semiconductor Res Found Semiconductor image pickup device
US5210434A (en) * 1983-07-02 1993-05-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Photoelectric converter with scanning circuit
US4774557A (en) * 1986-05-15 1988-09-27 General Electric Company Back-illuminated semiconductor imager with charge transfer devices in front surface well structure
NL8700370A (en) * 1987-02-16 1988-09-16 Philips Nv RADIATION-SENSITIVE SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE.
US4936653A (en) * 1988-06-02 1990-06-26 Santa Barbara Research Center Cerium oxyfluoride antireflection coating for group II-VI photodetectors and process for forming same
US5059787A (en) * 1990-03-22 1991-10-22 Northrop Corporation High speed broadband silicon photodetector
JPH05206146A (en) * 1992-01-24 1993-08-13 Toshiba Corp Manufacture of semiconductor device
DE4306565C2 (en) * 1993-03-03 1995-09-28 Telefunken Microelectron Process for the production of a blue-sensitive photodetector
US5739067A (en) * 1995-12-07 1998-04-14 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Method for forming active devices on and in exposed surfaces of both sides of a silicon wafer
US6259085B1 (en) * 1996-11-01 2001-07-10 The Regents Of The University Of California Fully depleted back illuminated CCD
JPH10209106A (en) * 1997-01-20 1998-08-07 Toshiba Corp Method and equipment for cleaning semiconductor substrate
AU7374198A (en) 1997-05-08 1998-11-27 Nanosystems, Inc. Silicon etching process for making microchannel plates
JP3924352B2 (en) * 1997-06-05 2007-06-06 浜松ホトニクス株式会社 Backside illuminated light receiving device
DE19838430C2 (en) * 1998-08-24 2002-02-28 Fraunhofer Ges Forschung Method of making an array of photodetectors
JP2003504856A (en) * 1999-07-02 2003-02-04 ディジラッド・コーポレーション Indirect back contact for semiconductor devices
US20020020846A1 (en) * 2000-04-20 2002-02-21 Bo Pi Backside illuminated photodiode array
EP1284021A4 (en) 2000-04-20 2008-08-13 Digirad Corp Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4131488A (en) * 1975-12-31 1978-12-26 Motorola, Inc. Method of semiconductor solar energy device fabrication
US4612408A (en) * 1984-10-22 1986-09-16 Sera Solar Corporation Electrically isolated semiconductor integrated photodiode circuits and method
US5923071A (en) * 1992-06-12 1999-07-13 Seiko Instruments Inc. Semiconductor device having a semiconductor film of low oxygen concentration
US6025585A (en) * 1996-11-01 2000-02-15 The Regents Of The University Of California Low-resistivity photon-transparent window attached to photo-sensitive silicon detector

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See also references of EP1284021A4 *

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7256386B2 (en) 2000-04-20 2007-08-14 Digirad Corporation Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes
US7297927B2 (en) 2000-04-20 2007-11-20 Digirad Corporation Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes
US7417216B2 (en) 2000-04-20 2008-08-26 Digirad Corporation Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes
EP1532686A2 (en) * 2002-07-11 2005-05-25 Qinetiq Limited Photodetector circuits
WO2022117804A1 (en) * 2020-12-04 2022-06-09 Vishay Semiconductor Gmbh Method for producing a photodiode

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20030059630A1 (en) 2003-03-27
US6670258B2 (en) 2003-12-30
US20060157811A1 (en) 2006-07-20
US20040206886A1 (en) 2004-10-21
EP1284021A4 (en) 2008-08-13
US7297927B2 (en) 2007-11-20
US7256386B2 (en) 2007-08-14
EP1284021A1 (en) 2003-02-19
US7417216B2 (en) 2008-08-26
JP2004507881A (en) 2004-03-11
US6734416B2 (en) 2004-05-11
US20070012866A1 (en) 2007-01-18
US20060175539A1 (en) 2006-08-10
US20060175677A1 (en) 2006-08-10
US20020000562A1 (en) 2002-01-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6670258B2 (en) Fabrication of low leakage-current backside illuminated photodiodes
US6798034B2 (en) Technique for suppression of edge current in semiconductor devices
US4616247A (en) P-I-N and avalanche photodiodes
US7576371B1 (en) Structures and methods to improve the crosstalk between adjacent pixels of back-illuminated photodiode arrays
US20020020846A1 (en) Backside illuminated photodiode array
EP1855321A2 (en) Low-resistivity photon-transparent window attached to photo-senstive silicon detector
WO1998020561A9 (en) Low-resistivity photon-transparent window attached to photo-sensitive silicon detector
CN113707751A (en) Single photon avalanche photoelectric detector and preparation method thereof
GB2258565A (en) Indium antimonide (insb) photodetector with non-flashing light receiving surface
CN115020504B (en) Method for manufacturing silicon detector
JPS61187267A (en) Solid-state image pickup device
CN117038775A (en) Photodiode, manufacturing method thereof and electronic element
CN117878131A (en) Preparation method of high-pixel-density APD array chip integrated with adapter plate
CN115810646A (en) Silicon-based wide-spectrum detector array and preparation method thereof
JPH0595124A (en) Photoelectric conversion element
CN116825874A (en) Photodiode, manufacturing method thereof and electronic element
JPH04318979A (en) Array type infrared ray sensor and manufacture thereof

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): JP

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE TR

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2001928739

Country of ref document: EP

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref country code: JP

Ref document number: 2001 579372

Kind code of ref document: A

Format of ref document f/p: F

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 2001928739

Country of ref document: EP