Display device having a thin film transistor and electronic...

Active solid-state devices (e.g. – transistors – solid-state diode – Non-single crystal – or recrystallized – semiconductor... – Amorphous semiconductor material

Reexamination Certificate

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C257S059000, C257S072000, C257S350000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06392255

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a semiconductor device having a circuit constructed of a thin film transistor (hereinafter referred to as TFTs) and a method of manufacturing the same. For example, the present invention relates to an electro-optical device typified by a liquid crystal display panel, and electronic equipment having such an electro-optical device mounted thereon as a part.
Note that a semiconductor device as used herein throughout the present specification indicates a general device that functions by utilizing semiconductor characteristics, and that electro-optical devices, semiconductor circuits, and electronic equipments are all semiconductor devices.
2. Description of the Related Art
Techniques for structuring a thin film transistor (TFT) using a semiconductor thin film (having a thickness on the order of about several to several hundred nm) formed on a substrate having an insulating surface have been in the spotlight in recent years. Thin film transistors are widely applied to electronic devices such as an IC or an electro-optical device, and in particular, development of the TFT as a switching element of a liquid crystal display device is proceeding rapidly.
In order to obtain high quality images in the liquid crystal display device, an active matrix liquid crystal display device that utilizes TFTs as switching elements to be connected to respective pixel electrodes, which are arranged in matrix, is attracting much attention.
To perform good quality display in the active matrix liquid crystal display device, it is necessary that the electric potential of an image signal is held in each pixel electrode connected to the TFTs until the next write-in time. Generally, the provision of a storage capacitor (Cs) in each pixel holds the electric potential of the image signal.
Various proposals have been made for the structure and the formation methods of the above-stated storage capacitor (Cs). However, from the viewpoint of reliability or simplicity of the manufacturing process, it is preferable that a gate insulating film of a TFT, among the insulating films for structuring a pixel, be utilized as a dielectric of the storage capacitor (Cs) because it is an insulating film of the highest quality. Conventionally, as shown in
FIG. 9
, a capacitor wiring that becomes an upper electrode is first formed by utilizing a scanning line, and then the formation of the storage capacitor (Cs) is carried out by using the upper electrode (capacitor wiring), a dielectric layer (gate insulating film), and a lower electrode (semiconductor film).
Also, from the perspective of display performances, there is a demand to provide pixels with larger storage capacitors as well as to make the aperture ratio of the pixels higher. Efficient utilization of a backlight is improved if each pixel has a high aperture ratio. Consequently, the amount of backlight for obtaining a predetermined display luminance can be restrained, and therefore power-saving and small-scale display device can be achieved. Furthermore, by providing each pixel with a large storage capacitor, the characteristic of each pixel in holding display data is improved, thereby improving display quality. In addition, for the case of point sequential driving of the display device, a signal storage capacitor (sample hold capacitor) is required in the driver circuit side of each signal line. However, with the provision of a large storage capacitor in each pixel, a surface area occupied by the sample hold capacitor can be made smaller, and therefore the display device can be made smaller.
Such demands become problems in proceeding with the progress of making the pitch of each display pixel microscopic which accompanies the progress of making a liquid crystal display device smaller and higher in definition (increasing the number of pixels).
There is an additional problem in that it is difficult to make a high aperture ratio and a large storage capacitor compatible with each other in the above-stated conventional pixel structure.
An example in which a conventional pixel structure having the size of a pixel formed to 19.2 &mgr;m in accordance with the design rule of Table 1 is shown in FIG.
9
.
Table 1
Si layer: min. Size=0.8 &mgr;m, min. Spacing=1.5 &mgr;m Gate Electrode: min. Size=1.0 &mgr;m, min. Spacing=1.5 &mgr;m
Scanning line: min. Size=1.5 &mgr;m, min. Spacing=1.5 &mgr;m Contact hole between signal line and Si layer: min. Size=1 &mgr;m□ Margin between contact hole and Si layer: 1.0 &mgr;m Distance between contact hole and scanning line (gate electrode) min. Spacing=1.3 &mgr;m Signal line: min. Size=1.5 &mgr;m, min. Spacing=1.5 &mgr;m Margin between contact hole and signal line 1.3 &mgr;m
Pixel size: 19.24 &mgr;m□ Pixel TFT: L=1.5 &mgr;m, W=0.8 &mgr;m, single gate Scanning line: wiring width min. Size=1.0 &mgr;m Scanning line: wiring width at an Si layer overlapping portion min. Size=1.5 &mgr;m Capacitor wiring: min. Size=2.0 &mgr;m
A characteristic of the conventional pixel structure is such that two wirings (a scanning line and a capacitor wiring) are arranged in parallel with each other for continuously forming two each of wirings, the scanning line and the capacitor wiring. In
FIG. 9
, reference numeral
10
denotes a semiconductor film,
11
denotes a scanning line,
12
denotes a signal line,
13
denotes an electrode, and
14
denotes a capacitor wiring. Note that
FIG. 9
is a simplified top view of the pixel, and therefore a pixel electrode that is connected to the electrode
13
and a contact hole that reaches the electrode
13
are both not shown in the figure.
Thus, in the case of structuring the storage capacitor with an upper electrode (capacitor wiring), a dielectric layer (gate insulating film), and a lower electrode (semiconductor film), all the circuit elements (a pixel TFT, a storage capacitor, a contact hole, etc.) necessary for structuring a circuit of the pixel become elements relevant to a gate insulating film. Accordingly, these elements are arranged substantially planarly within each pixel.
Therefore, it is crucial to efficiently layout the circuit elements that are necessary for constructing the circuit of the pixel in order to attain both a high aperture ratio and a large storage capacitor of each pixel within the regulated pixel size. In other words, from the fact that all the circuit elements are in connection with the gate insulating film, it can be said that it is essential to improve the efficiency of utilizing the gate insulating film.
Thus, from the above perspective, an efficient planar layout of the example of the circuit structure of a pixel of
FIG. 9
is shown in FIG.
10
. In
FIG. 10
, reference numeral
21
denotes a single pixel region,
22
denotes a pixel opening region,
23
denotes a storage capacitor region,
24
denotes an A region, and
25
denotes a portion of the TFT and a contact region.
With respect to the area of the pixel opening region
22
which is 216.7 &mgr;m
2
(aperture ratio of 58.8%) as shown in
FIG. 10
, it is composed of the areas of the storage capacitor region
23
which is 64.2 &mgr;m
2
, the portion of the TFT and the contact region
25
which is 42.2 &mgr;m
2
and the A region
24
which is 34.1 &mgr;m
2
.
The A region
24
is a separation region between the scanning line and the capacitor wiring which is necessary from the fact that a wiring portion for mutually connecting a region that functions as a gate electrode of a TFT, the scanning line and the capacitor wiring are arranged parallel to each other. The gate insulating film of the A region is not rendered its original function, becoming the cause of reducing the efficiency of layout.
Further, in the case of the above structure, there is a problem in that the demand for a capacitor wiring resistance has become strict.
In a normal liquid crystal display device drive, the writing-in of the electric potential of the image signal to the

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