Doping process for producing homojunctions in semiconductor...

Semiconductor device manufacturing: process – Introduction of conductivity modifying dopant into... – Diffusing a dopant

Reexamination Certificate

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C428S563000, C148SDIG003, C148SDIG003

Reexamination Certificate

active

06232207

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This application claims the priority of German Patent Document 19534574.6, which was filed on Sep. 18, 1995, the disclosure of which is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to a doping process for producing homojunctions in semiconductor substrates, into which dopants penetrate by diffusion. Furthermore, a light source is provided, the emission spectrum of which contains ultra-violet components, and which is directed at the surface of the semiconductor substrate. A process of this type is known, by way of illustration from IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, vol., ed. 39, 1992, pp. 105 to 110.
Diffusion and/or implantation techniques are employed for producing sharply defined adjacent doping regions in semiconductor substrates having different concentrations of the same dopants, i.e. p- or n-dopant atoms. In order to be able to dope solely the selected regions in the semiconductor base substrates, masks which are impenetrable for the dopant atoms in the selected diffusion and implantation conditions are provided on the substrates surface to be doped.
In the case of silicon semiconductor base substrates, silicon oxide masks, which are either thermally grown or precipitated as layers, are provided on the silicon surface. In order to produce masks of this type, a photosensitive resist is applied onto a homogeneously precipitated silicon oxide layer, with the photosensitive resist being exposed to light with the aid of suited shadow masks. On the exposed sites, a subsequent etching step removes the oxide layer locally down to the base substrate, which can then be enriched with a desired concentration of dopant atoms in the course of diffusion and/or implantation. Thus, selective doping of semiconductor base substrates using known doping techniques requires preliminary structuring measures; the mask layer which is active for diffusion has to be locally removed prior to diffusion. Another masking step, is required to remove the diffusion block locally.
In particular, the production of solar cells provided with a two-step emitter structure requires two complicated process diffusion steps which can be conducted using conventional methods of diffusion.
FIG. 3
shows the production of a two-step emitter solar cell using the known etching diffusion techniques, including the sequence of the individual steps a to h. In the course of a high temperature step, in
FIG. 3
a
an oxide layer
32
, which can be generated in a conventional process-controlled heating furnace, is applied to the base substrate
31
. Using conventional spin-on techniques, a photosensitive resist
33
is applied evenly onto the oxide layer. In a subsequent photolithographic step, the photosensitive resist
33
is exposed to light with the use of suited masks in a conventional manner (See
FIG. 3
c
.) At the sites exposed to light where the oxide layer is to be removed, the light-sensitive photoelectric layer is removed. In a subsequent etching step according to
FIG. 3
d
, the oxide layer
32
can be removed at the sites exposed to light in a selective manner in such a way that local removal of the oxide layer down to the base substrate surface becomes possible. Then, according to process step
FIG. 3
e
, the photosensitive resist is removed. Following this comes the first diffusion step (
3
f
) with n
++
-dopant atoms which can only penetrate into the material via the free base substrate surface (for this see the white-dotted n
++
-dopant atoms region
34
). In a further process step (
3
g
), again corresponding to an etching step, the remaining oxide regions are removed from the surface of the base substrate in such a manner that a homogeneous n
+
-doping
35
can occur in a subsequent second diffusion step, which in this case, according to the representation in
FIG. 3
h
, is whole surface n
+
-diffusion.
In the aforedescribed manner, so-called two-step emitter solar cells composed of two adjacent n
+


++
junctions can be produced.
The described production process of a two-step emitter comprises two diffusion steps. The first provides for local and deep diffusion, and the second provides for whole surface homogeneous diffusion. Both diffusion and oxidation are conducted in classical diffusion and oxidation furnaces at very high process temperatures of >1000° C.
In the development of components and the use of novel materials (and in order to improve the effectiveness and the reliability of the semiconductor components, which due to the hitherto prevailing conditions depend on the production of thermal doping processes), it is necessary to lower the thermal input during production. Thermal input refers to the duration of the thermal diffusion and oxidation steps including the absolute temperature level predominating during the diffusion and oxidation procedure. In order to meet these requirements, “rapid thermal processing” (RTP), in which the to-be-processed semiconductor substrates are individually optically heated, has been utilized.
Contrary to conventional heating methods, which are essentially based on the influence of infrared radiation on the to-be-heated substrate, the RTP method employs radiation intensive illumination units, which essentially emit in the ultraviolet spectral range. A more detailed explanation is given in R. Singh's article, Development Trends in Rapid Isothermal Processing (RIP) dominated Semiconductor Maufacturing” in, 1st Int. Rapid Thermal Processing Conf. RTP 93” Scotsdale, Ariz., Eds. Richard Fair and Bohumil Lojek, September 1993, pp. 31 to 42.
In particular in RTP methods, the diffusion properties of the dopant atoms penetrating the to-be-doped semiconductor material can be decisively influenced by the characteristic heating rates which can be obtained by means of the new “rapid thermal processing” techniques. By way of illustration, A. Usami's article, Shallow-Junction Formation on Silicon by Rapid Thermal Diffusion of Impurities from a Spin-On Source”, IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, vol. ED 39, 1992, pp. 105 ff. explains that the diffusion coefficients can be set in a specific range in a selective manner by employing new, optical heating methods.
One object of the present invention is to provide an improved doping process for producing homojunctions in semiconductor substrates into which dopants penetrate in the course of diffusion, using a light source which has an emission spectrum containing ultra-violet components and is directed at the surface of the semiconductor substrate.
Another object of the invention is to shorten the time required for production of components of this type and essentially involve considerably lower costs.
Still another object of the invention is to reduce thermal input on the semiconductor components during their production.
With the aid of new RTP methods described in the introduction, the production of semiconductor components having homojunctions and, in particular, two-step emitter solar cells can be simplified so that only a single thermal processing step is required. According to the present invention, a mask is placed between a semiconductor and a light source, dopant atoms are introduced between the mask and the semiconductor substrate to be doped, and rapid thermal processing is used, irradiating the mask with the light source.
The process uses a light source, which has an emission spectrum containing ultra-violet components and which is directed at the semiconductor substrate. Depending on the to-be-doped regions with the same dopant concentration, the mask has regions of varying thickness, and is placed between the to-be-doped semiconductor substrate and the light source. The light coming from the illumination source impinges at suited sites, where the mask has holes through it, directly upon the base substrate and immediately interacts with the surface of the substrate. At sites where the mask covers the surface of the substrate, only the parts which are of the emission spectrum of the illumination unit w

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