Archive for the ‘Advanced CMOS Technology’ Category

Intel’s 22-nm Tri-gate Transistors Exposed

Monday, April 23rd, 2012 by Dick James

Contributed by Dick James

Last week Intel had their Q1 conference call for financial analysts, and revealed that the 22-nm Ivy Bridge parts would make up 25% of their shipment volume in the second quarter of this year.  That means that a good quantity will already have shipped, and we managed to track some down in Hong Kong a few weeks ago.  Of course we got in touch ASAP and the parts duly arrived, and they were the real thing.

Fig. 1 Intel Xeon E3-1230V2 Server CPU

Fig.2 Intel Xeon E3-1230V2 Die

We obtained samples of Xeon E3-1230 v2 CPUs, which are four-core, 3.3 GHz, 64-bit parts intended for the server market. A quick cross-section reveals that Intel have stayed with the nine metal layers used in the last two generations:

Fig. 3 Intel Xeon E3-130V2 General Structure

A closer TEM image (Fig. 4) shows the lower metal stack and a pair of multi-fin NMOS and PMOS transistors. This section is parallel to the gate, across the fins, and we can see the diamond-shaped epi-SiGe that has been formed on the fins of the PMOS transistor.

We have to digress here a little to explain what we’re looking at.  A typical TEM sample is 80 – 100 nm thick, to be thin enough to be transparent to the electron beam and at the same time have enough physical rigidity so that it does not bend or fall apart.

Here we are trying to image structures in a die with a gate length of less than 30 nm; so if we make a sample parallel to the gate, and if the sample is aligned perfectly along the centre of the gate, then it will contain the gate plus at least part of the source/drain (S/D) silicon and contacts on either side.

Fig. 4 TEM Image of Lower Metals and NMOS and PMOS (right) Transistors

That is what we see above – I have labeled the gate and contact stripes, and we have PMOS on the right and NMOS on the left.  The tungsten-filled contacts obscure parts of the gate, but we can clearly see that the PMOS S/D fins have epitaxial growth on them, and the fins have an unexpected slope – a little different from Intel’s tri-gate schematic shown last year – see Fig.5.

Fig. 5 Intel Schematic of Tri-Gate Transistor

If we zoom in a bit further into the PMOS gate (Fig. 6), we can see how the gate wraps over the fin, and the rounded top of the fin.  The thin dark line adjacent to the fin is the high-k layer and just above that is a mottled TiN layer that is likely the PMOS work-function material, as in the 32-nm and 45-nm parts.

Fig. 6 TEM Image of PMOS Gate and Fin Structure

Fig. 7 shows a section of an NMOS transistor.  There is a ‘ghost’ of the contact behind the gate, but the gate structure itself looks similar to the PMOS, with the exception of the work-function material just above the high-k layer.

Fig. 7 TEM Image of NMOS Gate and Fin Structure

Fig. 8 gives me an opportunity to show off our new TEM – we have recently purchased an FEI Technai machine, which upgrades our capability considerably. Here we have a lattice image of a fin in an NMOS transistor; the diamond-like layout of the pattern of dots in the fin is created by the columns of atoms in the silicon crystal lattice. This tells us that the sample is oriented in the <110> direction, which given that silicon has a face-centred cubic structure in which equivalent planes are at right angles, means that the channel direction is also <110>.

Fig. 8 TEM Lattice Image of NMOS Fin Structure

To fully understand what we’re looking at, of course, we need to see what’s happening in the orthogonal direction, along the fin and cross-sectioning the gate – as in Fig. 9. This shows an array of PMOS transistors over a single fin, four functional gates and two dummy gates at the ends of the fin. Again the TEM sample is thick compared with the feature size, so we are seeing the gate on the side(s) of the fin, not just the top. The fin ends have the same taper as in Figs 6 and 7.

Fig. 9 TEM Image of PMOS Transistors

As announced by Intel, there is embedded SiGe in the source/drains, although not etched to the <111> planes as in the 32- and 45-nm product. It also looks as though the tops of the gates have been etched back and back-filled with dielectric, and the contacts are self-aligned as in memory chips.

Zooming in on the PMOS transistor in Fig.10, the image is a bit fuzzy, but the SiGe is clearly in a rounded cavity with no facets on the top, though there are facets on the sides of the fin (see fig. 4).

Fig. 10 TEM Image of PMOS Transistor

Looking at the NMOS equivalent (Figs. 11 and 12), we see a similar structure – there seems to be an epitaxial interface, and the silicide(?) seems to protrude slightly above the fin.

Fig. 11 TEM Image of NMOS Transistors

Fig. 12 TEM Image of NMOS Transistors

It is hard to say much about the gates here, either NMOS or PMOS, because of the sample thickness problem; we are viewing a slice that includes the gate on both sides of the fin and the fin itself. Fortunately we have images of gate metal over STI and they are less confusing.

Figure 13 is a composite image of NMOS and PMOS gates so that the differences are more noticeable. The dark line surrounding the gate structures is the Hf-based high-k, and within that are the two work-function materials, likely TiN for PMOS and TiAlN for NMOS. (The columnar structure of the PMOS TiN is visible in the right half of the image.)

Fig. 13 Composite TEM Image of NMOS/PMOS Gates

The fill has been changed from TiAl in the earlier parts to tungsten. It is more prominent in the NMOS gates than the PMOS, because the PMOS structure includes both work-function metals, whereas the TiN has been etched out of the NMOS gates. At the 45-nm node Intel used tensile tungsten in the contacts to apply channel stress – have they transposed this to the gates in the 22-nm process?

Just to finish up, so that this is still a blog, not a paper (I don’t want to go on too long) – fig. 14 shows a sample delayered to expose the transistors, and imaged on a tilt angle.  Both the gates and the fins show up nicely, and we can actually see tiny spikes of SiGe in the PMOS source/drains. The small pillars in between the fins in the NMOS areas are residual bits of contact metal.  I think it’s a cool image!

Fig. 14 Tilt SEM Image of NMOS/PMOS Transistors

We are just getting into the full scope of the analysis, so likely more to come in the next few weeks! Below is a link to the set of reports that we are doing on this ground-breaking part, with many more details than I will ever get a chance to write about:

Intel 22-nm Ivy Bridge Xeon E3-1230v2 Microprocessor Structural Analysis, Transistor Characterization, and Package Analysis Reports

Update – 32-nm Apple A5 in the Apple TV 3 – and an iPad 2!

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012 by rwilliamson

Contributed by Jim Morrison, Gary Tomkins, and Dick James

Apple is closely guarded about its product roadmap – check.

Apple leaks out the tiniest of tidbits to get the twitterverse  going, but (historically) has always had “just one more thing” to keep it going – check.

Apple getting easier to predict? Check. . . or maybe not.  Maybe they do have some secrets up their sleeves.

On March 15th, Apple released the New iPad, affectionately known as the iPad 3. With all of the hype and focus on the new iPad, the third generation Apple TV was somewhat overlooked and did not receive the same kind of attention that its tablet cousin did. We at Chipworks got around to examining the Apple TV in our labs, and wow, did Apple roll out a surprise; a new A5 processor. No, not the A5X that garnered so much attention in the iPad 3, but a new A5 processor.

Apple APL2498 from new Apple TV

Apple A5 APL0498 from iPhone 4s

Apple A5 APL0498 from iPhone 4s

The advanced media was calling this new A5 a single core application processor, with justification, since Apple themselves on their product specification page say that the new TV uses a single core application processor. Sometimes, when we get inside technology, we find that things are not always what they are supposed to be. The new A5 processor die is not a single core processor, but contains a dual core processor.  Either Apple is only utilizing one core or they are binning parts. Parts binning is a common process in semiconductors where devices are segregated (binned) based on meeting a subset of the overall requirements,  in this case they could disable the “bad” core, this increases the usable die per wafer, lowering the cost.

APL2498 from 3rd gen Apple TV Poly Die photo

APL2498 from Third Generation Apple TV Poly Die Photo

Aside from being a dual core processor, there was one more big surprise for us at Chipworks. Not only did Apple roll out a new processor that was not what it was advertised to be, but it also snuck in a new process technology for the manufacturing of this new A5. The previous generation A5, part number APL0498, was manufactured on Samsung Semiconductors’ 45 nm LP CMOS process. This new A5 processor is manufactured on Samsung’s new 32 nm high-k metal gate, gate first, LP CMOS process technology.

The new A5 measures nearly 41% smaller than its predecessor, coming in at 69.6 mm². Process shrinking not only reduce costs by fitting more dies on a wafer, but it also improves performance and lowers power consumption.

A5 Arm Core Comparison

A5 ARM A9 Dual-Core Comparison – 40% Shrink (Approximately)

This is a very complex chip for a relatively low volume part (for Apple); one would think they have greater plans for this new A5 variant. Does this give any hints about what might be in the next generation iPhone, or a cost reduction path for the current iPhone 4S?

And, lo! and behold, when we looked at a new iPad 2 (v4), inside it was the APL2498; presumably with both A9 cores enabled this time.

Apple A5 APL2498 from Apple TV 3

Apple A5 APL2498 from new Ipad 2 v4

Now we’re checking our recent 4S phones..

Reports on the Apple A5 Processor and Samsung 32 nm Technology

Apple A5 (APL2498) Single Active Core Processor (from Apple TV 3)  Functional Analysis Report

Samsung 32 nm HKMG LP CMOS Process Structural Analysis Report

Semicon China – SMIC Shows off 28-nm HKMG Development

Saturday, March 24th, 2012 by Dick James

Another foundry goes gate-last

In the opening keynote at Semicon China today, Dr. Tzu-Yin Chiu, CEO of SMIC, gave a run-through of their technology portfolio, and in doing so let out a few details of their sub-40 nm process development.

SMIC's application portfolio

It appears that they are actually shipping some 40-nm pilot product for revenue, and to keep the ARM-world happy, they will have Cortex A9 cores running at 1.2 GHz by the end of the year.

Snapshot of advanced node work at SMIC

Scheduled for mid-2013, their 28-nm offering will be both high-k, metal gate and poly/SiON, and feature one of the smallest SRAM cell sizes to date.

SMIC 28-nm schedule

The images are all distinctly fuzzy thanks to the challenges of using a phone camera at some distance from a dimly-lit screen, but they show what I’m talking about. It appears that the gate-last structure has more in common with TSMC’s 28-nm structure than Intel’s 32-nm, and also that the NMOS and PMOS labels have been reversed;

SMIC 28-nm gate structures and SRAM cell

In all the other gate-last HKMG transistors we have seen, the thick TiN and Ta layers are in the PMOS (you have to squint to distinguish them in this image, but they are there), and I wouldn’t expect SMIC’s to be any different. We can also see the tell-tale notch at the bottom of the gate edge that indicates that the gate dielectrics were formed before the dummy poly gate was put down.  At less than 0.13 sq. microns the SRAM cell is the smallest that I know of – TSMC is 0.15, and Intel 0.17 sq. microns.

Just for comparison, here’s a pair of composite images of Intel’s 45-nm transistors and TSMC’s 28-nm transistors. You can clearly see the notches at the bottom of the gate structures that I refer to above.

TSMC's 28-nm (right) and Intel's 45-nm gate-last transistors

The inclusion of a poly/SiON variant (presumably low-power) at 28 nm puts them on a par with TSMC and UMC, and leaves GLOBALFOUNDRIES as the only major foundry without an announced non-HKMG LP process at that node. If the rumours about GloFo second-sourcing the Qualcomm S4 (currently on TSMC’s poly/SiON 28LP line) are true, presumably they’ll have to develop one.

GloFo’s FinFETS are Better than Intel’s! Musings from on the Road..

Monday, March 19th, 2012 by Dick James

This confident statement came from Subramani (Subi) Kengeri of GLOBALFOUNDRIES (GloFo) during the panel session in the GloFo/IBM/Samsung Common Platform Technology Forum (CPTF), held Wednesday in the Santa Clara Convention Center. I’m currently on one of my periodic road trips, and this one has given me the chance to sit in on the CPTF – last year I had to make do with the online version.

Towards the end of the panel discussions, the host, Jaga Jagannathan of IBM, asked Subi “How do you stack up against Intel? – especially in the SoC/smartphone space?”

This clearly took Subi by surprise, but after some preamble, he focused on FinFET development, which AMD, then GloFo, have been working on for the last ten years.  In conjunction with customer input, they have been focusing their finFET efforts to optimise the (14 nm) process for mobile SoCs. He said that this was what would differentiate them from Intel, and in that space “We believe we have a much better finFET, that is optimised for mobile SoCs”.

CPFT Panel Session - Jaga on the left, Subi third from the right. Source: Common Platform

Of course time will tell, and the CPTF 14-nm process will likely not show up for three or four years, while we are waiting for Intel’s imminent launch of their trigate product.

The panel session has been put online, so you can see it by going here; register if you need to, then select Agenda and click the relevant link; if you want to see this particular Q & A, move the slider to the 52:30 timepoint.

Also during the discussion Subi stated that GlobalFoundries is in production for 32-nm HKMG, and running the full flow of the 20-nm (gate-last) process in their Malta NY fab.

Earlier in the day he had given one of the keynote talks, and it was then that he gave the logic for the move to finFET at 14-nm that was a major theme of the day.  It boils down to the fact that by the time you get to the 20-nm node, there are no more knobs to turn to crank up the performance of a transistor.  In order to mitigate the short-channel effects and increase drive current, a 3D fully-depleted structure is needed. GloFo regards the mobile sector as one of the big drivers for leading-edge process development these days, so their finFET efforts have been focused in the mobile SoC arena, with a multiple Vt process in development.

Another nugget from the day was the public announcement that Samsung is in full production with their 32-nm HKMG process, and it appears in Austin as well as Korea.  I was hoping that we might see it in the new iPad, but we’ve now confirmed that the A5x chip is 45-nm. I guess we’ll have to wait for one of the new phones or tablets that will be out soon. Actually, that includes TVs too – Samsung had a TV with gesture recognition on the show floor, powered by a 32-nm HKMG processor, and that’s due out next month as well.

The following day I was at an Intel analyst meeting, but that’s under NDA so I can’t say too much; but it’s not letting too much out to say that it reinforced their messages from CES and the Mobile World Congress that there will be a big push on Ultrabooks and mobile phones.  Next month expect a huge marketing campaign for Ultrabooks – it was described as “epic” and “cinematic” at CES. Even now we’re seeing all sorts of product announcements by the OEMs, including plenty with the 22-nm Ivy Bridge chip inside.

At the moment I’m in Shanghai taking in the China Semiconductor Technology International Conference and Semicon China. I’m presenting on “Recent Innovations in Leading-Edge Silicon Devices”; hopefully it will get a good reception. And we’ll see if there’s anything blog-worthy this week. In the meantime I tweet @ChipworksDick if anything is noteworthy.

ISSCC – Intel’s Ivy Bridge, Rosepoint, Near-Threshold Techniques

Thursday, February 23rd, 2012 by Dick James

Contributed by Vincent Karam.

Kicking off the afternoon of day 1 was the Ivy Bridge paper (3.1); the processor contains 1.4 Billion Transistors in an area of 160 mm2 (for their 4 core 2 graphic segment die). The IVB dies were shown in four configurations, 4+2 (4 cores 2 graphics), 2+2, 4+1 and 2+1.

Here were some of the chip’s major highlights:

Quad-core with Intel Hyper-threading Technology

Next Generation Intel HD Graphics with DirectX 11 support

Dual channel DDR3-1600 or DDR3L -1333 interface

Integrated PCIe

Support for 3 displays simultaneously

Up to 8 MB cache memory

Same Thermal Design Power as predecessor

Next up was Intel’s 32nm Atom SoC with integrated WiFi codenamed Rosepoint (paper 3.4). Intel says it’s the first 32nm SoC with a WiFi transceiver and two Atom cores on the same die. They were able to get the Atom cores and the WiFi transceiver to get along nicely by choosing Atom processor frequencies such that their harmonics didn’t land in the WiFi frequency band.

Intel announces Atom-based WiFi chip Source: Intel

This was an obvious example of the direction Intel would like to push RF, into a scalable technology that keeps up with Intel’s fabs, so think digital CMOS. For most RF designers, including myself, it’s hard to imagine, but it’s something all RF designers will have to come to grips with.  Over the past few years Intel has been converting traditionally analog blocks to fully digital circuits (LNA ISSCC’01, Synthesizer VLSI’10, T/R Switch ISSCC’11 to name a few). On Tuesday Intel will also be presenting an all digital PA and Phase modulator, so you can add those to the list.

Intel’s third Microprocessor project, code named Claremont, seems to have received more attention by the media for different reasons than intended. This was a 32nm processor that demonstrated NTV (Near Threshold Voltage) operation as a means to optimize computational speed and energy (3.6). Although Intel used a solar cell to power the chip, Intel says they do not have any intention of producing solar powered CPU’s (at least in the near future). Power consumption can be as low as 2 mW, and it can operate on as little as 280 mV up to the conventional 1.2 V.

Intel's Claremont processor using NTV technology Source: Intel