Low-temperature polycrystalline silicon

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Low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) is polycrystalline silicon that has been synthesized at relatively low temperatures (~650 °C and lower) compared to in traditional methods (above 900 °C). LTPS is important for display industries, since the use of large glass panels prohibits exposure to deformative high temperatures. More specifically, the use of polycrystalline silicon in thin-film transistors (LTPS-TFT) has high potential for large-scale production of electronic devices like flat panel LCD displays or image sensors.[1]

Development of polycrystalline silicon[]

Polycrystalline silicon (p-Si) is a pure and conductive form of the element composed of many crystallites, or grains of highly ordered crystal lattice. In 1984, studies showed that amorphous silicon (a-Si) is an excellent precursor for forming p-Si films with stable structures and low surface roughness.[2] Silicon film is synthesized by low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) to minimize surface roughness. First, amorphous silicon is deposited at 560–640 °C. Then it is thermally annealed (recrystallized) at 950–1000 °C. Starting with the amorphous film, rather than directly depositing crystals, produces a product with a superior structure and a desired smoothness.[3][4] In 1988, researchers discovered that further lowering temperature during annealing, together with advanced plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), could facilitate even higher degrees of conductivity. These techniques have profoundly impacted the microelectronics, photovoltaic, and display enhancement industries.

Use in liquid-crystal display[]

Diagram of liquid-crystal display. When current is applied to the transistor, the liquid crystals become aligned and no longer rotate the incident polarized light. This results in no transmission through the second polarizer, creating a dark pixel.

Amorphous silicon TFTs have been widely used in liquid-crystal display (LCD) flat panels because they can be assembled into complex high-current driver circuits. Amorphous Si-TFT electrodes drive the alignment of crystals in LCDs. The evolution to LTPS-TFTs can have many benefits such as higher device resolution, lower synthesis temperature, and reduced price of essential substrates.[5] However, LTPS-TFTs also have several drawbacks. For example, the area of TFTs in traditional a-Si devices is large, resulting in a small aperture ratio (the amount of area which is not blocked by the opaque TFT and thus admits light). The incompatibility of different aperture ratios prevents LTPS-based complex circuits and drivers from being integrated into a-Si material.[6] Additionally, the quality of LTPS decreases over time due to an increase in temperature upon turning on the transistor, which degrades the film by breaking the Si-H bonds in the material. This would cause the device to suffer from drain breakdown and current leakage, most notably in small and thin transistors, which dissipate heat poorly.[7]

Processing by laser annealing[]

While amorphous silicon lacks crystal structure, polycrystalline silicon consists of various crystallites or grains, each of which has an organized lattice.

XeCl Excimer-Laser Annealing (ELA) is the first key method to produce p-Si by melting a-Si material through laser irradiation. The counterpart of a-Si, polycrystalline silicon, which can be synthesized from amorphous silicon by certain procedures, has several advantages over widely used a-Si TFT:

  1. High electron mobility rate;
  2. High resolution and aperture ratio;
  3. Available for high integration of circuits.[8]

XeCl-ELA succeeds in crystallizing a-Si (thickness ranges from 500-10000A) into p-Si without heating the substrates.[9] The polycrystalline form has larger grains that yield better mobility for TFTs due to reduced scattering from grain boundaries. This technique leads to the successful integration of complicated circuits in LCD displays.[10]


Development of LTPS-TFT devices[]

Schematic of LTPS-TFT being used to drive an OLED

Apart from the improvement of the TFTs themselves, the successful application of LTPS to graphic display also depends on innovative circuits. One recent technique involves a pixel circuit in which the outgoing current from the transistor is independent of the threshold voltage, thus producing uniform brightness.[11][12] LTPS-TFT is commonly used to drive organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays because it has high resolution and accommodation for large panels. However, variations in LTPS structure would result in non-uniform threshold voltage for signals and non-uniform brightness using traditional circuits. The new pixel circuit includes four n-type TFTs, one p-type TFT, a capacitor, and a control element to control the image resolution.[12] Enhancing the performance and microlithography for TFTs is important for advancing LTPS active-matrix OLEDs. These many important techniques have allowed the mobility of crystalline film to reach up to 13 cm2/Vs, and they have helped to mass-produce LEDs and LCDs over 500 ppi in resolution.[9]

Characteristic Amorphous Si Polycrystalline Si
Mobility (cm^2 /(V*s)) 0.5 >500
Deposition Method PECVD ELA
Deposition Temperature 350 °C 600 °C
Driver Integration Only partial System-on-glass
Resolution Low >500 ppi
Cost Low Relatively higher

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Fonash, Stephen. "Low Temperature Crystallization and Patterning of Amorphous Silicon Film On Electrically Insulating Substrates." United States Patent (1994). Print.
  2. ^ Harbeke, G., L. Krausbauer, E.F. Steigmerier, and A.E. Widmer. "Growth and Physical Properties of LPCVD Polycrystalline Silicon Films." Journal of the Electrochemical Society (1984): 675. Print.
  3. ^ Hatalis, Miltiadis K., and David W. Greve. "Large Grain Polycrystalline Silicon By Low-Temperature Annealing Of Low-Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposited Amorphous Silicon Films." Applied Physics 63.07 (1988): 2266. Print.
  4. ^ Hatalis, M.K., and D.W. Greve. "High-Performance Thin-Film Transistors In Low-Temperature Crystallized LPCVD Amorphous Silicon Films." IEEE Electron Device Letters 08 (1987): 361–64. Print.
  5. ^ Zhiguo, Meng, Mingxiang Wang, and Man Wong. "High Performance Low Temperature Metal-Induced Unilaterally Crystallized Polycrystalline Silicon Thin Film Transistors for System-on-Panel Application." IEEE Transactions On Electron Devices 47.02 (2000). Print.
  6. ^ Inoue, Satoshi, Hiroyuki Ohshima, and Tatsuya Shimoda. "Analysis of Degradation Phenomenon Caused by Self-Heating in Low-Temperature-Processed Polycrystalline Silicon Thin Film Transistors." Japanese Journal of Applied Physics 41 (2002): 6313-319. IOP Sciences. Web. 2 Mar. 2015.
  7. ^ G. A. Bhat, Z. Jin, H. S. Kwok, and M. Wong, “Effect of MIC/MILC Interface On The Performance Of MILC-TFT’s,” in Dig. 56th Annu. Device Research Conf., June 22–24, 1998, pp. 110–111.
  8. ^ Kuo, Yue. "Thin Film Transistor Technology—Past, Present, and Future." The Electrochemical Society Interface (2013). Electrochemical Society Interface. Web. 1 Mar. 2015.
  9. ^ a b Sameshima, T., S. Usui, and M. Sekiya. "XeClExcimer Laser Annealing Used in the Fabrication of Poly-Si TFT's." IEEE Electron Device Letters 07.05 (1986): 276-78. IEEE Xplore. Web. 2 Mar. 2015.
  10. ^ Uchikoga, Shuichi. "Low-Temperature Polycrystalline Silicon Thin-Film Transistor Technologies for System-on-Glass Displays." MRS Bulletin (2002): 881-86. Google Scholar. MRS Bulletin. Web. 2 Mar. 2015.
  11. ^ Banger, K. K., Y. Yamashita, K. Mori, R. L. Peterson, T. Leedham, J. Rickard, and H. Sirringhaus. "Low-temperature, High-performance Solution-processed Metal Oxide Thin-film Transistors Formed by a ‘sol–gel on Chip’ Process." Nature Materials (2010): 45–50. Nature Materials. Web. 2 Mar. 2015.
  12. ^ a b Tai, Y.-H., B.-T. Chen, Y.-J. Kuo, C.-C. Tsai, K.-Y. Chiang, Y.-J. Wei, and H.-C. Cheng. "A New Pixel Circuit for Driving Organic Light-Emitting Diode With Low Temperature Polycrystalline Silicon Thin-Film Transistors." Journal of Display Technology 01.01 (2015): 100-104. IEEE Xplore. Web. 2 Mar. 2015.
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