Title of Invention

APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR FORMING A BATTERY IN AN INTEGRATED CIRCUIT

Abstract ABSTRACT APPARATUS AND bdETHOD FOR FORMING A BATTERY IN AN INTEGRATED CIRCUIT A method and structure that provides a battery within an integrated circuit for providing voltage to low-current electronic devices that exist within the integrated circuit. The method includes Front-End-Of-Line (FEOL) processing for generating a layer of electronic devices on a semiconductor wafer, followed by Back-End-Of-Line (BEOL) integration for wires the electronic devices together to form completed electrical circuits of the integrated circuit. The BEOL integration includes forming a multilayered structure of wiring levels on the layer of electronic devices. Each wiring level includes conductive metallization (e.g., metal-plated vias, conductive wiring lines, etc.) embedded in insulative material. The battery is formed during BEOL integration within one or more wiring levels, and the conductive metallization conductively couples positive and negative terminals of the battery to the electronic devices. The battery may have several different topologies relative to the structural and geometrical relationships among the battery electrodes and electrolyte. Multiple batteries may be formed within one or more wiring levels, and may be conductively coupled to the electronic devices. The multiple batteries may be connected in series or in parallel. fic-11
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Summary of the Invention
The present invention provides an electrochemical structure within
an integrated circuit, comprising: a semiconductor wafer; a layer of
electronic devices on the semiconductor wafer, wherein the layer of
electronic devices includes at least one electronic device; N wiring
levels on the layer of electronic devices, wherein N is at least 1,
wherein the N wiring levels are denoted as wiring level 1, wiring level 2,
... , wiring level N, and wherein the N wiring levels include a first
conductive metallization and a second conductive metallization; and at
least one battery within the wiring levels I, I+l, ... K, wherein I is
selected from the group consisting of 1, 2, ..., and N, wherein K is
selected from the group consisting of I, I+l, ..., and N, wherein the
first conductive metallization conductively couples a first electrode of
the at least one battery to the at least one electronic device, and
wherein the second conductive metallization conductively couples a second
electrode of the battery to the at least one electronic device.
. The preseijt invention provides a method for forming an
electrochemical -structure within an integrated circuit, comprising:
providing a semiconductor wafer; forming a layer of electronic devices on
the semiconductor wafer, wherein the layer of electronic devices includes
at least one electronic device; forming N wiring levels on the layer of
electronic devices, wherein N is at least 1, wherein the N wiring levels
are denoted as wiring level 1, wiring level 2, ... , wiring level N;
forming a first conductive metallization and a second conductive
metallization within the N wiring levels; and forming at least one battery
within the wiring levels I, I+l, ... K, wherein I is selected from the
group consisting of 1, 2, ..., and N, wherein K is selected from the group
consisting of I, I+l, ..., and N, wherein the first conductive
metallization conductively couples a first electrode of the at least one
battery to the at least one electronic device, and wherein the second
conductive representation conductively couples a second electrode of the
battery to the at least one electronic device.
The present invention supplies nonstandard bias voltages and
nonstandard reference voltages in accordance with special requirements of
particular integrated circuits. The present invention also avoids using
external voltage sources for supplying voltage to integrated circuits that
require low-power input, wherein the external voltage sources require more
wiring levels, have a larger size, or occupy a larger volume.

Brief Description of the Drawings
FIG. 1 depicts a front cross-sectional view of an integrated circuit
that includes a battery and conductive metallization, in accordance with
embodiments of the present invention.
FIG. 2 depicts a front cross-sectional view of a first
electrochemical structure comprising a substrate and a first conductive
layer within the substrate, in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention.
FIG. 3A depicts FIG. 2 after depositing an etch stop layer and a
first inter-level dielectric (ILD) layer on the substrate and exposing a
first portion of the first conductive layer by forming a second trench
within a first ILD layer and the etch stop layer.
FIG. 3B depicts FIG. 3A with the etch stop layer replaced by a
diffusion barrier film on a top surface of the first ILD layer, on first
wall and a second wall of the second trench, 'and on a surface of the first
conductive layer.
FIG. 4 depicts FIG. 3A after an electrolyte layer has been
conformally formed on a wall of the second trench and on the first portion
of the first conductive layer resulting in a third trench within the
electrolyte layer, and after the third trench has been filled with a
second conductive material.
FIG. 5 depicts FIG. 4 after planarization to a top surface of the
first ILD layer to remove excess electrolyte material of the electrolyte
layer and excess second conductive material.
FIG. 6 depicts FIG. 5 after forming a second ILD and a third ILD
layer on the top surface of the first ILD layer and forming an
inter-connecting via and a contact hole within the third ILD layer and the
second ILD layer, respectively.
FIG. 7 depicts FIG. 6 after the inter-connecting via and the contact
hole have been filled with a third conductive material and wherein an
excess of the third conductive material has been removed by planarization.

FIG. 8 depicts a front cross-sectional view of a second
electrochemical structure comprising a first conductive plate within an
insulating layer, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
FIG. 9 depicts FIG. 8 after forming an etch stop layer on the
insulating layer, forming a first inter-level dielectric (ILD) layer on
the etch stop layer, and exposing a portion of the first conductive plate
by forming a first trench within the first ILD layer and the etch stop
layer.
FIG. 10 depicts FIG. 9 after a first conductive layer has been
conformally formed on a first and second wall of the first trench and on
the portion of the first conductive plate, resulting in a second trench
within the first conductive layer.
FIG. 11 depicts FIG. 10 after an electrolyte layer has been
conformally "formed on a first wall, on a second wall, and on a bottom wall
of the second trench, resulting in a third trench within the electrolyte
layer.
FIG. 12 depicts FIG. 11 after.the" third trench has been filled with
a second conductive material.
FIG. 13 depicts FIG. 12 after planarization to a top surface of the
first ILD layer has removed portions of the second conductive material,
the electrolyte layer, and the first conductive material, and after a
conductive contact has been formed from a remaining portion of the second
conductive material.
FIG. 14 depicts a front cross-sectional view of a planar battery, in
accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
FIG. 15 depicts a front cross-sectional view of two batteries
connected in series, in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention.
FIG. 16 depicts a front cross-sectional view of three batteries
connected in series, in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention.

FIG. 17 depicts a front cross-sectional view of three batteries
connected in series, in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention.
FIG. 18 depicts a front cross-sectional view of two batteries
connected in parallel, in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention.
FIG. 19 depicts FIG. 1 with the battery rotated 90 degrees and the
conductive metallization resized for compatibility with the rotated
battery.
FIG. 20A depicts an electrolyte of a U-battery, in accordance with
embodiments of the present invention.
FIG. 20B depicts a U-Battery that includes the electrolyte of FIG.
20A.
FIG. 20C depicts the U-Battery of FIG. 20C after addition of
Extensions.
FIG. 21 depicts an S-Battery, in accordance with embodiments of the
present invention.
Detailed Description of the Invention
An integrated circuit may be fabricated' by, inter alia,
Front-End-Of-Line (FEOL) processing followed by Back-End-Of-Line (BEOL)
integration. FEOL processing comprises forming a layer of electronic
devices on a semiconductor wafer, which includes supporting process steps
for defining the electronic devices (e.g., photolithography, annealing,
ion implants, oxidation, etc.). The semiconductor wafer may include,
inter alia, a bulk single-crystal silicon wafer with or without a buried
oxide layer. The electronic devices include, inter alia, transistors,
bipolar transistors, diodes, etc. BEOL integration conductively couples
the electronic devices together to form completed electrical circuits, by
forming a multilayered structure on and above the layer of electronic
devices. Each layer of the multilayered structure may be thought of as a
wiring level that includes conductive metallization (e.g., metal-plated
vias, conductive wiring lines, etc.) embedded in insulative material
(e.g., a dielectric material). Thus, a layer of the multilayered
structure will be referred to herein as a "wiring level". Each wiring
level may be formed by, inter alia, placing a layer of dielectric material

on the previously formed layer, forming trenches or vias in the dielectric
material, placing metal in the trenches or vias (or on the sidewalls of
the trenches or vias), and polishing (i.e., planarizing) the exposed
surface of the layer. A result of the forming of wiring levels,
conductive metallization within each wiring level is conductively coupled
to conductive metallization within another wiring level. As a result of
the BEOL integration, completed circuits of the integrated circuit are
formed. Definitionally, BEOL integration begins as soon as a first
portion of a first metallization has been formed on or within, or coupled
to, the semiconductor wafer, even if formation of the layer of electronic
devices has not been completed.
The present invention provides a method and structure for forming a
battery within the integrated circuit at or on a wiring level of the
aforementioned multilayered structure. The battery of the present
invention is formed within one or more wiring levels during BEOL
integration. Although an extra wiring level of the multilayered structure
may be added to accommodate formation of the battery, it may be possible
to form the battery without adding an extra wiring level in situations in
which the battery is placed in a portion of a wiring level that is
sparsely populated with conductive metallization. The battery may be
formed directly above one or more of the electronic devices, or may be
formed above one or more of the electronic devices but laterally displaced
from the electronic devices.
FIG. 1 illustrates an integrated circuit 400 that includes a bulk
semiconductor wafer 402, a layer 900 of electronic devices coupled to the
bulk semiconductor wafer 402, N wiring levels formed on the layer 900 of
electronic devices during BEOL integration, and a battery 420 formed
during BEOL integration, in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention. The N wiring levels are denoted as wiring levels 901, ...,
900+J, ..., 900+N, and the battery 420 is at the wiring level 900+J,
wherein 2 [ J [ N. Fabrication of the integrated circuit 400 begins with
providing the bulk semiconductor wafer 402 (e.g., a bulk single-crystal
silicon wafer with or without a buried oxide layer). Next, FEOL
processing forms the layer 900 of electronic devices on the bulk
semiconductor wafer 402 by any method known to one of ordinary skill in
the art. The layer 900 of electronic devices includes a plurality of
electronic devices in a background of semiconductor material (e.g., P'
silicon), and may include millions of electronic devices or more. The
electronic devices may include, inter alia, semiconductor devices such as
field effect transistors, bipolar transistors, diodes, etc. For

illustrative purposes, the layer 900 of electronic devices includes a
field effect transistor (FET) 410, which comprises a source/drain 411, a
source/drain 412, a channel 413, a gate 414, a gate insulator 415, and
insulative spacers 418.
BEOL integration follows FEOL processing. BEOL integration forms
the N wiring levels (N ml) and includes forming conductive metallization
embedded within insulative material (e.g., dielectric material). The
conductive metallization includes conductive wiring, metal-plated vias,
etc., which serve to conductively couple electronic devices on the layer
of electronic devices 900. A conductive metallization representation 432
represents conductive metallization in the wiring levels 901, ...,
900+J-2, and may include conductive metallization of all kinds (e.g.,
conductive wiring lines, metal-plated vias, etc.) within each wiring
level. The conductive metallization representation 434 represents
conductive metallization in the wiring levels 901, ..., 900+J and may
include metallization of all kinds (e.g., conductive wiring lines,
metal-plated vias, etc.) within each wiring level. An electrical
conductor 442 is a form of conductive metallization that represents a
conductive plate, a conductive plug, or a similar conductive volume in the
wiring level 900+J-l. An electrical conductor 444 is a form of conductive
metallization that represents a conductive plate, a conductive plug, or a
similar conductive volume in the wiring level 900+J+l. Although not
shown, wiring levels 900+J+2, ..., 900+N may also include conductive
metallization of all kinds (e.g., conductive wiring lines, metal- plated
vias, etc.) .
Using any method known to one of ordinary skill in the art, the
wiring level 901 is formed on the layer of electronic devices 900, and
the wiring level 900+1 is formed on the wiring level 900+1-1, for 1=2, 3,
..., N. Each of the N wiring levels may be formed by, inter alia, placing
a layer of dielectric material on the previously formed wiring level (or
on the previously formed layer of electronic devices 900 for forming the
wiring level 901), forming trenches or vias in the dielectric material,
placing metal (e.g., copper) in the trenches or vias (or on the sidewalls
of the trenches or vias), and polishing (i.e., planarizing) the exposed
surface of the wiring level being formed. The processes that form the
wiring levels conductively couple each wiring level: to another wiring
level, to one or more electronic devices formed during the FEOL
processing, and/or to one or more electronic structures or electrical

devices external to the integrated circuit 400. In that manner, completed
circuits of the integrated circuit 400 are formed.
The battery 420 may be formed within the J'^^' wiring level as
described infra for forming a battery 38 associated with FIGS. 2-7, a
battery 39 associated with FIGS. 8-13, or a battery 170 associated with
FIG. 13. The battery 420 may be formed concurrently with other processes
that would be ordinarily performed (e.g., forming vias
photolithographically, adding metallization by damascene processing etc.)
in relation to the J"' wiring level. The battery 420 has a negative
terminal 422 which is conductively coupled to the conductor 442. The
battery 420 has a positive terminal 424 which is conductively coupled to
the conductor 444. The battery 420 provides voltage to the FET 410 by: a
conductive path from the positive terminal 424 to the conductor 444 to the
conductive metallization representation 434 to the source/drain 412 of the
FET 410, and a conductive path from the negative terminal 422 to the
conductor 442 to the conductive metallization representation 432 to the
source/drain 411 of the FET 410. As stated supra, the battery 420 is at
the J'' wiring level, and J stands for any positive integer in a range of
1 £ J :S N. Thus the battery 420 may be formed at any wiring level of the
integrated circuit 400. Altern-atively, the battery 420 could be formed on
a top surface 448 of the wiring level 900+N. Generally, the battery 420
could exist over a range of wiring levels such as from a wiring level 900
+ I through 900 + K, wherein I may have any of the values 1, 2, ..., N,
and K may have any of the values I, I+l, ..., N. Also generally, the
battery 420 could stand for a single battery, multiple batteries in series
as exemplified by FIGS. 15-17 discussed infra, or multiple batteries in
parallel as exemplified by FIG. 18 discussed infra.
The wiring level configuration in FIG. 1 is a particular example,
and many other wiring level configurations are possible. For example,
although the battery 420 in FIG. 1 has been placed at the single wiring
level 900+J the battery 420 could have been considered to exist at more
than one wiring level. To illustrate, a battery 170 in FIG. 14, to be
described infra, could comprise a first conductive layer 172 (which is an
electrode), an electrolyte 174, and a second conductive layer 176 (which
is an electrode), wherein each exists at a different wiring level.
Alternatively, the first conductive layer 172, the electrolyte 174, and
the second conductive layer 176 could be considered to collectively exist
at a single wiring level. Similarly, conductive metallization can be
assigned to wiring levels as desired. The foregoing forms of wiring
levels have been presented for purposes of illustration and description.

and are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the
precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible.
Such modifications that may be apparent to a person skilled in the art are
intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined by
the accompanying claims.
A constraint on wiring level notation is included herein, namely: a
wiring level that includes a battery or a portion of a battery (e.g., an
electrode of a battery) cannot extend beyond a physical extent of the
battery in a direction 450. Thus in FIG. 1, a single wiring level cannot
include both the battery 420 and the conductor 442, because the conductor
442 is beyond the physical extent of the battery 420; i.e., the conductor
442 does not occupy space that is between the positive terminal 424 and
the negative terminal 422 of the battery 420. In contrast, multiple
wiring levels could be defined between the positive terminal 424 and the
negative terminal 422 of the battery 420, because each such wiring level
of the multiple wiring levels would not extend beyond a physical extent of
the battery 420. Also note that a battery may be included within multiple
wiring levels. For example, a battery may be included within two wiring
levels such that a first electrode of the battery is in a first wiring
level of the two wiring levels, and an electrolyte and a second wiring
level of the battery is in a second wiring level of the two wiring levels.
The aforementioned constraint on wiring level notation serves to clarify
features of the present invention with respect to how placement of
conductive metallization is related to placement of the battery.
Neither of the conductors 444 and 442 are in the same wiring level
900+J (or same multiple wiring levels within 900+J if so defined) in which
the battery 420 is located. However, the battery 420 could be rotated 90
degrees (i.e., from the direction 450 to a direction 451). Such rotation
could result in a positioning of the positive and negative terminals of
the battery 420, as illustrated in FIG. 19, such that conductors (such as
the conductors 444 and 442) to said positive and negative terminals would
be located in the same wiring level 900+J (or same multiple wiring levels
within 900+J if so defined) in which the battery 420 is located. In
summary, the scope of the present invention includes two possibilities for
placement of the conductors 444 and 442 in relation to where the
battery 420 is located. The first possibility is that the conductors 444
and 442 are both outside of the same single wiring level or the same
multiple wiring levels in which the battery 420 is located. The second
possibility is that the conductors 444 and 442 are both within the same

single wiring level or the same multiple wiring levels in which the
battery 420 is located.
Several battery topologies are presented herein as depicted in FIGS.
20A, 20B, 20C, and 21. The battery topologies presented herein include a
U-Battery, a U-Battery With Extension, and a S-Battery.
FIG. 20A illustrates an electrolyte 600 of a U-battery, in
accordance with embodiments of the present invention. The electrolyte 600
has a shape of a "U" (in cross-sectional view) and includes: a base 602,
an arm 604, and an arm 606. The base 602, arm 604, and arm 606
collectively define a cavity 610.
FIG. 20B illustrates a U-Battery 650 that includes the electrolyte
600 of FIG. 20A, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
The cavity 610 has been partially or fully filled with conductive material
.to form a cavity electrode 620. A base electrode 622 having conductive
material contacts a portion of the base 602 of the electrolyte 600.
Generally, the electrolyte 600 of the U-battery 650 is not required to
have an exact shape of a "U", but must have a base, 2 arms, and a cavity
such that when the cavity is partially or totally filled with conductive
material, the conductive material of the resultant cavity electrode is in
contact with the base and the 2 arms.
FIG. 20C illustrates the U-Battery 650 of FIG. 20B after addition of
extensions 624 and 626 to form a U-Battery With Extensions 670. The
extensions 624 and 626 each include the conductive material of the base
electrode 622 and must contact a portion of the arms 604 and 606,
respectively, of the electrolyte 600. If both extensions 624 and 626 are
present, then the battery 670 is a U-Battery With Double Extension. If
either extension 624 or extension 626, but not both, is present, then the
battery 670 is a U-Battery With Single Extension.
FIG. 21 illustrates a S-Battery 680, in accordance with embodiments
of the present invention. The S-battery 680 includes an electrolyte 684
sandwiched between electrodes 682 and 686. A characteristic feature of a
S-Battery is a stratified (i.e., layered) structure of the electrolyte
sandwiched between electrodes.
The battery of the present invention eliminates a need to use
external voltage sources for particular applications requiring
nonstandard voltage bias or nonstandard reference voltage. Additionally,

the battery of the present invention avoids using external voltage sources
or external current sources which supply voltage or current, respectively,
to integrated circuits that require low-power input, wherein such external
voltage sources or external current sources require more wiring levels,
have a larger size, or occupy a larger volume, than desired. For example,
the battery may be advantageously used in a biomedical application in
which a sensor may be placed on a catheter intended for insertion into a
person's body. The sensor would include the battery in an integrated
circuit for powering the circuits of the sensor. As another example, the
battery of the present invention may be formed within low-power integrated
circuits on disk-drive heads, wherein the battery would supply the power
required by the disk heads and could be periodically recharged. Further,
thermal cycling in relation to the battery is reduced during BEOL
integration in comparison with FEOL processing, since the battery will be
subjected to lower temperatures that occur during BEOL integration. The
reduced thermal cycling is advantageous, since the battery may include,
inter alia, highly reactive lithium or lithiated vanadium oxide (LieVzOs) .
FIGS. 2-7 depict an apparatus and method for forming a battery
during BEOL integration for use within an integrated circuit {e.g., the
integrated circuit 400 described supra in conjunction with FIG. 1) , in
accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
FIG. 2 depicts a front cross-sectional view of a first
electrochemical structure 1, comprising a substrate 2 that includes any
dielectric material such as Si02 or the like and a first conductive layer 8
within the substrate 2, wherein the first conductive layer 8 is formed
using any method known to one of ordinary skill in the art, such as a
damascene procedure described by Beyer in 1999 (U.S. Patent No. 5,965,459,
herein incorporated by reference). The substrate 2 represents a portion
of a wiring level (e.g., any one of the wiring levels 901, 902, ..., 900+N
described supra in conjunction with the integrated circuit 400 of FIG.
1), wherein the wiring level includes conductive metallization embedded
within dielectric material. The substrate 2 has been deposited on a
surface below such as on the layer of electronic devices 900, or on one of
the wiring levels 901, ..., 900+J. ..., 900+N, described supra in
conjunction with FIG. 1, using any method known to one of ordinary skill
in the art.
The substrate 2 has been patterned and etched by any method known to
one of ordinary skill in the art such as, inter aJia, a photolithographic

method, thus defining and forming a shallow first trench 3, having a width
in the direction 5 that includes from about 0.3 ym (i.e., microns) to
about 5 \m, and a height that includes from about 0.3 ]m to about 5 pm.
The shallow first trench 3 has been filled with a first conductive
material, followed by polishing, such as by chemical mechanical polishing
(CMP), to remove excess first conductive material and to planarize a top
surface 4 of the processed substrate 2. Filling the shallow first trench
3 with the first conductive material forms the first conductive layer 8.
The first conductive layer 8 may be formed using reactive sputtering of
vanadium as described by Bates et al., in 1994 (U.S. Patent No. 5,338,625,
herein incorporated by reference) or by any method known by one of
ordinary skill in the art. When the first conductive material is V2O5, the
first conductive material functions as a cathode of an electrolytic cell.
When the first conductive material is LieV205, or lithium, the first
conductive material functions as an anode of an electrolytic cell. An
electrolytic cell derived from the electrochemical structure 1 is a
battery 38 shown infra in FIG. 5.
FIG. 3A depicts FIG. 2 after sequentially forming an etch stop layer
9 (e.g. a silicon nitride layer) on the planarized substrate 2, and a
first inter-level dielectric (ILD) layer 10 on the etch stop layer 9. The
etch stop layer 9 and the first ILD layer 10 may be formed by any method
known to one of ordinary skill in the art. The etch stop layer 9 acts as
a barrier to etching and to prevent chemical diffusion of residual ions
into the substrate 2 from subsequent patterning, wet chemical etching or
planarization steps that will be described infra in relation to FIG. 5.
The etch stop layer 9 has a thickness between about 0.015 \m and about 0.3
]m. If the etch-stop functionality of the etch stop layer 9 is not
needed, the etch stop layer 9 may be omitted. The first inter-level
dielectric ILD layer 10 has a thickness between about 0.285 ym and about
4.7 ]m.
A second trench 13 is formed in the first ILD layer 10 by any method
known to one of ordinary skill in the art, such as in the following two
steps. In the first step, the first ILD layer 10 is patterned and etched,
using any appropriate photolithographic method known to one of ordinary
skill in the art. The patterning and etching removes a portion of the
first ILD layer 10, and leaves a remaining portion 12 of the first ILD
layer 10 on the etch stop layer 9. In the second step, a first portion 18
of the etch stop layer 9 is patterned and etched, removing the first
portion 18 of the etch stop layer 9 which leaves a second portion 15 of

the etch stop layer 9 on a first portion 17 of the first conductive layer
8 and exposes a second portion 11 of the first conductive layer 8.
If the second trench 13 has a rectangular cross-section, then the
second trench 13 has a first wall 32 and a second wall 34, and a bottom
wall that is about coplanar with a surface 36 of the exposed second
portion 11 of the first conductive layer 8. Alternatively, the second
trench 13 may have a circular cross section.
FIG. 3B, which is an alternative to FIG. 3A, depicts FIG. 3A with
the etch stop layer 9 of FIG. 3 replaced by a diffusion barrier film 14 on
a top surface of the first ILD layer 10, on the first wall 32 and the
second wall 34 of the second trench 13, and on a surface 36 of the first
conductive layer 8. The diffusion barrier film 14 may be deposited by any
method known to one of ordinary skill in the art. The diffusion barrier
film 14 serves as diffusion barrier to prevent leakage of impurities into
the bulk semiconductor wafer (e.g., the bulk semiconductor wafer 402 in
FIG. 1) and into the device layer just above the bulk semiconductor wafer
(e.g., the layer 900 in FIG. 1). Such impurities may originate from,
inter alia, an electrolyte of a battery within the electrochemical
structure 1. For example in FIG. 1, impurities may leak from an
electrolyte of the battery 420 through the conductor 442 and the
conductive metallization representation 432 into the gate 414 of the FET
410. As another example, impurities may leak from an electrolyte of the
battery 420 through the conductor 444 and the conductive metallization
representation 434 into the source/drain 412 of the FET 410. The material
of the diffusion barrier film 14 should be electrically conductive so as
not to electrically insulate the first conductive layer 8 from an
electrolyte layer 41 (the electrolyte layer 41 will be subsequently formed
as discussed infra in conjunction with FIGS. 4-5). Alternatively, the
diffusion barrier film 14 need not be electrically conductive if a bottom
portion 16 of the diffusion barrier film 14 is removed such as by, inter
alia, reactive ion etching (RIE), which would avoid electrically
insulating the first conductive layer 8 from the electrolyte layer 41. To
effectively act as a diffusion barrier, the diffusion barrier film 14
should have a minimum thickness that depends on the material of the
diffusion barrier film 14, and the minimum thickness of about 50 A is
representative for some materials. Although FIGS. 4-7 (to be discussed
infra) show the etch stop layer 9 of FIG. 3A, the diffusion barrier film
14 of FIG. 3B could alternatively be used in FIGS. 4-7 instead of the

etch stop layer 9. Similarly, although FIGS. 8-18 (to be discussed
infra) show an etch stop layer 89 (see, in particular, FIG. 9) which is
analogous to the etch stop layer 9 of FIGS. 3A and 4-7, FIGS. 8-18 could
have alternatively use a diffusion barrier film (e.g., the diffusion
barrier film 14 of FIG. 3B) instead of the etch stop layer 89.
FIG. 4 depicts FIG. 3A after conformally forming an electrolyte
layer 41 on the remaining portion 12 of the first ILD layer 10, on the
first wall 32 of the second trench 13, on the second wall 34 of the second
trench 13, and on the surface 36 of the second portion 11 of the first
conductive layer 8, resulting in a third trench 44 within the electrolyte
layer 41. The third trench 44 may have, inter alia, a rectangular or
cylindrical cross-section in a plane about normal to a direction 6. The
electrolyte layer 41, comprises a first portion 48 above the first ILD ■
layer 10, and a second portion 42 within the first ILD layer 10. The
electrolyte layer 41, may be formed by any method known to one of ordinary
skill in the art such as a method described by Bates et al. in 1994 (U.S.
Patent No. 5,336,625), According to Bates, an electrolyte material such
as lithium phosphorous oxynitride (Lipon) or like materials may be
conformally deposited to about a uniform thickness between about 0.11 l]im
and about 1.8 loro by known methods, such as rf magnetron sputtering of
LisPO^ in Nj. A second conductive layer 49 has been conformally formed on
the electrolyte layer 41, wherein the second conductive layer 49 comprises
a first portion 50 above the first portion 48 of the electrolyte layer 41
and a second portion 53 within the second portion 42 of the electrolyte
layer 41. The second conductive layer 49 includes a second conductive
material such as lithium metal or lithiated vanadium oxide (LieVsOs) , such
that the third trench 44 has been filled with the second conductive
material. Similarly, Bates et al. described in U.S. Patent No. 5,338,625
depositing a film of lithium metal on a film of lithium phosphorous
oxynitride (Lipon) electrolyte.
FIG. 5 depicts FIG. 4 after planarization using any method known to
one of ordinary skill in the art, such as CMP, removes the first portion
50 of the second conductive layer 49 and the first portion 48 of the
electrolyte layer 41, leaving a top surface 57 of the planarized structure
1. In the example depicted in FIG. 5, planarization of the structure 1
results in formation of a conductive metal plug or contact 46 (formerly
the second portion 53 of the second conductive layer 49 in FIG. 3A) having
a height (in the direction 6) such as from about 0.225 pm to about 3.8 ]im,
and a width (in the direction 5) such as from about 0.08 pm to about 1.4

vim. The electrolyte layer 41 (i.e., the second portion 42 as shown in
FIG. 4) separates the second conductive material of the conductive metal
plug or contact 46 from the second portion 11 of the first conductive
layer 8.
The structure 1 depicted in FIG. 5 includes an electrolytic cell or
battery 38, wherein the first conductive layer 8 and the first conductive
plug or contact 46 are electrodes, and wherein the electrolyte layer 41
provides a medium in which ions such as lithium ions, or ions of other
alkali metals, migrate from an anode of the battery 38 to a cathode of the
battery 38. For example, in the battery 38, if the conductive plug or
contact 46 is an anode because it is derived from second conductive
materials such as lithium metal or LisVjOs, and the first conductive layer
8 is a cathode because it is derived from first conductive materials such
as V2O5, then the lithium ions migrate from the conductive plug or contact
46 to the first conductive layer 8 during a discharge cycle of the
battery. Alternatively, in the battery 38, if the first conductive layer
8 is the anode because it is derived from first conductive materials such
as lithium or LieVzOs, and the conductive plug or contact 46 is the cathode
because it is derived from second conductive materials such as V2O5, then
the lithium ions migrate from the first conductive layer 8 to the
conductive plug or contact 46 during the discharge cycle of the battery.
If the electrodes 8 and 46 are electrodes of a thin film lithium
battery, then the electrodes 8 and 46 may comprise Materials such as
described by Lee et al., wherein a cathode is VjOs, an electrolyte is
lithium phosphorous oxynitride (Lipon), and an anode is LieV205 . See
"All-Solid- State Rocking Chair Lithium Battery on a Flexible Al
Substrate", Electrochemical and Solid- State Letters, 2(9) 425-427 (1999),
herein incorporated by reference. Bates, in 1996 (U.S. Patent No.
5,567,210, herein incorporated by reference), described performance
characteristics that relate surface area to output of lithium/Lipon/VaOs
batteries. Bates states that an amorphous LiMnjO^ cathode provides a lower
discharge rate than does a crystalline LiCo02 cathode, and recommends the
amorphous LiMn204 cathode for applications requiring ambient temperature
battery fabrication. See John B. Bates' Material, vl-5/1/98, URL
"http://www.ccs.ornl.gov/3M/bates.html", herein incorporated by reference.
See also. Park et al., "All- Solid-state Lithium Thin-Film Rechargeable
Battery With Lithium Manganese Oxide", Electrochemical and Solid State
Letters, 2(2) Feb. (1999) 58-59 , herein incorporated by reference,
(describing thin film batteries comprising Li/Lipon/LiMn204 having "a

nearly constant potential of 4.0 [volts] V, good coulombic efficiency and
the capability of carrying high current density. Planar microbatteries
were connected in series through metallization". Park et al. described
infra high voltages of approximately 32 volts (V) could be obtained from
eight batteries connected in series). Kurokawa et al., in 1994 (U.S.
Patent No. 5,308,720, herein incorporated by reference), disclosed a
non-aqueous battery comprising an anode made up of "material which
occludes and releases lithium reversibly, a non-aqueous electrolyte and a
positive electrode which has a composite oxide which includes lithium,
nickel and oxygen". An alternative electrolytic cell comprises
M/PbSnl^/(Agl, Ag), wherein M is a cathode and is either Sn or Pb, wherein
PbSnl, is an electrolyte, and wherein Agl and Ag are the anode. See T. A.
Kuku, "Ion Transport Studies on Vacuum Deposited PbSnl4 Thin Films", Thin
Solid Films, 340 (1) 292-296 (1999), herein incorporated by reference.
Gregor proposed formation of a thin film battery that is suitable as a
microminiature component to supply biasing potentials to field effect
transistors on a substrate,- comprising alternating films of a silver (Ag)
cathode , silver oxide (A§20)' electrolyte and a copper (Cu) anode. See
"Thin Film Voltage Source", IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin, Nov. 1964,
p. 433, herein incorporated by reference. Further, an electrolytic cell
may comprise Ag/Zn batteries using potassium hydroxide electrolyte in
water.
FIG. 6 illustrates FIG. 5 after forming a path to the conductive
metal plug or contact 46, wherein the path comprises an inter-connecting
via 65 and a contact hole or via 72. The path to the conductive metal
plug or contact 46 may be formed using techniques known to one skilled in
the art such as a "dual damascene" technique. For example, Cronin et al.,
in 1998 (U.S. Patent No. 5,759,911, herein incorporated by reference),
described a "dual damascene" technique in which two masks are used to form
patterned conductive lines simultaneously, with formation during BEOL
integration of stud via connections through an insulating layer to
underlying metallization in an integrated circuit. See also Cronin, in
1999 (U.S. Patent No. 5,960,254, herein incorporated by reference),
describing a dual damascene technique. See also Chow et al., in 1988
(U.S. Patent No. 4,789,648, herein incorporated by reference), describing
the dual damascene technique. In preparation for using the dual damascene
technique in the present invention, a second ILD layer 58 having a
thickness between about 0.15 pm and about 2.5 pm and comprising
inter-level dielectric materials such as, inter alia, sputtered quartz,
has been formed on the planarized surface 57. The contact hole or via 72
has been defined using photolithography by forming a first mask layer 63

of photoresist on the second ILD layer 58 by a method known to one of
ordinary skill in the art. Alignment is facilitated by standard alignment
means such as described by Cronin et al., in U.S. Patent No. 5,759,911.
An etch stop layer (not shown) may be deposited on the second ILD layer 58
or on the first mask layer 63. A third ILD layer 60 comprising
inter-level dielectric materials such as. Inter alia, sputtered glass or
the like is formed on the second ILD layer 58 and on the first mask layer
63.
The third ILD layer 60 has been patterned using a second mask as
required by the "dual damascene" technique, and etched using an
appropriate method of patterning and etching known to a one of ordinary
skill in the art. As a result, the inter-connecting via 65 is formed
within the third ILD layer 60 to the first mask layer 63 by removing a
portion of the third ILD layer 60 and leaving a remaining portion 62,;
Additionally, the contact hole or via 72 is formed within the second ILD
layer 58 by removing a portion of the second ILD layer 58 that is not
protected from etching by the first mask 63, leaving a remaining portion
55 of the second ILD layer 58.
FIG. 7 illustrates FIG. 6 after a second conductive plug or contact
85 has been formed by filling the inter-connecting via 65 and the contact
hole or via 72 with a third conductive material. The third conductive
material may include any conductive material such as, inter alia, Cu, W,
Al, TiN, Ta, or similar metals. Excess third conductive material is
removed by etching or CMP techniques know by those of ordinary skill in
the art, resulting in a planarized top surface 82 of the electrochemical
structure 1. The planarization has formed a top surface 82 of the third
ILD layer 60 and of the second conductive plug or contact 85. The second
conductive plug or contact 85 extends from the top surface 82 to the first
conductive plug or contact 46.
If the inter-connecting hole or via 65 and the contact via 72 have
rectangular cross- sections, then: a height in the direction 6 from the
top surface 82 to a top surface 54 the first conductive plug or contact 46
includes from about 0.2 yim to about 3.7 ]jm; a width of the contact hole or
via 72 (see FIG. 6) in the direction 5 includes from about 0.07 jam to
about 1.2 pm; and a width of the inter-connecting via 65 (see FIG. 6) in
the direction 5 includes from about 0.17 ]xm to about 2.9 pm-

The second ILD layer 58 and the third ILD layer 60, in combination,
is a composite ILD layer. Generally, a composite ILD layer includes one
or more stacked ILD layers. Similarly, the inter-connecting via 65 and
the contact hole or via 72 (see FIG. 6), in combination, is a composite
trench. Generally, a composite trench includes one or more sequentially
stacked trenches such that successive trenches overlap, partially or
fully. For example, the inter- connecting via 65 and the contact hole or
via 72 are trenches that overlap at an interface 64 (see FIG. 6) .
The battery 38 of FIG. 7 is an example of a U-Battery as described
supra in conjunction with FIGS. 20A and 2OB.
Relating the electrochemical structure 1 of FIG. 7 to the integrated
circuit 400 of FIG. 1, the battery 38 is at the wiring level 900+J, and
the second conductive plug or contact 85 is at the wiring level 900+J+1.
Thus, the second conductive plug or contact 85 extends conductive coupling
of the battery 38 to other wiring levels which are conductively coupled to
one or more electronic devices to be powered by the battery 38. For
example, the second conductive plug or contact 85 is analogous to the
conductor 444 of FIG. 1,_ described supra as conductively coupling to the
FET 410 via the conductive metallization representation 434 of FIG. 1.
FIGS. 8 -13 depict an apparatus and method for forming a battery
during BEOL integration for use within or on an integrated circuit (e.g.,
the integrated circuit 400 described supra in conjunction with FIG. 1), in
accordance with embodiments of the present invention.
FIG. 8 depicts a front cross-sectional view of an electrochemical
structure 71, comprising an insulating layer 84 that includes an
insulating material 75 and a first conductive plate 88. The insulating
layer 84 represents a wiring level (e.g., any one of the wiring levels
901, ..., 900+N described supra in conjunction with the integrated circuit
400 of FIG. 1), wherein the wiring level includes conductive
metallization embedded within dielectric material. The insulating
material 75 includes any dielectric material such as SiOz or the like.
The insulating layer 84 is typically formed on the layer of
electronic devices 900, or on one of the wiring levels 901, ..., 900+J.
..., 900+N, of FIG. 1 described supra, using any method known to one of
ordinary skill in the art. For example, chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
or a similar technique may be used to form the insulating layer 84 . The

insulating material 75 includes insulating materials such as planarized
SiOs, a glass material (e.g., re-flowed phosphosilicate glass), a composite
of SiOa and silicon nitride, or a polymer (e.g., a polyimide) . If the
insulating material 75 comprises silicon nitride (i.e. SisN^), plastics, or
like materials, then the SisN^, plastics, etc. may further act as an ionic
barrier to prevent residual ions that remain behind after processing from
contaminating underlying integrated chip circuitry such as the layer of
electronic devices 900 and thus prevent impairment of a functioning of the
underlying integrated circuit circuitry. The residual ions may include,
inter alia, alkali metal ions such as lithium and sodium ions, or chloride
ions. The processing may include, inter alia, wet chemical etching and
chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) of the top surface 82 of the
insulating layer 84.
The first conductive plate 88 is formed by any method known to one
of ordinary skill in the art, such as using a damascene procedure
described by Beyer in 1999 in U.S. Patent No. 5,965,459. A width (in a
direction 83) of the first conductive plate 88 includes from about 0.3 pm
to about 5 ym, and a height of the first conductive plate 88 (in a
direction 81) includes from about 0.3 pm to about 5 pm.
FIG. 9 depicts FIG. 8 after sequentially forming an etch stop layer
89 on the insulating layer 84, and an inter-level dielectric ILD layer 90
on the etch stop layer 89. The etch stop layer 89 may include, inter
alia, silicon nitride, and may be formed using any method known to one of
ordinary skill in the art such as CVD. The etch stop layer 89 acts as a
barrier to etching and to prevent chemical diffusion of residual ions into
the insulating layer 84 from subsequent patterning or planarization steps
that will be described infra in relation to FIG. 13. The etch stop layer
89 may be formed from materials such as silicon nitride or alumina. The
etch stop layer 89 has a thickness (in the direction 81) between about
0.015 pa and about 0.3 pm. The etch stop layer 9 has a thickness between
about 0.015 pm and about 0.3 \m. If the etch-stop functionality of the
etch stop layer 89 is not needed, the etch stop layer 89 may be omitted.
An ILD layer 90 is formed on the etch stop layer 89 from inter-level
dielectric materials that include such materials as sputtered quartz or an
oxide. A thickness of the ILD layer 90 (in the direction 81) includes
between about 0.285 pm and about 4.7 pm. A first trench 93 is formed
within the ILD layer 90 using the same procedure as was described supra in
conjunction with FIG. 3A for forming the second trench 13.
20

FIG. 10 depicts FIG. 9 after a first conductive layer 110 has been
conformally deposited to about a uniform thickness between about 0.08 pm
and about 1.3 pm on the ILD layer 90, on a first wall 102 of the first
trench 93 (see FIG. 9), on the first conductive plate 88, and on a second
wall 105 of the first trench 93 (see FIG. 9), resulting in a second trench
115 within the first conductive layer 110, The first conductive layer 110
has been made from any conductive materials appropriate for use as
electrodes of an electrolytic cell such as described supra for forming the
electrodes of battery 38 shown in FIG. 5.
FIG. 11 illustrates FIG. 10 after an electrolyte layer 121 has been
conformally deposited to about a uniform thickness such as from about 0.08
pm to about 1.3 jm on a first wall 122, on a second wall 124, and on a
bottom surface 125, of the second trench 115, resulting in a third trench
123 within the electrolyte layer 121. The electrolyte layer 121 may be
formed using known methods, such as rf magnetron sputtering of LisPO^ in Na
as described by Bates et al. in 1994 in U.S. Patent No, 5,338,625. The '
electrolyte layer 121 is made from an electrolyte material such as lithium
phosphorous oxynitride (Lipon) and other like materift'S.
FIG. 12 depicts FIG. 11, after the third trench 123 (see FIG. 11)
has been filled with a second conductive material by depositing a second
conductive layer 135 on the electrolyte layer 121,
FIG. 13 depicts FIG. 12 after planarization has removed portions of:
the second conductive layer 135, the electrolyte layer 121, and the first
conductive layer 110. The planarization may be accomplished using any
method known to one of ordinary skill in the art, such as CMP, as is
described supra in conjunction with planarization of structure 1 shown in
FIG. 5. The planarization leaves a conductive contact 165, as well as a
remaining portion 152 of the second conductive layer 135, a remaining
portion of the electrolyte layer 121, and a remaining portion of the first
conductive layer 110. FIG. 13 includes a battery 39, comprising the
remaining portion pf the first conductive layer 110 and the remaining
portion 152 of the second conductive layer 135 as electrodes (i.e., anode
and cathode, or cathode and anode, respectively), and the remaining
portion of the electrolyte layer 121 as the electrolyte. The conductive
contact 165 is in conductive contact with the remaining portion 152 of the
second conductive layer 135 (see FIG. 12). The conductive contact 165 has
a height (in the direction 81) between about 0.15 jam and about 2.5 pm, and
a width (in the direction 83) between about 0.04 pm and about 0.7 jam. The

remaining portion 152 of the second conductive layer 135 of FIG. 13 has a
height (in the direction 81) between about 0.15 ^m and about 2.5 )jm, and a
width (in the direction 83) between about 0.1 pm and about 1.7 ^m,
The battery 39 is an example of a U-Battery With Double Extension as
described supra in conjunction with FIG. 20C. If the step in FIG. 10 of
forming the first conductive layer 110 were modified to prevent the first
conductive layer 110 from forming on either the first wall 102 or the
second wall 105, then the battery 39 would be an example of a U-Battery
With Single Extension as described supra in conjunction with FIG. 20C.
The electrolyte layer 121 of the battery 39 has a "U" shape and is
therefore an example of a battery having a U-shaped electrolyte.
Additionally, the U-shaped electrolyte layer 121 has "arms" 117 and 118
extending in the direction 81, wherein an electrode, namely the first
conductive layer 110, is in contact with the arms 117 and 118. Thus, the
battery 39 is considered to be a battery having a U-shaped electrolyte
with electrode arm contact.
Relating the electrochemical structure 71 of FIG. 13 to the
integrated circuit 400 of FIG. 1, the battery 39 is at the wiring level
900+J, and the first conductive plate 88 is at the wiring level 900+J-l.
Thus, the conductive contact 165 extends conductive coupling of the
battery 39 to other wiring levels which are conductively coupled to one or
more electronic devices to be powered by the battery 39. For example, the
conductive contact 165 is analogous to the conductor 444 of FIG. 1,
described supra as being conductively coupled to the source/drain 412 of
the FET 410 via the conductive metallization representation 434.
Similarly, the conductive plate 88 is analogous to the conductor 442 of
FIG. 1, as being conductively coupled to the gate 414 of the FET 410 via
the conductive metallization representation 432.
FIG. 14 depicts an apparatus and method for forming a battery 170 of
an electrochemical structure 181 during BEOL integration, for use within
or on an integrated circuit (e.g., the integrated circuit 400 described.
supra in conjunction with FIG. 1), in accordance with embodiments of the
present invention.
The electrochemical structure 181 comprises a planar battery 170
between a first insulating layer 171 and a second insulating layer 180.

The first insulating layer 171 comprises a first conductive plate 173
conductively coupled to a first conductive layer 172 which serves as a
first electrode of the planar battery 170. The second insulating layer
180 comprises a second conductive plate 182 conductively coupled to a
second conductive layer 176 which serves as a second electrode of the
planar battery 170.
The first conductive plate 173 may be formed in the insulating layer
171 by any method known to one of ordinary skill in the art, such as in
three steps as follows. In the first step, the insulating layer 171 has
been deposited on a surface below such as on the layer of electronic
devices 900, or on one of the wiring levels 901, ..., 900+N-l, of FIG. 1
described supra, using any method known to one of ordinary skill in the
art. In the second step, a first portion of the insulating layer 171 has
been removed such as by reactive ion etching (RIE), leaving a second
portion 177 of the insulating layer 171, and resulting in formation of a
first trench 178. In the third step, the first conductive plate 173 has
been formed by filling the Tirst trench 178 with a conductive metal. The
second conductive plate 182 in the second insulating layer 180 may be
formed in a manner similar to the manner in which the first conductive
plate 173 has been formed, which includes forming a second trench 179.
The first conductive plate 173 and the second conductive plate 182 are
formed from conductive metals that may include, inter alia, Cu, W, Al,
TiN, Ta, or similar metals . If the first conductive plate 173 or the
second conductive plate 182 include copper, then the first conductive
plate 173 or the second conductive plate 182 could be formed by damascene
copper plating in the trenches 178 or the trench 179, respectively.
The planar battery 170 may be formed by sequentially depositing: the
first conductive layer 172 on the first insulating layer 171; an
electrolyte layer 174 on the first conductive layer 172; and the second
conductive layer 176 on the electrolyte layer 174. The first conductive
layer 172 and the second conductive layer 176 may be formed from
appropriate materials determined by their function as an anode or cathode.
The electrolyte layer 174 may be formed from Lipon or equivalent material.
A thickness of the first conductive layer 172 (in the direction 81) and
of the second conductive layer 176 (in the direction 81) each includes
from about 0.1 Ivim to about 1.3 ]im. A thickness of the electrolyte layer
174 (in the direction 83) includes from about 0.04 vim to about 0.7 pm.

The planar battery 170 is formed using conventional patterning and
etching, such as reactive ion etching (RIE) known to one of ordinary skill
in the art, to optimize desired features of the battery 170 such as its
shape, so that the battery 170 will fit, either within, or on top of, the
integrated circuit that includes the planar battery 170. Bates, in 1996,
in U.S. Patent No. 5,567,210 describes performance characteristics
relating to surface area and output of lithium/Lipon/V205 batteries.
Additionally, optimizing the shape of the battery 170 enables a power
output of the battery 170 to meet requirements of the application. The
materials of the battery 170 (i.e., the materials of the first conductive
layer 172, the electrolyte layer 174, and the second conductive layer 174)
controls the voltage output of the battery (e.g., provides bias voltage
or reference voltage such as from about 1 to about 5 volts) .
The ILD layer 180 may be formed by depositing inter-level dielectric
materials such as sputtered quartz on the second conductive layer 176 .
The ILD layer 180 has a thickness (in the direction 81) such as from
about 0.3 pm to about 5 ]im. Planarization for forming a surface 311 of
first insulating layer 171 and a surface 312 of the second insulating
layer 180 may be accomplished by using any method known to one of ordinary
skill in the art, such as CMP described supra.
The battery 170 is an example of a S-Battery as described supra in
conjunction with FIG. 21.
Relating the electrochemical structure 181 of FIG. 14 to the
integrated circuit 400 of FIG. 1, the battery 170 is at the wiring level
900+J, the first conductive plate 173 is at the wiring level 900+J-l, and
the second conductive plate 182 is at the wiring level 900+J+l. Thus, the
first conductive plate 173 and second conductive plate 182 extend
conductive coupling of the battery 170 to other wiring levels which are
conductively coupled to one or more electronic devices to be powered by
the battery 170. For example, the first conductive plate 173 and the
second conductive plate 182 are analogous to the conductor 442 and the
conductor 444, respectively, of FIG. 1 described supra as conductively
coupling to the FET 410 via the conductive metallization representation
432 and the conductive metallization representation 434, respectively, of
FIG. 1,
FIGS. 15-17 depict front cross-sectional views of batteries
connected in series, in accordance with embodiments of the present

invention. Structures 186 in FIG. 15, 207 in FIG. 16, and 208 in FIG. 17
each illustrate a different configuration of batteries conductively
coupled in series. The batteries of FIGS. 15-17 are formed during BEOL
integration steps that occur during formation of integrated circuits.
FIG. 15 depicts a front cross-sectional view of an electrochemical
structure 186, comprising a battery 188 and a battery 189 embedded within
insulation 187 in an integrated circuit. The battery 188 and the battery
189 are connected in series such that a negative terminal of the battery
188 is conductively coupled to a positive terminal of battery 189 by
conductive interconnects 196, 198, and 200, as shown. The conductive
interconnects 196, 198, and 200 may be formed from conductive metals that
include, inter alia, Cu, W, Al, TiN, Ta, or similar metals The batteries
188 and 189 may be formed in any manner .described supra (and with any
materials described supra) for forming the battery 38 associated with
FIGS. 2-7, the battery 39 associated with FIGS. 8-13, or the battery 170
associated with FIG. 14. A conductive plate 194 is in conductive contact
with a positive terminal of the battery 188, and a conductive plate 202 is
in conductive contact with a negative terminal of the battery 189.
Relating the electrochemical structure 186 of FIG. 15 to the
integrated circuit 400 of FIG. 1: the battery 188, the battery 189, and
the conductive interconnect 198 are at the wiring level 900+J; the
conductive plate 202 and the conductive interconnect 196 are at the wiring
level 900+J-1; and the conductive plate 194 and the conductive
interconnect 200 are at the wiring level 900+J+l. Thus, the conductive
plate 202 and conductive plate 194 extend conductive coupling of the
series-connected batteries 188 and 189 to other wiring levels which are
conductively coupled to one or more electronic devices to be powered by
the series-connected batteries 188 and 189. For example, the conductive
plate 202 and the conductive plate 194 are analogous to the conductor 442
and the conductor 444, respectively, of FIG. 1 described supra as
conductively coupling to the FET 410 via the conductive metallization
representation 432 and the conductive metallization representation 434,
respectively, of FIG. 1.
FIG. 15 includes three wiring levels. While the series-connected
batteries 188 and 189 are at a same wiring level, the series-connected
batteries 188 and 189 could be rearranged to be at different wiring levels
such as, inter alia, by using one or more conductive interconnects

(similar to the conductive interconnect 198) to shift either the battery
188 or the battery 189 to a wiring level below or above the wiring level
shown.
FIG. 16 depicts a front cross-sectional view of an electrochemical
structure 207, which is the electrochemical structure 186 of FIG. 15 such
that the conductive interconnect 198 of FIG. 15 is replaced by a battery
201 in FIG. 16. The electrochemical structure 207 comprises the battery
188, the battery 201, and the battery 189 embedded within the insulation
187 in an integrated circuit. The battery 188, the battery 201, and the
battery 189 are connected in series such that the negative terminal of the
battery 188 is conductively coupled to a positive terminal of battery 201
by the conductive interconnect 196, and a negative terminal of the battery
201 is conductively coupled to a positive terminal of the battery 189 by
the conductive interconnect 200. The conductive interconnects 196 and 200
may be formed from conductive metals that include, inter alia, Cu, W, Al,
TiN, Ta, or similar metals. The batteries 188, 201, and 189. may be formed
in any manner described supra (and with any materials described supra) for
forming the battery 38 associated with FIGS. 2-7, the battery 39
associated with FIGS. 8-13, or the battery 170 associated with FIG. 14.
The conductive plate 194 is in conductive contact with the positive
terminal of the battery 188, and the conductive plate 202 is in conductive
contact with the negative terminal of the battery 189.
Relating the electrochemical structure 207 of FIG. 16 to the
integrated circuit 400 of FIG. 1: the batteries 188, 201, and 189 are at
the wiring level 900+J; the conductive plate 202 and the conductive
interconnect 196 are at the wiring level 900+J-1; and the conductive plate
194 and the conductive interconnect 200 are at the wiring level 900+J+1.
Thus, the conductive plate 202 and conductive plate 194 extend conductive
coupling of the series-connected batteries 188, 201, and 189 to other
wiring levels which are conductively coupled to one or more electronic
devices to be powered by the series-connected batteries 188, 201, and 189.
For example, the conductive plate 202 and the conductive plate 194 are
analogous to the conductor 442 and the conductor 444, respectively, of
FIG. 1 described supra as conductively coupling to the FET 410 via the
conductive metallization representation 432 and the conductive
metallization representation 434, respectively, of FIG. 1.

FIG. 16 includes three wiring levels. While the series-connected
batteries 188, 201, and 189 are at a same wiring level, the
series-connected batteries 188, 201, and 189 could be rearranged to be at
different wiring levels such as, inter alia, by using one or more
conductive interconnects (similar to the conductive interconnect 198) to
shift the battery 188, the battery 201, and/or the battery 189 to a wiring
level below or above the wiring level. Generally, the series-connected
batteries 188, 201, and 189 could: all be at the same wiring level as
shown in FIG. 16, each be at a different wiring level, or have two of the
three aforementioned batteries at a same wiring level and the third (i.e.,
remaining) battery at a different wiring level.
FIG. 17 depicts a front cross-sectional view of an electrochemical
structure 208 which comprises a battery 214, a battery 216, and a battery
218 embedded within an insulation 209 in an integrated circuit. The
battery 214, the battery 216, and the battery 218 are directly connected
(by contact) in series with no intervening conductive interconnects, as
shown. The batteries 214, 216, and 218 may be formed in any manner
described supra (and with any materials described supra) for forming the
battery 38 associated with FIGS. 2-7, the battery 39 associated with FIGS.
8-13, or the battery 170 associated with FIG. 14. A T-shaped conductive
contact 210 is in conductive contact with the positive terminal of the
battery 214, and a H-shaped conductive contact 220 is in conductive
contact with the negative terminal of the battery 218.
Relating the electrochemical structure 208 of FIG. 17 to the
integrated circuit 400 of FIG. 1: the batteries 214, 216, and 218 are at
the wiring level 900+J; the H-shaped the conductive contact 220 is at the
wiring level 900+J-l; and the T-shaped conductive contact 210 is at the
wiring level 900+J+l. Thus, the H-shaped the conductive contact 220 and
the T-shaped conductive contact 210 extend conductive coupling of the
series-connected batteries 214, 216, and 218 to other wiring levels which
are conductively coupled to one or more electronic devices to be powered
by the series-connected batteries 214, 216, and 218. For example, the
H-shaped conductive contact 220 and the T-shaped conductive contact 210
are analogous to the conductor 442 and the conductor 444, respectively, of
FIG. 1 described supra as conductively coupling to the FET 410 via the
conductive metallization representation 432 and the conductive
metallization representation 434, respectively, of FIG. 1.

Components 221, 222 and 223 of the H-shaped conductive contact 220
could have been formed in different wiring levels. Alternative wiring
level assignments include: components 221, 222, and 223 are assigned to a
single wiring level; components 221 and 222 are assigned to a first wiring
level, and component 223 is assigned to a secon'd wiring level; components
221 is assigned to a first wiring level, components 222 is assigned to a
second wiring level, and component 223 is assigned to a third wiring
level; etc.
The series arrangement of the batteries 218, 216, and 214 Of FIG. 17
could be implemented by U-Batteries in series in accordance with the
methodology depicted in FIGS. 8- 13, discussed supra. Definitionally let
the first conductive layer 110 be labeled as a first conducting layer.
Noting in FIG. 13 that a first step has conformally deposited the first
conducting layer (which serves as an electrode of a first polarity such as
a positive polarity) on the ILD layer 90, and that a second step has
conformally deposited the electrolyte layer 121 on the first conducting
layer which forms a trench in the electrolyte layer 121, a third step
could conformally deposit a second conducting layer (which serves as an
electrode of a second polarity such as a negative polarity) within the
trench defined by the electrolyte layer 121 to form a first U-Battery
comprising the first conducting layer, the electrolyte layer 121, and the
second conducting layer. Next and noting that each conformal depositing
foritis a trench within said conformal depositing as stated svpra for the
electrolyte layer 121, a second U-battery could be formed in series with
the first U-Battery by the three steps of: conformally depositing a third
conducting layer (which serves as an electrode of the first polarity) on
the second conducting layer, conformally depositing a electrolyte layer on
the third conducting layer, and conformally depositing a fourth conducting
layer (which serves as an electrode of the second polarity) on the second
electrolyte layer. Thus, the second U-battery comprises the third
conducting layer, the second electrolyte layer, and the fourth conducting
layer. This aforementioned process of three steps may be repeated
iteratively as many times as desired. Each iterative repetition of the
three steps forms a new U-battery in series with the previously formed
U-Batteries. The third step, which is a conformally depositing step,
associated with the last such U-Battery formed would be replaced by a step
that fills the trench of the last conformally deposited electrolyte layer
with conductive material in manner analogous to the forming of the second
conductive layer 135 of FIG. 12 by filling the third trench 123 of FIG.
11.

While FIGS. 15, 16, and 17 depict 2 batteries, 3 batteries, and 3
batteries, respectively, in series within an integrated circuit, the
present invention includes any number of batteries in series within an
integrated circuit.
FIG. 18 depicts a front cross-sectional view of the electrochemical
structure 240, comprising a battery 242 and a battery 244 embedded within
insulation 249 in an integrated circuit. The battery 242 and the battery
244 are connected in parallel such that negative terminals of the
batteries 242 and 244 are conductively coupled to a conductive plate 248,
and positive terminals of the batteries 242 and 244 are conductively
coupled to a conductive plate 246, as shown.
Relating the electrochemical structure 240 of FIG. 18 to the
integrated circuit 400 of FIG. 1; the battery 242 and the battery 244 are
at the wiring level 900+J; the conductive plate 248 is at the wiring level
900+J-l; and the conductive plate 246 is at the wiring level 900+J+1.
Thus, the conductive plate 248 and the conductive plate 246 extend
conductive coupling of the parallel- connected batteries 242 and 244 to
other wiring levels which are conductively coupled to one or more
electronic devices to be powered by the parallel-connected batteries 242
and 244. For example, the conductive plate 248 and the conductive plate
246 are analogous to the conductor 442 and the conductor 444,
respectively, of FIG. 1 described supra as conductively coupling to the
FET 410 via the conductive metallization representation 432 and the
conductive metallization representation 434, respectively, of FIG. 1.
The electrochemical structure 240 of FIG. 18 of batteries connected
in parallel could be placed in a single wiring level such as the wiring
level 900+J of FIG. 19.
While FIG. 18 depicts 2 batteries in parallel within an integrated
circuit, the present invention includes any number of batteries in
parallel within an integrated circuit.


WE CLAIM:
1. An integrated circuit, comprising:
a semiconductor wafer (402);
a layer (900) of electronic devices on the semiconductor wafer, wherein the layer of
electronic devices comprises at least one electronic device (410);
a plurality of wiring levels (901, ..., 900+N) on the layer of electronic devices, the
wiring levels comprising a first conductive metallization (432, 442) and a second conductive
metallization (444,434); and
at least one battery (420) within the wiring levels such that the first conductive
metallization conductively couples a first electrode of the at least one battery to the at least
one electronic device, and wherein the second conductive metallization conductively couples
a second electrode of the battery to the at least one electronic device and the at least one
battery comprising a substantially U-section electrolyte (600) defining a central cavity (610)
in which the second electrode (620) is located in contact with the electrolyte.
2. The integrated circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the wiring levels and the at least one
battery are formed during a Back-End-Of-Line (BEOL) integration of the integrated circuit.
3. The integrated circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one battery is one of a
plurality of batteries in series.
4. The integrated circuit as claimed in claim 3, wherein the plurality of batteries are
conductively coupled to each other by a conductive interconnect between each pair of
batteries.
5. The integrated circuit as claimed in claim 3, wherein the plurality of batteries are directly
connected to each other.
6. The integrated circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one battery is one of a
plurality of batteries in parallel.

7. The integrated circuit of any preceding claim, wherein the at least one battery comprises
anode material selected from the group consisting of lithium, lithiated vanadium oxide
(Li8V205), Agl, Ag, and Zn, and cathode material selected from the group consisting of
V2O5, LiMn204, LiCo02, Sn, Pb, and Ag, and wherein an electrolyte of the first battery
comprises lithium phosphorous oxynitride.
8. The integrated circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one battery comprises a
U-Battery or a S- Battery.
9. A method for forming an integrated circuit, comprising the steps of:
providing a semiconductor wafer (402);
forming a layer (900) of electronic devices on the semiconductor wafer, wherein the
layer of electronic devices comprises at least one electronic device (410);
forming a plurality of wiring levels (901, ..., 900+N) on the layer of electronic
devices;
forming a first conductive metallization (432, 442) and a second conductive
metallization (434, 444) within the plurality of wiring levels;
forming at least one battery within the plurality of wiring levels such that the first
conductive metallization conductively couples a first electrode of the at least one battery to
the at least one electronic device, and wherein the second conductive metallization
conductively couples a second electrode of the battery to the at least one electronic device,
the at least one battery comprising a substantially U-section electrolyte (600) defining a
central cavity (610) in which the second electrode (620) is located in contact with the
electrolyte.
10. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein forming the at least one battery comprises:
forming an exposed insulating layer (2) in a first wiring level and an exposed first
conductive layer (8) in the insulating layer;
forming an inter-level dielectric (ILD) layer (lO)over the exposed first conductive
layer and over the exposed insulating layer;

forming a first trench (13) within the ILD layer by removing a portion of the ILD
layer, which exposes a portion of the first conductive layer;
conformally depositing an electrolyte layer (41) over the ILD layer, over sidewalls of
the first trench, and within the first trench over the first conductive layer, wherein a second
trench (44) is formed and is bounded by the electrolyte layer;
depositing a second conductive material (53) in the second trench and on the
electrolyte layer, wherein the second conductive material overfills the second trench; and
polishing off top portions of the electrolyte layer and the second conductive material
resulting in a planarized top surface (57) of the electrolyte layer and the second conductive
material, whereby a U-battery is formed from the first conductive layer as the first electrode,
the electrolyte layer as an electrolyte, and the second conductive material as the second
electrode.
11. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein forming an ILD layer over the exposed first
conductive layer and over the exposed insulating layer comprises: forming an etch stop layer
on the exposed first conductive layer and on the exposed insulating layer, and forming the
ILD layer on the etch stop layer; and
wherein forming a first trench within the first ILD layer comprises removing a
portion of the etch stop layer to expose the portion of the first conductive layer.
12. The method as claimed in claim 10, comprising after forming a first trench: conformally
depositing a conductive diffusion barrier film on the ILD layer, on sidewalls of the first
trench, and on the exposed portion of the first conductive layer, and wherein the step of
conformally depositing an electrolyte layer comprises depositing the electrolyte layer on the
diffusion barrier.
13. The method as claimed in claim 10, comprising after forming a first trench: conformally
depositing a diffusion barrier film on the ILD layer, on sidewalls of the first trench, and on
the exposed portion of the first conductive layer; and removing the diffusion barrier film that
exists on the exposed portion of the first conductive layer, wherein the step of conformally

depositing an electrolyte layer comprises depositing the electrolyte layer on the diffusion
barrier film and within the first trench over the first conductive layer.
14. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein forming the first conductive metallization and
the second conductive metallization comprises:
forming a composite ILD layer on the planarized top surface; and
forming a composite trench within the composite ILD layer, which exposes a portion
of the second conductive material; and
overfilling the composite trench with a third conductive material, wherein the third
conductive material conductively contacts the second conductive material; and
polishing off a top portion of the third conductive material, which forms a planarized
top surface of the third conductive material and which forms a conductive contact made of
the third conductive material, wherein the first conductive metallization or the second
conductive metallization comprises the conductive contact.
15. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein forming the at least one battery comprises
forming a first battery, wherein forming a first battery, forming a first conductive
metallization, and forming a second conductive metallization comprises:
forming an exposed insulating layer in a first wiring level and an exposed conductive
plate in the insulating layer;
forming an inter-level dielectric (ILD) layer over the exposed conductive plate and
over the exposed insulating layer;
forming a first trench within the ILD layer by removing a portion of the ILD layer,
which exposes a portion of the first conductive plate;
conformally depositing a first conductive layer on the ILD layer, on sidewalls of the
first trench, and on the exposed portion of the first conductive plate, wherein a second trench
is formed and is bounded by the first conductive layer;
conformally depositing an electrolyte layer on the first conductive layer, wherein a
third trench is formed and is bounded by the electrolyte layer;
depositing a second conductive material in the third trench and on the electrolyte
layer, wherein the second conductive material overfills the third trench; and

polishing off top portions of the second conductive material, of the electrolyte layer,
and of the first conductive layer, to form a planarized top surface comprising a conductive
contact with the second conductive material, wherein the first conductive metallization
comprises the conductive plate, and wherein the second conductive metallization comprises
the conductive contact, and wherein a U-battery With Double Extension is formed from the
first conductive layer as the first electrode, the electrolyte layer as an electrolyte, and the
second conductive material as the second electrode.
16. The method as claimed in claim 15, the method comprising
wherein forming an exposed insulating layer in the first wiring level and an exposed
conductive plate in the dielectric layer comprises: forming an etch stop layer on the exposed
first conductive plate and on the exposed insulating layer, and forming the ILD layer on the
etch stop layer; and
wherein forming a first trench within the ILD layer comprises removing a portion of
the etch stop layer to expose the portion of the first conductive plate.
17. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein forming the at least one battery comprises
forming a first battery, wherein forming a first battery, forming a first conductive
metallization, and forming a second conductive metallization comprises:
forming an exposed insulating layer in a first wiring level and an exposed first
conductive plate in the dielectric;
forming a first conductive layer on the insulating layer such that the first conductive
layer is in conductive contact with the first conductive plate;
forming an electrolyte layer on the first conductive layer, wherein the electrolyte layer
comprises electrolyte materials; and
forming a second conductive layer on the electrolyte layer, wherein the second
conductive layer comprises a second conductive material, wherein the first conductive
metallization comprises the first conductive plate, such that an S-battery is formed from the
first conductive layer as the first electrode, the electrolyte layer as an electrolyte, and the
second conductive layer as the second electrode.

18. The method as claimed in claim 17, comprising:
forming an inter-level dielectric (ILD) layer on the second conductive layer;
forming a trench within the ILD layer by removing a portion of the ILD layer, which
exposes a portion of the second conductive layer;
overfilling the trench with a third conductive material; and
polishing off top portions of the third conductive material, which results in a
planarized top surface of the ILD layer and of the third conductive material, wherein a
second conductive plate is formed from the third conductive material on the planarized top
surface, wherein the second conductive plate is in conductive contact with the second
conductive layer, and wherein the second conductive metallization comprises the second
conductive plate.
19. The method of any of the preceding claims 9 to 18, comprising
forming a plurality of batteries, comprising the at least one battery, in series; and
conductively coupling the plurality of batteries by means of respective conductive
interconnects and/or conductively coupling the plurality of batteries directly to each other.
20. The method as claimed in claim 9, comprising forming a plurality of batteries,
comprising the at least one battery, in parallel.
21. The method of any of the preceding claims 9 to 20, wherein forming a first conductive
metallization comprises forming a first conductive contact that conductively contacts the first
electrode, and wherein forming a second conductive metallization comprises forming a
second conductive contact that conductively contacts the second electrode, wherein the first
and second condutive contacts are within the wiring levels forming the battery.
22. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein forming a first conductive metallization
comprises forming a first conductive contact that conductively contacts the first electrode,
and wherein forming a second conductive metallization comprises forming a second
conductive contact that conductively contacts the second electrode, wherein the first and
second conductive contacts are outside of the wiring levels forming the battery.

23. The method of any of the preceding claims 9 to 22, wherein forming the at least one
battery comprises forming an anode of the battery from an anode material selected from the
group consisting of lithium, lithiated vanadium oxide (Li8V205), Agl, Ag, and Zn, and
forming a cathode of the battery from a cathode material selected from the group consisting
of V2O5, LiMn204, LiCo02, Sn, Pb, and Ag, and wherein the electrolyte of the battery
comprises lithium phosphorous oxynitride.
24. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein the step of forming a layer of electronic
devices comprises forming the layer of electronic devices during a Front-End-Of-Line
(FEOL) processing of the integrated circuit, wherein the step of forming the plurality of
wiring levels comprises forming the wiring levels during a Back-End-Of-Line (BEOL)
integration of the integrated circuit, wherein the step of forming a first conductive
metallization and a second conductive metallization comprises forming the first conductive
metallization and the second conductive metallization during the BEOL integration of the
integrated circuit, and wherein the step of forming at least one battery comprises forming the
at least one battery during the BEOL integration of the integrated circuit.


Documents:

1058-chenp-2003 abstract duplicate.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 abstract.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 claims duplicate.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 claims.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 correspondence-others.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 correspondence-po.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 description (compelet) duplicate.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 description (compelet).pdf

1058-chenp-2003 drawings duplicate.tif

1058-chenp-2003 drawings.tif

1058-chenp-2003 form-1.tif

1058-chenp-2003 form-18.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 form-26.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 form-3.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 form-5.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 pct.pdf

1058-chenp-2003 petition.pdf


Patent Number 229613
Indian Patent Application Number 1058/CHENP/2003
PG Journal Number 13/2009
Publication Date 27-Mar-2009
Grant Date 18-Feb-2009
Date of Filing 09-Jul-2003
Name of Patentee INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
Applicant Address ARMONK, NEW YORK 10504,
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 BALLANTINE, ARNE 25 COVEL AVENUE, ROUND LAKE, NY 12151,
2 GROVES, ROBERT 11 OAK CREST DRIVE, HIGHLAND, NY 12528,
3 LUND, JENNIFER 11 MAHOPAC AVENUE, AMAWALK, NY 10510,
4 NAKOS, JAMES 3 BUTTERNUT COURT, ESSEX, VT 05452,
5 RICE, MICHAEL 166 MARBLE ISLAND ROAD, COLCHESTER, VT 05446,
6 STAMPER, ANTHONY 46 EVERGREEN DRIVE, WILLISTON, VT 05495,
PCT International Classification Number H01L23/58
PCT International Application Number PCT/GB02/00119
PCT International Filing date 2002-01-11
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 09/761,123 2001-01-16 U.S.A.