Thermal Boundary Conductance of Direct Bonded Aluminum Nitride to Silicon Interfaces.
Tarmo NieminenTomi KoskinenVladimir KornienkoGlenn RossMervi Paulasto-KröckelPublished in: ACS applied electronic materials (2024)
Heat accumulation and self-heating have become key issues in microelectronics owing to the ever-decreasing size of components and the move toward three-dimensional structures. A significant challenge for solving these issues is thermally isolating materials, such as silicon dioxide (SiO 2 ), which are commonly used in microelectronics. The silicon-on-insulator (SOI) structure is a great demonstrator of the limitations of SiO 2 as the low thermal conductivity insulator prevents heat dissipation through the bottom of a device built on a SOI wafer. Replacing SiO 2 with a more thermally conductive material could yield immediate results for improved heat dissipation of SOI structures. However, the introduction of alternate materials creates unknown interfaces, which can have a large impact on the overall thermal conductivity of the structure. In this work, we studied a direct bonded AlN-to-SOI wafer (AlN-SOI) by measuring the thermal conductivity of AlN and the thermal boundary conductance (TBC) of silicon (Si)/AlN and Si/SiO 2 /aluminum-oxygen-nitrogen (AlON)/AlN interfaces, the latter of which were formed during plasma-activated bonding. The results show that the AlN-SOI possesses superior thermal properties to those of a traditional SOI wafer, with the thermal conductivity of AlN measured at roughly 40 W m -1 K -1 and the TBC of both interfaces at roughly 100 MW m -2 K -1 . These results show that AlN-SOI is a very promising structure for improving heat dissipation in future microelectronics.