Inside this smartphone are 62 microchips
containing a total of 90 billion transistors. These microchips are incredibly powerful and
the cornerstone of all technology, but how are billions of nanoscopic transistors manufactured
into a microchip the size of a tiny ant? Well, all these microchips were manufactured in
a semiconductor fabrication plant like this one. Inside it is a clean room which spans the area of
8 football fields and is filled with hundreds of machines ranging in size from that of a van to
that of a city bus and costing anywhere between a few million and 170 million dollars. Within
this microchip factory, silicon wafers travel from machine to machine and undergo around a
thousand processes over a 3-month period. And, by the end of production, each silicon wafer
will be covered in hundreds of CPU chips each containing 26 billion transistors.
When we zoom in we can see the nanoscopic transistors at the bottom and over
a dozen layers of wires above. This integrated circuit is then cut out from
the wafer, tested, and packaged so that it can be installed into your desktop computer.
In this video we’re going to explore the entire microchip manufacturing process and show
you how billions of nanoscopic transistors and an impossibly complex 3D maze of wires
are manufactured in one of the world’s most technologically advanced microchip factories.
It’s an incredibly complicated process, so stick around and let’s jump right in! A portion
of this video is sponsored by Brilliant.org. There are two sides to understanding how microchip
manufacturing works. The first is the sequence of steps and processes needed to build the nanoscopic
transistors and the labyrinth of wires. Whereas the second is how the semiconductor fab and
multimillion dollar equipment on the cleanroom floor work, and we’ll be flipping between
these two sides to get a complete picture. Let’s start by opening up this desktop computer,
focusing on the CPU and taking a look at what’s inside. Here we have an integrated circuit, or
die, which we’ll refer to as a chip. This chip has 24 cores, a memory controller, a graphics
processor, and many other sections. Within one of the cores, we can see its block diagram
and the various elements. Zooming in on this multiply block, we find a layout of 44
thousand transistors that physically execute 32-bit multiplication and constitute just
point zero zero zero one seven percent of the overall 26 billion transistors in the CPU.
Zooming in even further, we see layers of metal wires, or interconnects, and at the very
bottom are the transistors that form the basic logic gates. Note that these layers of metal
interconnects aren’t floating, but rather, the empty space that you see is filled with
insulating materials, thus providing structure, and preventing the metal wire layers from
touching. Furthermore, here we’re only showing the transistors at the bottom and five layers of
metal interconnects with vias traveling vertically between the layers. In actuality there are a
total of 17 metal layers of wires in the CPU, and each successive set of levels uses larger
and larger interconnects. At the bottom are local interconnects that move data around this
32 bit multiply circuit. In the middle are intermediate interconnects that move data around
the core, and at the top are global interconnects that move data around the entire CPU.
You might be wondering how small are these transistors? Zooming in again and past
the interconnect layers we find FinFets, which are transistors whose channel dimensions
are 36 by 6 by 52 nanometers with a transistor to transistor pitch of 57 nanometers. Clearly
the transistors are incredibly small. Here’s a mitochondria, a dust particle, and
a human hair for size comparisons. Now that you have a sense of what the transistors
and labyrinth of metal interconnects look like, let’s explore how they’re manufactured.
We’ll begin with an analogy. Imagine baking a cake that’s 80 layers tall, with each layer cut
to a unique shape. To make this cake there are 940 steps in the recipe, which takes 3 months
to complete and includes hundreds of exotic ingredients. And, if any measurement, baking
time, or temperature is more than one percent off, then the cake is entirely ruined. That’s
kind of what it’s like to make a microchip, but microchips are even more complicated.
Let’s look at a single layer of this integrated circuit and run through a simplified
set of steps used to build it. To start, a layer of insulating silicon dioxide is deposited
on top of the wafer and then a layer of light sensitive photoresist is spread across the top.
Next, using UV Light and a stencil, a pattern is applied to the photoresist. Solvents then are
used to remove the areas hit by the UV light, thus creating a patterned mask layer. Using the
mask, the revealed silicon dioxide is etched away down to the previous layer. Next the mask layer is
removed, and a layer of copper is added to cover the wafer and fill in the areas that were just
etched away. Finally, the surface is ground down and leveled off to reveal the copper and insulator
patterns. And thus, a single layer is completed. In order to build the next layer, which is
a vertical set of metal vias, we repeat the same set of steps, but use a different pattern
for the photomask. Since these layers are all built using the same set of steps it’s more
effective to visualize the steps as a circle like a clock. To build all the 80 layers of the
die, this sequence is repeated over and over, resulting in 940 steps. One important note is
that the FinFet transistors at the bottom are even more complicated than the metal wires, and
thus additional steps are needed to fabricate them. Furthermore, cleaning the wafer to wash away
dust particles that may have landed on the wafer, as well as inspecting the wafer to make
sure everything is being built properly, happens frequently and these steps need to
be added to the circle. A different tool is used to complete each of these process steps. .
Now that we have an understanding of the steps, let’s take a look at this semiconductor
fabrication plant. This CPU is manufactured on a 300-millimeter silicon wafer which can
fit 230 CPU chips. In contrast DRAM chips are considerably smaller and thus 952 of them can fit
on a wafer. These silicon wafers are carried in stacks of 25 using a container called a front
opening universal pod, or foup. This sealed plastic wafer carrier is transported around the
cleanroom floor using an overhead transport system which lowers the foup onto the tool’s landing pad.
Inside the tool, robotic arms transport the wafer through vacuum load locks and to different
process chambers where materials are added, removed, or processed in ways that we’ll explore
later. The wafers are then returned to the foup, resealed inside, lifted up to the overhead
transport system, and carried to and dropped onto the next tool, where the next step in the
process is completed. To build the entire chip composed of 80 different layers it takes 3 months
of traveling from tool to tool where at each stop one of the 940 process steps is completed.
In order to increase the microchip mass production capabilities of a semiconductor fabrication
plant or fab, typically there are dozens of the same semiconductor tools organized in rows that
perform the same process. On the cleanroom floor there are a total of 435 semiconductor tools
resulting in the fab’s production capacity of 50,000 wafers or 11.5 million CPUs a month.
These tools have rather complicated names, so we’ll start by categorizing them according
to their functionality. There are 6 groups: making the mask layer, adding material,
removing material, modifying the material, cleaning the wafer, and finally inspecting
the wafer. We’ve color coded the different functional groups to the various tools and
process steps to help you not get lost. Let’s next look at each of these semiconductor
tools and see how they process the wafer in various ways. We’ll start with the ones that are
used to make the mask layer or the nanoscopic stencil on the wafer. These tools include the
photoresist spin coater, photolithography tool, developer and photoresist stripper. First the
photoresist spin coater applies a light-sensitive layer to the surface of the wafer and sends
it through a soft bake where the wafer is heated in order to evaporate the solvent from
the photoresist. Next the wafer goes to the lithography tool which shines UV light through a
stencil, which is technically called a photomask. The light passes through the stencil and is then
demagnified or shrunk down to produce a nanoscopic pattern on the wafer. Wherever the light from
the stencil touches the wafer, the photoresist is weakened. The wafer then goes to the developer
and the weakened photoresist is washed away, leaving only the patterned nanoscopic stencil on
the wafer. The wafer is then sent through a hard bake to harden the remaining photoresist.
Next the wafer travels to other tools to undergo processing, and once these processes
are completed the wafer goes to a photoresist stripper which uses solvents to dissolve and
remove the photoresist mask layer. And that’s how a mask layer is formed and then removed.
The photolithography tool is one of the most important, so let’s take a look at it. Inside
is a UV light source, a set of lenses to focus the light, a photomask which contains the
stencil, or design of the layer to be patterned, and a wafer carrier. The photomask is 6 by 6
inches, and, based on the dimensions of the CPU, can fit 2 copies of a single layer of
the CPU design. The purpose of using a photomask with these crazy optics is because
it’s a reliable way to copy and paste a design for billions of nanoscopic transistors and wires
onto 230 identical CPUs on a single wafer in a few minutes. After the light passes through the
photomask, the UV light goes to more lenses in order to shrink down the pattern by a factor of
4 and print a single layer of the design onto the photoresist. The wafer carrier steps from position
to position, printing the photomask image at each stop, until all 230 chips are patterned.
Let’s clarify one detail. In our previous examples, we talked a lot about this CPU having 80
layers. Specifically, what we were referring to is the number of photomasks and mask layers used to
create all the different layers of patterns on the wafer. Therefore, one complete CPU chip
uses 80 different photomasks, each costing 300,000 dollars. With only one mask layer being
patterned at a time, this CPU chip will undergo 80 separate visits to the lithography tool. We could
spend another hour talking about photolithography but let’s move onto the next category of tools.
Deposition tools are used to add or deposit material onto the wafer. A lot of times we
use the mask layer from the photolithography step to add materials to the areas uncovered
by the mask layer, kind of like spray painting through a stencil. Due to the wide range of
elements and compounds used to create the layers, deposition tools have a wide range of variations
with complicated names and acronyms for each variant. But essentially there are 3 key groups
of materials that are added or deposited onto the wafer: metals such as copper or tantalum,
insulators which are typically called oxides, and crystalline layers of silicon. Each group of
different materials uses different physics and chemistry principles to deposit the material
on the wafer and therefore has a different technical name for the tool that deposits the
material. Deposition tools typically have a central wafer handling chamber, with the various
chambers attached to the edges, each one dedicated to adding just a single element or compound.
The next category of machines do the opposite, which is to remove material. There are 2
key methods. The first is etching. Etchers use either corrosive chemicals or high energy
plasmas to react with and remove materials from the surface of the wafer. They are typically used
with the mask layer stencil in order to remove the material exposed by the mask, thus creating a hole
that can be later filled by a deposition tool. The second method to remove material is CMP,
which is chemical mechanical planarization. CMP applies slurry and uses abrasive pads to grind
and polish away the top surface of the wafer, making it perfectly flat. CMP levels off the top
layers of the wafer and is typically used as the last step in a cycle of processes in order to
prepare the wafer for another layer to be added. The fourth category are tools that modify the
silicon and are called ion implanters. These tools use the photomask stencil to bombard the unmasked
regions with phosphor, boron, or other elements in order to make the P and the N regions required
to form the transistors themselves. Therefore, ion implanters are only used in the front end of line.
You might think that this is adding material. However, ion implanters only add around one atom
of phosphor or boron for every 10,000 atoms of silicon. Additionally, while other machines spray
paint a layer on top of the wafer, ion implanters hurl atoms deep into the silicon lattice, kind
of like a cannon launching a baseball 6 feet into a concrete wall. This process typically damages
the silicon lattice, which is why the following step is to repair the silicon by heating the
wafer using a separate tool called an annealer. The fifth category of tools are used to clean
and remove any contaminants or particles from the wafer. These wafer washers use ultra-pure water to
clean the wafer and then dry it with nitrogen or hot isopropyl alcohol. Cleaning the wafer happens
rather frequently in order to remove any stray particles that may have fallen onto the wafer.
And finally, sixth are tools that inspect the transistors and metal layers for defects and
are called metrology tools. A common metrology tool uses a scanning electron microscope with
nanometer-level resolution to take pictures of the top surface of the wafer and determine if there
are defects such as improperly patterned layers or particles on the surface. When fabricating
an integrated circuit that takes 3 months to complete, it’s important to repeatedly monitor the
progress and make sure that each of the processes is being executed with nanometer-level precision.
Now that we’ve covered each of the categories, here are the color coded process steps
along with the layout of the tools in the semiconductor fabrication plant. Let’s run
through the complete set of steps used to manufacture a single metal interconnect layer.
First a layer of insulating silicon dioxide is deposited onto the wafer. Next photoresist is
spread across the surface and the wafer is sent through a soft bake to remove the solvent. The
wafer then travels to the photolithography tool where the design from the photomask is transferred
to each of the chips on the wafer by weakening the areas of photoresist hit by the light. The
wafer next goes to the developer to wash away the sections that were hit by the light from the
lithography tool and then through a hard bake to harden the remaining photoresist. With the mask
layer built, the wafer goes to an etching tool, where a plasma etcher removes a vertical column
through the exposed silicon dioxide until it reaches the previous layer’s metal vias. Next the
wafer is sent to a photoresist stripper where the mask layer is removed. The wafer then travels
to a physical vapor deposition tool where a sequence of metals fills in the exposed pattern
and coats the wafer in metal. Finally the wafer is sent to a chemical mechanical planarization
tool where the metal is ground down so that all that remains is a flat layer of insulating silicon
dioxide and conductive copper interconnects that match the pattern from the photomask. A single
metal layer is now completed, and the wafer is ready for the next cycle to begin where insulating
silicon dioxide and the vias will be added. Note that cleaning and wafer metrology or inspection
steps occur in between many of these other steps. Furthermore, the process steps to make the
transistors are less straightforward and utilize the ion implanter, and thus we’ll cover them in a
separate video on transistor physics and design. These steps are for building the
integrated circuit on the wafer, however, there are additional steps in manufacturing a
microchip which we’ll explore in a little bit. But before we get there, one important thing
to note is that the semiconductor industry is incredibly secretive regarding the exact tool
layout and the process steps and recipes used to make the transistors. We wanted to make the best
video on how microchips are made and it took us 180 hours of scouring the internet and textbooks
for information and reference images and, using what we found, we spent 205 hours modeling each
of these tools, the many layers of the integrated circuit, and the semiconductor fab. Furthermore,
writing the script took about 100 hours, and then animating all these visuals took more than 825
hours. As a result, this video took over 1300 hours to make, and it’s entirely free to watch.
We want to make more videos like this one where we explore computer architecture and how transistors
work, and we can’t do it without your help. The best way you can help is by taking a few seconds
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So then, what are the additional steps in manufacturing a microchip? Before
chip manufacturing at the fab, we first have to manufacture the silicon
wafers by refining quartzite into pure silicon, and then growing a monocrystalline ingot
and cutting it into wafers. For reference, these 300-millimeter wafers are around
three-quarters of a millimeter thick, they have a barcode on the side and a small
notch in them to indicate the direction of the crystal lattice. Furthermore, these wafers are
incredibly delicate, and shatter into hundreds of shards when broken. A single wafer costs
around a hundred dollars, but after being populated with CPUs it’s worth closer to a hundred
thousand dollars, making it quite literally ten times more valuable than its weight in gold.
Moving onto the steps after chip manufacturing. The completed wafer is sent to a separate building
where each of the CPUs undergoes rigorous testing to figure out if it works as intended. If a CPU
works, that’s great. But frequently a particle or photomask defect has damaged a section of
the integrated circuit, rendering that section defective. These semi-functional circuits are then
categorized, or binned, based on what still works. These Intel Thirteenth Gen processors are sold as
an i9, i7, i5, or i3, depending on how many cores are functional with different product lines of
CPUs whose on-board integrated graphics sections are defective. These wafers are transported
to another building where the chips are cut out using a laser, flipped over, and placed on an
interposer which distributes the connection points to a printed circuit board while a protective
heat conductive cover is placed on the back side. The printed circuit board holds the landing
grid array that interfaces with the motherboard as well as various electrical components. Next
an integrated heat spreader is mounted on top, and the entire assembly is tested one last time
before being packaged for sale. Finally, the CPU is now ready to be mounted onto the motherboard
and installed into your desktop computer. It’s important to understand that chip
manufacturing requires an incredible amount of science and engineering and there’s a
free and easy way to learn the basic principles inside each of these complex tools and that’s with
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link is in the description below. Microchip Fabrication is a massive topic, and
thus, we have two more equally complex videos that we’re working on. The first will be an
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