
The Piezojunction Effect in Silicon Integrated Circuits and Sensors
von Fabiano Fruett und Gerard C.M. MeijerMechanical stress affects the magnitude of base-emitter  voltages of forward biased bipolar transistors. This phenomenon is  called the piezojunction effect. The piezojunction effect is the main  cause of inaccuracy and drift in integrated temperature sensors and  bandgap voltage references. The aim of The Piezojunction Effect in  Silicon Integrated Circuits and Sensors is twofold. Firstly,  to describe techniques that can reduce the mechanical-stress-induced  inaccuracy and long-term instability. Secondly, to show, that the  piezojunction effect can be applied for new types of mechanical-sensor  structures. During IC fabrication and packaging thermo-mechanical  stress is induced, when the packaged chips cool down to the  temperature of application.
  The piezojunction effect is caused by a stress-induced change in the  conductivity of the minority-charge carriers, while the piezoresistive  effect is caused by a similar effect for the majority-charge carriers.  To characterise the anisotropic piezojunction effect, the authors  performed systematic investigations over wide ranges of mechanical  stress and temperature. The experiments have been performed for  various crystal and stress orientations. The experimental results have  been used to extract the first- and second-order piezojunction (FOPJ  and SOPJ) coefficients for bipolar transistors.
  It is shown how the knowledge of the piezojunction and piezoresistive  coefficients can used to minimize the undesirable mechanical-stress  effects on the electrical characteristics of transistors and  resistors, respectively. Devices with lower mechanical-stress  sensitivity can be found by comparing their piezo-coefficients. The  layout of the device can also be optimized to reduce the  mechanical-stress sensitivity.
  As a next step it is shown, how the knowledge of the piezo-effects on  device level can be used to predict and to reduce their negative  influence on circuit level. This is demonstrated for a number of  important basic circuits, including translinear circuits, temperature  transducers and bandgap references.
  Finally, it is shown how the piezojunction effect can be used to  fabricate stress-sensing elements. It appears that, in comparison with  resistive stress-sensing elements, the piezojunction sensors have the  advantage of a smaller size and very low power dissipation.



