Browsing by Subject "High-k"
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Item Device characterization and reliability of Dysprosium (Dy) incorporated HfO₂ CMOS devices and its application to high-k NAND flash memory(2010-12) Lee, Tackhwi; Banerjee, Sanjay; Lee, Jack C.; Register, Leonard; Chen, Ray; Ekerdt, JohnDy-incorporated HfO₂ gate oxide with TaN gate electrode nMOS device has been developed for high performance CMOS applications in 22nm node technology. DyO /HfO bi-layer structure shows thin EOT with reduced leakage current and less charge trapping compared to HfO₂. Excellent electrical performance of the DyO-capped HfO₂ oxide n-MOSFET such as lower V[subscript TH], higher drive current, and improved channel electron mobility are reported. DyO/HfO samples also show better immunity for V[subscript TH] instability and less severe charge trapping characteristics. Its charge trapping characteristics, conduction mechanisms and dielectric reliability have been investigated in this work. As an application to memory device, HfON charge trapping layered NAND flash memory is developed and characterized. First, temperature-dependent Dy diffusion and the diffusion-driven Dy dipole formation process are discussed to clarify the origin of V[subscript TH] shift, and eventually modulate the effective work function in Dy-Hf-O/SiO₂ system. The Dy-induced dipoles are closely related to the Dy-silicate formation at the high-k/SiO₂ interfaces since the V[subscript FB] shift in Dy₂O₃ is caused by the dipole and coincides with the Dy-silicate formation. Dipole formation is a thermally activated process, and more dipoles are formed at a higher temperature with a given Dy content. The Dy-silicate related bonding structure at the interface is associated with the strength of the Dy dipole moment, and becomes dominant in controlling the V[subscript FB]/V[scubscript TH] shift during high temperature annealing in the Dy- Hf-O/SiO₂ gate oxide system. Dy-induced dipole reduces the degradation of the electron mobility. Second, to understand the reduced leakage current of the DyO/HfO sample, the effective barrier height of Dy₂O₃ was calculated from FN tunneling models, and the band diagram was estimated. The higher effective barrier height of Dy₂O₃, which is around 2.32 eV calculated from the F-N plot, accounts for the reduced leakage current in Dy incorporated HfO₂ nMOS devices. The lower barrier height of HfO₂ result in increased electron tunneling currents enhanced by the buildup of hole charges trapped in the oxide, which causes a severe increase of stress-induced leakage current (SILC), leading to oxide breakdown. However, the increased barrier height in Dy incorporated HfO₂ inhibits a further increase of the electron tunneling from the TaN gate, and trapped holes lessen the hole tunneling currents, resulting in a negligible SILC. The lower trap generation rate by the reduced hole trap density and the reduced hole tunneling of the Dy-doped HfO₂ dielectric demonstrates the high dielectric breakdown strength by weakening the charge trapping and defect generation during the stress. Based on these fundamental studies of the dielectric breakdown, modeling of time-dependent dielectric breakdown (TDDB) was done. The intrinsic TDDB of the Dy-doped HfO₂ gate oxide having 1 nm EOT is characterized by the progressive breakdown (PBD) model. At high temperature, the PBD becomes severe, since thermal energy causes carrier hopping between the localized weak spots. The voltage acceleration factor derived from the power law shows a realistic prediction in comparison with those from the 1/E model. The increase of the voltage acceleration factor at lower stress voltage is due to the lower trap generation rate in Dy- incorporated HfO₂. This voltage acceleration factor can be easily extended to include temperature dependency, and the effective activation energy derived from the power law is voltage dependent. Lastly, I studied the device characteristics of thin HfON charge-trap layer nonvolatile memory in a TaN/Al₂O₃/HfON/SiO₂/p-Si (TANOS) structure. A large memory window and fast erase speed, as well as good retention time, were achieved by using the NH₃ nitridation technique to incorporate nitrogen into the thin HfO₂ layer, which causes a high electron-trap density in the HfON layer. The higher dielectric constant of the HfON charge-trap layer induces a higher electric field in the tunneling oxide at the same voltage compared to non-nitrided films and, thus, creates a high Fowler-Nordheim (FN) tunneling current to increase the erase and programming speed. The trap-level energy in the HfON layer was calculated by using an amphoteric model.Item III-V MOSFETs from planar to 3D(2013-08) Xue, Fei, active 2013; Lee, Jack Chung-YeungSi complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology has been prospered through continuously scaling of its feature size. As scaling is approaching its physical limitations, new materials and device structures are expected. High electron mobility III-V materials are attractive as alternative channel materials for future post-Si CMOS applications due to their outstanding transport property. High-k dielectrics/metal gate stack was applied to reduced gate leakage current and thus lower the power dissipation. Combining their benefits, great efforts have been devoted to explore III-V/high-k/metal metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect-transistors (MOSFETs). The main challenges for III-V MOSFETs include interface issues of high-k/III-V, source and drain contact, silicon integration and reliability. A comprehensive study on III-V MOSFETs has been presented here focusing on three areas: 1) III-V/high-k/metal gate stack: material and electrical properties of various high-k dielectrics on III-V substrates have been systematically examined; 2) device architecture: device structures from planar surface channel MOSFETs and buried channel quantum well FETs (QWFETs) to 3D gate-wrapped-around FETs (GWAFETs) and tunneling FETs (TFETs) have been designed and analyzed; 3) fabrication process: process flow has been set up and optimized to build scaled planar and 3D devices with feature size down to 40nm. Potential of high performances have been demonstrated using novel III-V/high-k devices. Effective channel mobility was significantly improved by applying buried channel QWFET structure. Short channel effect control for sub-100nm devices was enhanced by shrinking gate dielectrics, reducing channel thickness and moving from 2D planar to 3D GWAFET structure. InGaAs TFETs have also been developed for ultra-low power application. This research work demonstrates that III-V/high-k/metal MOSFETs with superior device performances are promising candidates for future ultimately scaled logic devices.Item Nanocrystals Embedded Zirconium-doped Hafnium Oxide High-k Gate Dielectric Films(2012-10-19) Lin, Chen-HanNanocrystals embedded zirconium-doped hafnium oxide (ZrHfO) high-k gate dielectric films have been studied for the applications of the future metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) and nonvolatile memory. ZrHfO has excellent gate dielectric properties and can be prepared into MOS structure with a low equivalent oxide thickness (EOT). Ruthenium (Ru) modification effects on the ZrHfO high-k MOS capacitor have been investigated. The bulk and interfacial properties changed with the inclusion of Ru nanoparticles. The permittivity of the ZrHfO film was increased while the energy depth of traps involved in the current transport was lowered. However, the barrier height of titanium nitride (TiN)/ZrHfO was not affected by the Ru nanoparticles. These results can be important to the novel metal gate/high-k/Si MOS structure. The Ru-modified ZrHfO gate dielectric film showed a large breakdown voltage and a long lifetime. The conventional polycrystalline Si (poly-Si) charge trapping layer can be replaced by the novel floating gate structure composed of discrete nanodots embedded in the high-k film. By replacing the SiO2 layer with the ZrHfO film, promising memory functions, e.g., low programming voltage and long charge retention time, can be expected. In this study, the ZrHfO high-k MOS capacitors that separately contain nanocrystalline ruthenium oxide (nc-RuO), indium tin oxide (nc-ITO), and zinc oxide (nc-ZnO) have been successfully fabricated by the sputtering deposition method followed with the rapid thermal annealing process. Material and electrical properties of these kinds of memory devices have been investigated using analysis tools such as XPS, XRD, and HRTEM; electrical characterizations such as C-V, J-V, CVS, and frequency-dependent measurements. All capacitors showed an obvious memory window contributed by the charge trapping effect. The formation of the interface at the nc-RuO/ZrHfO and nc-ITO/ZrHfO contact regions was confirmed by the XPS spectra. Charges were deeply trapped to the bulk nanocrystal sites. However, a portion of holes were loosely trapped at the nanocrystal/ZrHfO interface. Charges trapped to the different sites lead to different detrapping characteristics. For further improving the memory functions, the dual-layer nc-ITO and -ZnO embedded ZrHfO gate dielectric stacks have been fabricated. The dual-layer embedded structure contains two vertically-separated nanocrystal layers with a higher density than the single-layer embedded structure. The critical memory functions, e.g., memory window, programming efficiency, and charge retention can be improved by using the dual-layer nanocrystals embedded floating gate structure. This kind of gate dielectric stack is vital for the next-generation nonvolatile memory applications.Item Nonlinear optical characterization of advanced electronic materials(2012-08) Lei, Ming, active 2012; Downer, Michael CoffinContinuous downscaling of transistor size has been the major trend of the semiconductor industry for the past half century. In recent years, however, fundamental physical limits to continued downscaling were encountered. In order to overcome these limits, the industry experimented --- and continues to experiment --- with many new materials and architectures. Non-invasive, in-line methods of characterizing critical properties of these structures are in demand. This dissertation develops optical second-harmonic generation (SHG) to characterize performance-limiting defects, band alignment or strain distribution in four advanced electronic material systems of current interest: (1) Hot carrier injection (HCI) is a key determinant of the reliability of ultrathin silicon-on-insulator (SOI) devices. We show that time-dependent electrostatic-field-induced SHG probes HCI from SOI films into both native and buried oxides without device fabrication. (2) Band offsets between advanced high-k gate dielectrics and their substrates govern performance-limiting leakage currents, and elucidate interfacial bond structure. We evaluate band offsets of as-deposited and annealed Al₂O₃, HfO₂ and BeO films with Si using internal photoemission techniques. (3) Epi-GaAs films grown on Si combine the high carrier mobility and superior optical properties of III-V semiconductors with the established Si platform, but are susceptible to formation of anti-phase boundary (APB) defects. We show that SHG in reflection from APB-laden epi-films is dramatically weaker than from control layers without APBs. Moreover, scanning SHG images of APB-rich layers reveal microstructure lacking in APB-free layers. These findings are attributed to the reversal in sign of the second-order nonlinear optical susceptibility [chi]⁽²⁾ between neighboring anti-phase domains, and demonstrate that SHG characterizes APBs sensitively, selectively and non-invasively. (4) 3D integration --- i.e. connecting vertically stacked chips with metal through-Si-vias (TSVs) --- is an important new approach for improving performance at the inter-chip level, but thermal stress of the TSVs on surrounding Si can compromise reliability. We present scanning SHG images for different polarization combinations and azimuthal orientations that reveal the sensitivity of SHG to strain fields surrounding TSVs. Taken together, these results demonstrate that SHG can identify performance-limiting defects and important material properties quickly and non-invasively for advanced MOSFET device applications.Item A study of electrical and material characteristics of III-V MOSFETs and TFETs with high-[kappa] gate dielectrics(2010-12) Zhao, Han, 1982-; Lee, Jack Chung-Yeung; Banerjee, Sanjay K.; Register, Leonard F.; Tutuc, Emanuel; Goel, NitiThe performance and power scaling of metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect-transistors (MOSFETs) has been historically achieved through shrinking the gate length of transistors for over three decades. As Si complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) scaling is approaching the physical and optical limits, the emerging technology involves new materials for the gate dielectrics and the channels as well as innovative structures. III-V materials have much higher electron mobility compared to Si, which can potentially provide better device performance. Hence, there have been tremendous research activities to explore the prospects of III-V materials for CMOS applications. Nevertheless, the key challenges for III-V MOSFETs with high-[kappa] oxides such as the lack of high quality, thermodynamically stable insulators that passivate the gate oxide/III-V interface still hinder the development of III-V MOS devices. The main focus of this dissertation is to develop the proper processes and structures for III-V MOS devices that result in good interface quality and high device performance. Firstly, fabrication processes and device structures of surface channel MOSFETs were investigated. The interface quality of In[subscript 0.53]Ga[subscript 0.47]As MOS devices was improved by developing the gate-last process with more than five times lower interface trap density (D[subscript it]) compared to the ones with the gate-first process. Furthermore, the optimum substrate structure was identified for inversion-type In[subscript 0.53]Ga[subscript 0.47]As MOSFETs by investigating the effects of channel doping concentration and thickness on device performance. With the proper process and channel structures, the first inversion-type enhancement-mode In[subscript 0.53]Ga[subscript 0.47]As MOSFETs with equivalent oxide thickness (EOT) of ~10 Å using atomic layer deposited (ALD) HfO₂ gate dielectric were demonstrated. The second part of the study focuses on buried channel InGaAs MOSFETs. Buried channel InGaAs MOSFETs were fabricated to improve the channel mobility using various barriers schemes such as single InP barrier with different thicknesses and InP/InAlAs double-barrier. The impacts of different high-[kappa] dielectrics were also evaluated. It has been found that the key factors enabling mobility improvement at both peak and high-field mobility in In[subscript 0.7]Ga[subscript 0.3]As quantum-well MOSFETs with InP/InAlAs barrier-layers are 1) the epitaxial InP/InAlAs double-barrier confining carriers in the quantum-well channel and 2) good InP/Al₂O₃/HfO₂ interface with small EOT. Record high channel mobility was achieved and subthreshold swing (SS) was greatly improved. Finally, InGaAs tunneling field-effect-transistors (TFETs), which are considered as the next-generation green transistors with ultra-low power consumption, were demonstrated with more than two times higher on-current while maintaining much smaller SS compared to the reported results. The improvements are believed to be due to using the In[subscript 0.7]Ga[subscript 0.3]As tunneling junction with a smaller bandgap and ALD HfO₂ gate dielectric with a smaller EOT.