The characteristics of TDDB (time-dependent dielectric breakdown) and SILC (stress-induced leakage current) for an ultra-thin SiO2/HfO2 gate dielectric stack are studied. The EOT (equivalent-oxide-thickness) of ...The characteristics of TDDB (time-dependent dielectric breakdown) and SILC (stress-induced leakage current) for an ultra-thin SiO2/HfO2 gate dielectric stack are studied. The EOT (equivalent-oxide-thickness) of the gate stack (Si/SiO2/HfOz/TiN/TiA1/TiN/W) is 0.91 am. The field acceleration factor extracted in TDDB experi- ments is 1.59 s.cm/MV, and the maximum voltage is 1.06 V when the devices operate at 125 ℃ for ten years. A detailed study on the defect generation mechanism induced by SILC is presented to deeply understand the break- down behavior. The trap energy levels can be calculated by the SILC peaks: one S1LC peak is most likely to be caused by the neutral oxygen vacancy in the HfO2 bulk layer at 0.51 eV below the Si conduction band minimum; another SILC peak is induced by the interface traps, which are aligned with the silicon conduction band edge. Fur- thermore, the great difference between the two SILC peaks demonstrates that the degeneration of the high-k layer dominates the breakdown behavior of the extremely thin gate dielectric.展开更多
Positive bias temperature instability(PBTI) characteristics and degradation mechanisms of NMOSFET with high-k/metal gate last process have been systematically investigated. The time evolution of threshold voltage sh...Positive bias temperature instability(PBTI) characteristics and degradation mechanisms of NMOSFET with high-k/metal gate last process have been systematically investigated. The time evolution of threshold voltage shift during PBTI stress still follows a power law. However, the exponent n decreases from 0.26 to 0.16 linearly as the gate stress voltage increases from 0.6 to 1.2 V. There is no interface state generation during stress because of the negligible sub-threshold swing change. Moreover, the activation energy is 0.1 e V, which implies that electrons directly tunnel into high-k bulk and are trapped by pre-existing traps resulting into PBTI degradation. During recovery the threshold voltage shift is linear in lgt, and a mathematical model is proposed to express threshold voltage shift.展开更多
基金Project supported by the Important National Science & Technology Specific Projects(No.2009ZX02035)the National Natural Science of China(No.61306129)the National Found for Fostering Talents of Basic Science(No.J0730318)
文摘The characteristics of TDDB (time-dependent dielectric breakdown) and SILC (stress-induced leakage current) for an ultra-thin SiO2/HfO2 gate dielectric stack are studied. The EOT (equivalent-oxide-thickness) of the gate stack (Si/SiO2/HfOz/TiN/TiA1/TiN/W) is 0.91 am. The field acceleration factor extracted in TDDB experi- ments is 1.59 s.cm/MV, and the maximum voltage is 1.06 V when the devices operate at 125 ℃ for ten years. A detailed study on the defect generation mechanism induced by SILC is presented to deeply understand the break- down behavior. The trap energy levels can be calculated by the SILC peaks: one S1LC peak is most likely to be caused by the neutral oxygen vacancy in the HfO2 bulk layer at 0.51 eV below the Si conduction band minimum; another SILC peak is induced by the interface traps, which are aligned with the silicon conduction band edge. Fur- thermore, the great difference between the two SILC peaks demonstrates that the degeneration of the high-k layer dominates the breakdown behavior of the extremely thin gate dielectric.
基金Project supported by the Important National Science&Technology Specific Projects(No.2009ZX02035)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Nos.61176091,61306129)
文摘Positive bias temperature instability(PBTI) characteristics and degradation mechanisms of NMOSFET with high-k/metal gate last process have been systematically investigated. The time evolution of threshold voltage shift during PBTI stress still follows a power law. However, the exponent n decreases from 0.26 to 0.16 linearly as the gate stress voltage increases from 0.6 to 1.2 V. There is no interface state generation during stress because of the negligible sub-threshold swing change. Moreover, the activation energy is 0.1 e V, which implies that electrons directly tunnel into high-k bulk and are trapped by pre-existing traps resulting into PBTI degradation. During recovery the threshold voltage shift is linear in lgt, and a mathematical model is proposed to express threshold voltage shift.