DocumentCode :
1140607
Title :
A comprehensive study of indium implantation-induced damage in deep submicrometer nMOSFET: device characterization and damage assessment
Author :
Liao, H. ; Ang, D.S. ; Ling, C.H.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Nat. Univ. of Singapore, Singapore
Volume :
49
Issue :
12
fYear :
2002
fDate :
12/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2254
Lastpage :
2262
Abstract :
The impact of indium channel implantation on the current-voltage characteristics, gate oxide breakdown and hot-carrier reliability of deep submicrometer nMOSFETs is studied in detail. A significantly faster oxide wear-out during ramped-voltage testing and a distinctly enhanced drain current degradation during hot-carrier stressing are observed in devices with implant dose ranging from 1-2 × 1013 cm-2. An important generation leakage is also measured in the long-channel MOSFET, although such irregularity is normally not detected in short-channel devices owing to predominant subthreshold current. The loss in device reliability may be attributed to the generation of local amorphous regions in the channel when the implant dose exceeds 1013 cm-2. The limited thermal budget of the subsequent gate oxidation step is generally unable to anneal out these defects, which in turn lead to the formation of local weak spots and strained Si-H bonds in the gate oxide, and dislocation loops in the channel region. This finding raises an important concern on the use of indium implantation in retrograde channel engineering, since implant doses on the order of 1013 cm-2 are often needed for effective suppression of short-channel effects. In order to minimize the loss in device reliability, the damaged lattice would need to be restored using a dedicated thermal annealing cycle prior to gate oxidation. A good correlation between the hot-carrier stress data and the DC current-voltage (DCIV) measurement data is also presented. This makes the DCIV technique a precise, nondestructive monitor for implantation-induced damage in deep submicrometer MOSFET, via a direct measurement of the process-residue interface traps.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; MOSFET; annealing; dislocation loops; doping profiles; hot carriers; indium; interface states; ion implantation; semiconductor device breakdown; semiconductor device measurement; semiconductor device reliability; CMOS technologies; DC I-V characteristics; DC current-voltage measurement technique; In channel implantation; In implantation-induced damage; Si:In-SiO2; channel doping profiles; current-voltage characteristics; dedicated thermal annealing cycle; deep submicrometer nMOSFETs; deep submicron NMOSFETs; device reliability; direct measurement; dislocation loops; enhanced drain current degradation; gate oxidation; gate oxide breakdown; gate oxide integrity; hot-carrier reliability; hot-carrier stressing; implantation-induced damage; interface traps; n-MOSFET; n-channel MOSFET; nondestructive monitor; oxide wear-out; process-residue interface traps; ramped-voltage testing; retrograde channel engineering; short-channel devices; short-channel effects suppression; strained Si-H bonds; super-steep retrograde channel; Annealing; Current measurement; Current-voltage characteristics; Electric breakdown; Hot carriers; Implants; Indium; MOSFET circuits; Oxidation; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9383
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TED.2002.805610
Filename :
1177992
Link To Document :
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