Title :
Thin-film transistors in polycrystalline silicon by blanket and local source/drain hydrogen plasma-seeded crystallization
Author :
Pangal, Kiran ; Sturm, James C. ; Wagner, Sigurd ; Yao, Nan
Author_Institution :
Intel Corp., Santa Clara, CA, USA
fDate :
8/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Thin film n-channel transistors have been fabricated in polycrystalline silicon films crystallized using hydrogen plasma seeding, by using several processing techniques with 600 to 625°C or 1000°C as the maximum process temperature. The TFTs from hydrogen plasma-treated films with a maximum process temperature of 600°C, have a linear field-effect mobility of ~35 cm2/Vs and an ON/OFF current ratio of ~106, and TFTs with a maximum process temperature of 1000°C, have a linear field-effect mobility of ~100 cm2/Vs and an ON/OFF current ratio of ~107. A hydrogen plasma has also then been applied selectively a in the source and drain regions to seed large crystal grains in the channel. Transistors made with this method with maximum temperature of 600°C showed a nearly twofold improvement in mobility (72 versus 37 cm2 /Vs) over the unseeded devices at short channel lengths. The dominant factor in determining the field-effect mobility in all cases was the grain size of the polycrystalline silicon, and not the gate oxide growth/deposition conditions. Significant increases in mobility are observed when the grain size is in order of the channel length. However the gate oxide plays an important role in determining the subthreshold slope and the leakage current
Keywords :
carrier mobility; crystallisation; elemental semiconductors; grain size; plasma materials processing; silicon; thin film transistors; 600 to 1000 degC; ON/OFF current ratio; Si; channel length; crystal grains; grain size; linear field-effect mobility; n-channel transistors; plasma-seeded crystallization; polysilicon thin-film transistors; process temperature; Crystallization; Grain size; Hydrogen; Plasma materials processing; Plasma sources; Plasma temperature; Semiconductor films; Semiconductor thin films; Silicon; Thin film transistors;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on