Title :
Fully depleted SOI devices with TiN gate and elevated source-drain structures
Author :
Bagchi, S. ; Grant, J.M. ; Chen, J. ; Samavedam, S. ; Huang, F. ; Tobin, P. ; Conner, J. ; Prabhu, L. ; Tiner, M.
Author_Institution :
Adv. Products Res. & Dev. Lab., Motorola Inc., Austin, TX, USA
Abstract :
As microelectronics technology enters the deep-submicron arena, fully depleted SOI (FDSOI) technology assumes a prominent position as a potential solution to the problems associated with continued device scaling. Some of the possible benefits of using FDSOI are improved control of the transistor threshold voltage, lower junction capacitance, higher device packing density, and latchup immunity (Maiti et al, 1998). Fully depleted SOI devices with a metal gate (MGFDSOI) offer the additional benefits of eliminating polysilicon depletion, allowing thinner electrical gate dielectric thickness for the same physical thickness along with reduced gate sheet resistance (Colinge, 1997). For FDSOI structures with ultrathin (<200 Å) superficial silicon thickness, epitaxially deposited Si is used to increase the available depth for silicidation in the source-drain areas. This technique, referred to as elevated source/drain (ESD), ensures lower contact resistance with the device. This paper reports the results of physical and electrical characterization of MGFDSOI device structures
Keywords :
MOSFET; capacitance; contact resistance; dielectric thin films; semiconductor device measurement; semiconductor device metallisation; silicon-on-insulator; titanium compounds; 200 angstrom; FDSOI structures; FDSOI technology; MGFDSOI device structures; MGFDSOI devices; MOSFET; TiN gate; TiN-Si-SiO2; contact resistance; device packing density; device scaling; electrical characterization; electrical gate dielectric thickness; elevated source-drain structures; elevated source/drain; epitaxially deposited Si; fully depleted SOI devices; fully depleted SOI technology; gate sheet resistance; junction capacitance; latchup immunity; metal gate FDSOI devices; microelectronics technology; physical characterization; physical thickness; polysilicon depletion; silicidation depth; source-drain areas; transistor threshold voltage; ultrathin superficial silicon thickness; Capacitance; Dielectric devices; Electric resistance; Electrostatic discharge; Microelectronics; Silicidation; Silicon; Threshold voltage; Tin; Voltage control;
Conference_Titel :
SOI Conference, 2000 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Wakefield, MA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6389-2
DOI :
10.1109/SOI.2000.892767