Title :
CMOS Device Performance Improvement Using Flood Buried-Contact Plasma Doping Processes
Author :
Shu Qin ; Hu, Yongjun Jeff ; McTeer, Allen
Author_Institution :
Micron Technol. Inc., Boise, ID, USA
Abstract :
An additional ultrashallow boron-based plasma doping (PLAD) was carried out into the source/drain contacts for both pMOS and nMOS devices without masks. The PLAD using either B2H6 or BF3 gas in a mild energy to ultralow energy (ULE) regime, which are roughly equivalent to 1.5-0.2-keV energy and 1-3 × 1016/cm2 dose regime beam-line B implants, were utilized for this process. The pMOS devices exhibit significant performance improvements, including ~80% lower contact resistances, similar threshold and subthreshold voltage characteristics, and ~15%-30% higher drive currents, without degrading OFF current. Using ULE BF3 PLAD, the nMOS devices also show performance improvements, including ~50% lower contact resistances, similar threshold and subthreshold voltage characteristics, and ~4% higher drive currents without degrading OFF current. The mechanism of the nMOS device performance improvement can be attributed to the Schottky barrier height lowering effect and deactivation improvement. It significantly reduces cost because this one low-cost PLAD module eliminates two photo steps, one implant step, and two photo removing/cleaning steps.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; MIS devices; Schottky barriers; boron compounds; contact resistance; electrical contacts; semiconductor doping; B2H6; BF3; CMOS device; PLAD; Schottky barrier height; beam-line B implants; contact resistance; deactivation improvement; drive currents; flood buried-contact plasma doping process; lowering effect; nMOS devices; pMOS devices; source-drain contacts; ultralow energy regime; ultrashallow boron-based plasma doping; Implants; MOS devices; Performance evaluation; Plasmas; Process control; Standards; Threshold voltage; Deactivation improvement; Schottky barrier height (SBH) lowering effect.; flood buried-contact (FBC) implants; plasma doping (PLAD); schottky barrier height (SBH) lowering effect;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TED.2015.2416917