DocumentCode :
3471644
Title :
Effects of plasma-induced damage to ultrathin (≤1.5 nm) gate dielectric on equivalent oxide thickness downscaling using plasma nitridation process
Author :
Chang, Vincent S. ; Chen, C.C. ; Wu, C.-L. ; Lee, D.Y. ; Lee, T.L. ; Chen, S.C. ; Liang, M.S.
Author_Institution :
Res. & Dev., Taiwan Semicond. Manuf. Co. Ltd., Hsin-Chu, Taiwan
fYear :
2003
fDate :
24-25 April 2003
Firstpage :
130
Lastpage :
133
Abstract :
Plasma nitridation was used to increase the dielectric constant of SiO2 so that the equivalent oxide thickness (EOT) could be reduced. The effects of plasma-induced damage to ultrathin (≤15 A) plasma-nitrided oxide (PNO) on EOT scaling were systematically investigated. The study showed that increasing nitrogen concentrations of PNO using aggressive plasma nitridation failed to reduce the EOT because the plasma-induced parasitic oxidation resulted in a substantial increase in oxide thickness that overrode the dielectric constant increase and consequently increased the EOT. The carrier mobility degradations and higher HF etching rates of PNO demonstrated the damage from plasma nitridation. Although reducing base oxide thickness was able to scale down EOT, the efficiency was extremely poor; a decrease of 1.5 A in base oxide thickness only resulted in 0.3 A of EOT reduction. MOSFET device data and SIMS depth profiles indicated that a thinner base oxide was more susceptible to plasma-induced damage. Finally, this study showed that after optimization, the plasma nitridation process was able to reduce plasma-induced damage so that the EOT could be scaled down without penalties.
Keywords :
MOSFET; carrier mobility; dielectric thin films; etching; leakage currents; nitridation; permittivity; plasma materials processing; radiation effects; secondary ion mass spectra; 1.5 nm; EOT scaling; HF etching rates; MOSFET device data; SIMS depth profiles; Si-SiO2; Si-SiON; SiO2 dielectric constant; base oxide thickness; carrier mobility degradations; equivalent oxide thickness downscaling; nitrogen concentrations; oxide thickness increase; plasma nitridation process; plasma-induced damage; plasma-induced parasitic oxidation; ultrathin gate dielectric; ultrathin plasma-nitrided oxide; Dielectric constant; Hafnium; Leakage current; Nitrogen; Oxidation; Plasma applications; Plasma devices; Plasma materials processing; Plasma temperature; Silicon;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Plasma- and Process-Induced Damage, 2003 8th International Symposium
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7747-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PPID.2003.1200940
Filename :
1200940
Link To Document :
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