Title: X. J. Zhou, et al 1
1Effects of Switched-Bias Annealing on Charge
Trapping in HfO2 high-? Gate Dielectrics
- X. J. Zhou,a D. M. Fleetwood,a L. Tsetseris,b
- R. D. Schrimpf,a S. T. Pantelidesb
- a Department of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science, Vanderbilt University - b Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vanderbilt
University - Supported in part by Air Force Office of
Scientific Research - through the MURI program and the US Navy
2Outline
- Motivation
- Experimental results
- Switched bias annealing after X-ray radiation
- Switched bias annealing after Constant Voltage
Stress (CVS) - Model of device response based on
- Metastable electron traps near interface (?Vot)
- Primarily after radiation exposure
- Proton transport reaction (?Vit)
- After irradiation or CVS
- Additional defect growth during longer anneal
cycles
3General Motivation
- High-? dielectrics are promising candidates for
future commercial and space electronics. - At last years IEEE NSREC, we reported more
degradation (very large threshold voltage shifts)
when irradiation and bias temperature stressing
(BTS) were combined than when the two separate
effects were assessed independently and added. - Charge trapping properties of high-? dielectrics
are not well understood more insight is needed
in advance of their potential use in
manufacturing.
4Specific Motivation (from last years NSREC)
Worst case for Circuit response pMOS devices
irradiated off and annealed on
- Doses 1 Mrad(SiO2) 0, 2 MV/cm
- BTS 10 min 2 MV/cm 75ºC
Zhou, Fleetwood, Felix, Gusev, and DEmic, TNS,
52 (6),2231, 2005
5Experimental details
- Devices
- Al/SiOxNyHfO2/p-Si MOS caps
- EOT 2.1 nm
- Irradiation or constant voltage stress (CVS)
- Rad 10-keV X-rays 500 rad(SiO2)/s to 1
Mrad(SiO2) Eox 2MV/cm - CVS Eox 3.6 MV/cm t 1200s T25ºC
- Switched-Bias annealing
- 25ºC to 150ºC
- Eox 2 MV/cm alternating
- Typical anneal time 10 min
?Vot and ?Vit (flatband to midgap) estimated by
midgap method of Winokur et al., IEEE TNS 31,
1453 (1984)
6Reversibility observed in ?Vot after
irradiation,during switched-bias anneals at 50ºC
Rad 1 Mrad (SiO2) 2 MV/cm Anneals 2 MV/cm,
50?C
- ? ?Vot? increases during NBTS and decreases
during PBTS - Metastably trapped electrons near interface
contribute to reversibility of ?Vot
7Dominant Mechanism ?Vot
Electrons move out of oxide during NBTS
Electrons pulled back into oxide during PBTS
8?Vot reversibility increases with annealing
temperature
Rad 1 Mrad (SiO2) 2 MV/cm Anneals 2 MV/cm
- Pure electron tunneling should not depend
strongly on temperature - Other mechanisms must be contributing (e.g., H
motion), as we now show
9Similar reversibility also observed for ?Vit
Rad 1 Mrad (SiO2) 2 MV/cm Anneals 2 MV/cm
- ?Vit increases during NBTS, and decreases during
PBTS - Process not due to normal two-stage ?Vit buildup
due to H release in oxide - More consistent with ?Vit buildup seen in NBTI
experiments
10Candidate Mechanism (Oversimplified)structural
reconfiguration likely also occurs not just H
motion
-V
V
Al
HfO2 (6.8 nm)
H
SiOxNy(1.0 nm)
H
Si
Protons depassivate Si-H bond ?Vit ?, ?Vot ?
Protons passivate Si-H bond ?Vit ?, ?Vot ?
11?Vit increases with increasing anneal temperature
Rad 1 Mrad (SiO2) 2 MV/cm Anneals 2 MV/cm
- More than simple reversibility in charge motion
after rad - Additional defect growth must occur in these
devices during the anneal why?
12After rad, ?Vot gt ?Vit
Rad 1 Mrad (SiO2) 2 MV/cm Anneals 2 MV/cm _at_
50 ?C
- Both electron exchange and H motion occur
- Enhanced reversibility in ?Vot consistent with
large e-h (dipole) generation during rad
13Post-CVS annealing at 50?C ?Vot lt ?Vit
CVS ( 3.6 MV/cm 1200s 25ºC) Anneals 2 MV/cm
- Similar trend as post-rad, but now ?Vit
dominates - No electron-hole pair creation due to low
voltage lack of radiation - Proton interactions relatively more important
than for post-rad case
14More annealing cycles lead to enhanced defect
growth
CVS ( 3.6 MV/cm 1200s 25ºC) Anneals 2 MV/cm
- Degradation increases with time (not just
reversibility) - Defect growth increases with annealing time and
temperature
15Defect growth with time post-CVS(similar trends
post-rad)
CVS ( 3.6 MV/cm 1200s 25ºC) Anneals 2 MV/cm
- Low electric fields, but high enough to increase
gate current - Gate current increases with temperature
- Additional CVS stress occurs during annealing
cycles at high-T - Enhanced H motion and interactions lead to
increasing ?Vit, ?Vot
16Conclusions and Implications
- High-?devices can trap large numbers of
compensating electrons and holes during
irradiation. - Leads to significant reversibility in ?Vot during
switched-bias annealing. - Effects large enough to cause pMOS transistors to
fail in circuit applications. - Constant-voltage stress experiments show the
importance of hydrogen motion and reactions on
device response. - Reversible with bias.
- But generally increasing with time and
temperature. - Unless effects are addressed via process
improvements, qualification of high-?devices for
space application will require additional
screening and testing margins, as compared to SiO2