Abstract

We investigate the abnormal current-voltage (C-V) hump effect of p-type low-temperature polysilicon (LTPS) thin-film transistors (TFTs) which have undergone high current operations. Experimental results indicate localized electron trapping in the gate insulator (GI), which is carried out near the drain. The ON-current ( ${I}_{ \mathrm{\scriptscriptstyle ON}}$ ) enhancement is due to the reduction of effective length, and the OFF-current ( ${I}_{ \mathrm{\scriptscriptstyle OFF}}$ ) decrease as the electron tunneling path distance increases. These can be observed after hot carrier stress in current characteristics. The C-V measurements demonstrate that the threshold voltage ( ${V}_{\text {th}}$ ) shift is associated with the gate length. In addition, capacitance-voltage measurements also show that this localized trapping region remains the same in length, regardless of channel length. Hence, a model is proposed to explain how the electric field, which is gate length-dependent, affects the source side of the device, and then lowers the source barrier height. This leads to bulk leakage, which causes the subthreshold swing degradation at device scale down.

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