Abstract

Device-quality gate oxides have been nitrided using both rapid thermal processing and conventional furnace treatment. Charge trapping and high-field endurance including breakdown field and time-dependent dielectric breakdown, are investigated in detail. It is found that proper nitridation can eliminate positive charge accumulation in oxides, increase charge to breakdown, suppress high-field injection-induced interface state generation, and decrease the dependence of the breakdown field on the gate area as a result of the reduced density of microdefects. Experimental results show that although both the density and capture cross-section of the bulk and interface traps increased by nitridation, the combined effects of bulk and interface traps induced by high-field injection can improve the stability of the flatband voltage. For lightly nitrided oxides, the trap generation rate is greatly decreased as compared with the as-grown oxide. Not only are the density and capture cross-section of the traps affected by nitridation, but also the locations of the trapped-charge centroids are changed. The experimental results for postnitridation annealing suggest that these property modifications most likely result from nitridation-induced structural changes rather than hydrogenation alone. >

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