Abstract
The combined effect of total ionizing dose (TID) and electrical stress is investigated on NMOSFETs. For devices bearing both radiation and electrical stress, the threshold voltage shift is smaller than those only bearing electrical stress, indicating that the combined effect alleviates the degradation of the devices. The H bond is broken during the radiation process, which reduces the participation of H atoms in the later stage of electrical stress, thereby reducing the degradation caused by electrical stress. The positive charges of the oxide layer generated by radiation neutralize part of the tunneling electrons caused by electrical stress, and consume some of the electrons that react with the H bond, resulting in weaker degradation. In addition, the positive charges in shallow trench isolation (STI) generated by radiation create parasitic leakage paths at the interfaces of STI/Si, which increase the leakage current and reduce the positive shift of the threshold voltage. The parasitic effect generated by the positive charges of STI makes the threshold voltage of the narrow-channel device degrade more, and due to the gate edge effect, the threshold voltage of short-channel devices degrades more.
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