Abstract

Carrier mobility and negative-bias temperature instability (NBTI) characteristics were studied for p+ polycrystalline Si-gated metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs) with various gate dielectrics: atomic-layer-deposited (ALD) Si–nitride/SiO2 stack, plasma-nitrided SiON, and pure-SiO2 dielectrics. MOSFETs with the ALD Si–nitride/SiO2 stack dielectrics offer the lowest interface trap density and highest carrier mobility among the three samples owing to their superior ability to suppress boron penetration. P-channel MOSFETs with the ALD stack dielectrics exhibit an abnormal NBTI behavior: threshold voltage shift (ΔVth) is positive at the early stress stage and then becomes negative at longer stress times. Such a turnaround behavior may be attributed to the presence of preexisting neutral electron traps in the Si–nitride/SiO2 stack dielectrics, which may lead to the net ΔVth of the stack dielectrics stressed at a low voltage to be even smaller than that of the pure-SiO2 dielectrics. The above-mentioned findings suggest that the ALD Si–nitride/SiO2 stack dielectrics are very promising for sub-0.1-µm MOSFETs.

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