Abstract

The negative-capacitance effect in devices based on combined ferroelectric-dielectric gate oxides is thought to be a potential solution to break free from the so-called Boltzmann tyranny. To lower the power consumption in field-effect transistors, the subthreshold swing factor $S$ should be reduced below the thermodynamic limit of $60\phantom{\rule{0.2em}{0ex}}\mathrm{mV}$ per decade. Yet, despite numerous studies dedicated to this effect in the past decade, its origin in ferroelectric capacitors or ferroelectric-based superlattices remains unclear, being considered either a transitory product of polarization switching or an intrinsic phenomenon related to the presence of ferroelectric polarization. In this study it is shown, starting from simple electrostatic considerations, that negative capacitance is present during polarization switching and is accompanied by a significant increase of the current flowing through the ferroelectric capacitor. Coupled with piezo-force microscopy results, it is shown that the polarization orientation suddenly changes at the coercive voltage, accompanied by a complete reconfiguration of the potential barriers at the Schottky-like contacts present at the electrode-ferroelectric interfaces. A method to estimate the polarization-switching time, as the time associated with the presence of the negative-capacitance effect, is proposed. Values in the range from 100 to 1000 ns are obtained for epitaxial $\mathrm{Pb}{\mathrm{Zr}}_{0.2}{\mathrm{Ti}}_{0.8}{\mathrm{O}}_{3}$ films. These findings suggest that negative capacitance may be an intrinsic effect in ferroelectrics but that it is a transitory effect, present only when ferroelectric polarization passes through zero (switching).

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