Abstract

The superior carrier mobility of SiGe alloys make them a highly desirable channel material in complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) transistors. Passivation of the SiGe surface and the associated minimization of interface defects between SiGe channels and high- k dielectrics continues to be a challenge for fabrication of high-performance SiGe CMOS. A primary source of interface defects is interfacial GeO x. This interfacial oxide can be decomposed using an oxygen-scavenging reactive gate metal, which nearly eliminates the interfacial oxides, thereby decreasing the amount of GeO x at the interface; the remaining ultrathin interlayer is consistent with a SiO x-rich interface. Density functional theory simulations demonstrate that a sub-0.5 nm thick SiO x-rich surface layer can produce an electrically passivated HfO2/SiGe interface. To form this SiO x-rich interlayer, metal gate stack designs including Al/HfO2/SiGe and Pd/Ti/TiN/nanolaminate (NL)/SiGe (NL: HfO2-Al2O3) were investigated. As compared to the control Ni-gated devices, those with Al/HfO2/SiGe gate stacks demonstrated more than an order of magnitude reduction in interface defect density with a sub-0.5 nm SiO x-rich interfacial layer. To further increase the oxide capacitance, the devices were fabricated with a Ti oxygen scavenging layer separated from the HfO2 by a conductive TiN diffusion barrier (remote scavenging). The Pd/Ti/TiN/NL/SiGe structures exhibited significant capacitance enhancement along with a reduction in interface defect density.

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