MURI 1 Rutgers Advanced Gate Stacks and Substrate Engineering Eric Garfunkel and Evgeni Gusev...

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1 Rutger s MURI Advanced Gate Stacks and Substrate Engineering Eric Garfunkel and Evgeni Gusev Rutgers University Departments of Chemistry and Physics Institute for Advanced Materials and Devices Piscataway, NJ 08854

Transcript of MURI 1 Rutgers Advanced Gate Stacks and Substrate Engineering Eric Garfunkel and Evgeni Gusev...

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MURI 1 Rutgers Advanced Gate Stacks and Substrate Engineering Eric Garfunkel and Evgeni Gusev Rutgers University Departments of Chemistry and Physics Institute for Advanced Materials and Devices Piscataway, NJ 08854 Slide 2 MURI 2 Rutgers Advanced Gate Stack Materials u Motivation: Severe power dissipation in aggressively scaled conventional SiO 2 gate oxides Gate Stack Gate dielectric approaching a fundamental limit (a few atomic layers) Slide 3 MURI 3 Rutgers SiO 2 Monolayer? Metal Electrode High- Dielectric SourceDrain SiGe? Barrier? 10-30nm CMOS transistor ~2008? Goal: develop understanding of interaction of radiation with CMOS materials C A /d EOT - effective oxide thickness u New materials: metal electrodes, high-K dielectrics, substrates u Electronic structure, defects, band alignment Slide 4 MURI 4 Rutgers Advanced Gate Stack: Materials Challenges Enormous materials/interface challenge rad. response not fully understood Slide 5 MURI 5 Rutgers Selected material requirements for high-K dielectric + metal electrode CMOS gate stack High-K dielectric high thermal stability; no reaction with substrate or metal high uniformity: minimal roughness, single amorphous phase preferred low electrical defect concentration high permittivity ? ? ? ?????????? ? ? Oxide thermal stability: Si + M x O y M + SiO 2 Si + M x O y MSi z + SiO 2 (or silicate) G>0 @1000K Metal gate electrode Appropriate band alignment wrt substrate semiconductor and dielectric high thermal stability; no reaction with dielectric high conductivity Slide 6 MURI 6 Rutgers Rutgers CMOS Materials Analysis Capabilities u Ion scattering: RBS, MEIS, NRA, ERD composition, crystallinity, depth profiles, H/D u Direct, inverse and internal photoemission electronic structure, band alignment, defects u Scanning probe microscopy topography, surface damage, electrical defects, capacitance u FTIR, XRD, TEM, STEM u Electrical IV, CV u Growth ALD, MOCVD, PVD Slide 7 MURI 7 Rutgers Starting surface N 2 flow Si 0 Chemisorption of HfCl 4 1 Cl HfHf HfHf Chemisorption of H 2 O Si 3 Cl HfHf HCl HfHf HfHf Inert gas purge Si 4 HfHf HfHf HfHf Inert gas purge Si 2 Cl HfHf HfHf HfHf monolayer control of dielectric and metal film growth mixed oxides and nanolaminates - allows tailored films conformality advantage for novel structures low temperature deposition ~ 300C Why Atomic Layer Deposition? Silicon Substrate Silicon Substrate Silicon Substrate Silicon Substrate Silicon Substrate Silicon Substrate Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) Slide 8 MURI 8 Rutgers Slide 9 MURI 9 Rutgers ZrO 2 (ZrO 2 ) x (SiO 2 ) y Si(100) ~100 keV p + depth profile MEIS depth profiling u Sensitivity: 10 +12 atoms/cm 2 (Hf, Zr) 10 +14 atoms/cm 2 (C, N) u Accuracy for determining total amounts: 5% absolute (Hf, Zr, O), 2% relative 10% absolute (C, N) u Depth resolution: (need density) 3 near surface 8 at depth of 40 Slide 10 MURI 10 Rutgers ZrO 2 film re-oxidized in 18 O 2 30 Al 2 O 3 annealed in 3 Torr 18 O 2 Isotope studies of diffusion and growth in metal/high-K gate stacks Isotope tracer studies Slide 11 MURI 11 Rutgers Nuclear resonance methods for light element profiling Schematic of ion beam-film reactions for (p, ), (p, ) and (p, ) resonance reactions. Control incident energy to get depth information 18 O 15 N p Energy (keV) Differential cross section Slide 12 MURI 12 Rutgers Some low energy nuclear resonances Slide 13 MURI 13 Rutgers Deuterium distribution in SiO 2 films Slide 14 MURI 14 Rutgers Determine electronic structure and band alignment for metal/high- /Si gate stack Use high resolution spectroscopic tools to: Determine band alignment and defects Observe changes induced by radiation EcEc EFEF EVEV metal semiconductor EFEF high- SiO 2 Slide 15 MURI 15 Rutgers Inverse Photoemission (Unoccupied States) e-e- e-e- Photoemission (Occupied States) e-e- e-e- e-e- e-e- Experimental tools to examine electronic structure EFEF CL VB CB EFEF VB Core Level CB Electron Counts Electron Energy E VBM Photon Energy # of Photons E CBM EFEF EFEF Slide 16 MURI 16 Rutgers e-e- Additional experimental tools EFEF VB CL CB XAS, EELS (Core CB) Optical methods EFEF EgEg EgEg MetSi High-k EFEF EgEg MetSi High-k V I-V EFEF EgEg MetSi High-k V probe STM/C-AFM Slide 17 MURI 17 Rutgers Photoemission and Inverse Photoemission of ZrO 2 /Si CBM = E F + 1.4 eV VBM = E F - 4.2 eV First Principles Theory Theory resolution First Principles Theory E c = 1.15 eV E v = 3.40 eV E g = 5.7 eV ZrO 2 SiO 2 Si VBM, CBM Determination: Comparison with Theory (where possible) Extrapolation Establish band offsets Slide 18 MURI 18 Rutgers Internal Photoemission (IntPES) EcEc EFEF EVEV M/Ox metalsemiconductor EFEF high- a c b EcEc EFEF EVEV Si/Ox metal semiconductor EFEF high- (a) E c (Hi )-E F (met.) e-IntPES; (b) photo-excitation; optical band gap; (c) E c (sc)-E v (Hi ) h-IntPES Arc lampMonochromator Chopper Lock-in amplifier I-V Source Measure Unit Probe station Slide 19 MURI 19 Rutgers IntPES: W / SiO 2 / n-Si Negative Bias on Si, Si/ SiO2 : ~4.4 eV Si =4.4 eV W =3.8 eV W SiO 2 Si Combine positive and negative bias data to determine W and Si barriers with SiO 2 Slide 20 MURI 20 Rutgers Conductive Tip AFM Image and I-V Behavior of a Ru/HfO 2 /Si Stack For simple F-N tunneling with an electron effective mass of 0.18, the HfO 2 /Si conduction band barrier height is 1.4eV Image physical and spectroscopic behavior of radiation induced defects Slide 21 MURI 21 Rutgers I. High-mobility Channels: Germanium u Carrier mobility enhancement u Interface-free high-K Slide 22 MURI 22 Rutgers II. High-mobility Channels: HfO 2 on strained Si Slide 23 MURI 23 Rutgers High-mobility Channels: HfO 2 on strained Si u Significant mobility enhancement for HfO2 on strained Si Slide 24 MURI 24 Rutgers III. High-mobility Channels: Si orientations u Hybrid (Si) Orientation Technology: combines best NFET performance for Si(100) and PFET for Si(110) PFET NFET Slide 25 MURI 25 Rutgers Logistics & MURI Collaborations Samples, Processes, Devices Rutgers, NCSU, IBM Materials & Interface Analysis Rutgers & NCSU Radiation Exposure Vanderbilt & Sandia Post-radiation Characterization Vanderbilt & Rutgers Theory Vanderbilt Slide 26 MURI 26 Rutgers Plans u Generation of films and devices with high-K dielectrics (HfO 2 ) and/or metal gate electrodes (Al, Ru, Pt) with 1-50nm thickness u Interface engineering: SiO x N y (vary thickness and composition) u Physical measurements of defects: STM, AFM, TEM vs particle, fluence, energy u H/D concentration and profiles, and effects on defect generation and passivation u Correlate UHV-based studies with electrical and internal photoemission measurements. u Explore different processing and growth methods. u Correlate with first principles theory. u Develop predictive understanding of radiation induced effects General goal: to examine new materials for radiation induced effects and compare with Si/SiO2/poly-Si stacks Slide 27 MURI 27 Rutgers Industrial contacts u Gusev, Guha - IBM u Liang, Tracy - Freescale u Tsai - Intel u Chambers, Columbo - TI u Vogel, Green - NIST u Gardner, Lysaght, Bersuker, Lee Sematech u Edwards, Devine AFOSR