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Journal ArticleDOI

Fabrication and analysis of deep submicron strained-Si n-MOSFET's

TL;DR: In this paper, deep submicron strained-Si n-MOSFETs were fabricated on strained Si/relaxed Si/sub 0.8/Ge/sub sub 0.2/ heterostructures to yield well matched channel doping profiles after processing, allowing comparison of strained and unstrained Si surface channel devices.
Abstract: Deep submicron strained-Si n-MOSFETs were fabricated on strained Si/relaxed Si/sub 0.8/Ge/sub 0.2/ heterostructures. Epitaxial layer structures were designed to yield well-matched channel doping profiles after processing, allowing comparison of strained and unstrained Si surface channel devices. In spite of the high substrate doping and high vertical fields, the MOSFET mobility of the strained-Si devices is enhanced by 75% compared to that of the unstrained-Si control devices and the state-of-the-art universal MOSFET mobility. Although the strained and unstrained-Si MOSFETs exhibit very similar short-channel effects, the intrinsic transconductance of the strained Si devices is enhanced by roughly 60% for the entire channel length range investigated (1 to 0.1 /spl mu/m) when self-heating is reduced by an ac measurement technique. Comparison of the measured transconductance to hydrodynamic device simulations indicates that in addition to the increased low-field mobility, improved high-field transport in strained Si is necessary to explain the observed performance improvement. Reduced carrier-phonon scattering for electrons with average energies less than a few hundred meV accounts for the enhanced high-field electron transport in strained Si. Since strained Si provides device performance enhancements through changes in material properties rather than changes in device geometry and doping, strained Si is a promising candidate for improving the performance of Si CMOS technology without compromising the control of short channel effects.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
24 Jun 2002
TL;DR: In this article, the first detailed electrical characterization of uniaxially-strained fully-depleted silicon-on-insulator (FD-SOI) n and p-channel MOSFETs was reported.
Abstract: In this paper we report the first detailed electrical characterization of uniaxially-strained fully-depleted silicon-on-insulator (FD-SOI) n and p-channel MOSFETs. Using the back-end approach, an in-plane, tensile strain was applied to the FD SOI MOSFETs after device manufacture. Dies were thinned to membrane dimensions and then affixed to curved substrates. The die transfer process minimizes edge effects and spurious membrane behavior.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a novel layer structure comprising Si/Si/sub 0.7/Ge/Sub 0.3/ virtual substrate (VS) offers improved performance advantages and a strain-compensated structure.
Abstract: Performance enhancements of up to 170% in drain current, maximum transconductance, and field-effect mobility are presented for nMOSFETs fabricated with strained-Si channels compared with identically processed bulk Si MOSFETs. A novel layer structure comprising Si/Si/sub 0.7/Ge/sub 0.3/ on an Si/sub 0.85/Ge/sub 0.15/ virtual substrate (VS) offers improved performance advantages and a strain-compensated structure. A high thermal budget process produces devices having excellent on/off-state drain-current characteristics, transconductance, and subthreshold characteristics. The virtual substrate does not require chemical-mechanical polishing and the same performance enhancement is achieved with and without a titanium salicide process.

85 citations


Cites result from "Fabrication and analysis of deep su..."

  • ...55 mA m and is increased by over 140% compared with the Si control device, exceeding recently published data [14], [16], [31], [32]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the performance of a surface channel Si n-MOSFET is significantly influenced by the strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface quality, and the effect of the interface trap density was found to be proportional to the Ge content in the virtual substrate.
Abstract: Surface channel strained-silicon MOSFETs on relaxed Si/sub 1-x/Ge/sub x/ virtual substrates (VSs) have been established as an attractive avenue for extending Si CMOS performance as dictated by Moore's law. The performance of a surface channel Si n-MOSFET is significantly influenced by strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface quality. The effects of Ge content (20, 25, and 30%) in the VS and strained-Si thickness (6, 5.5, 4.7, and 3.7 nm) on the strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface have been investigated. The interface trap density was found to be proportional to the Ge content in the VS. Fixed oxide charge density reduces to a lower limit at higher strained-Si thickness for any Ge content in the VS, and the value increases as the strained-Si thickness is reduced. There is a high concentration of interface trap charge and fixed oxide charge present for devices with a strained-Si channel thickness below 4.7 nm. To investigate the effect of strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface quality on MOSFET devices fabricated using a high-temperature CMOS process, the performance of surface channel n-MOSFETs has been correlated with channel thickness. It is noted that the drain-current rapidly decreases at low gate voltages for channel thicknesses less than 4.7 nm. The performance of both MOS capacitors and MOSFETs degraded below a strained-Si thickness of 4.7 nm irrespective of the Ge content in the VS even up to 30%. TCAD simulations have been carried out to analyze the effect of strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface on electrical characteristics. Performance degradation in thin strained-Si channels is primarily attributed to gate oxide quality. The out-diffused Ge accumulates at the strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface, introducing a significant amount of interface traps and fixed oxide charges during thermal oxidation. Interface trap density and fixed oxide charge density significantly increased when the Ge concentration at the surface becomes more than 6%. This paper suggests that a minimum strained-Si layer thickness of /spl sim/ 5.0 nm is required to achieve a good strained Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface quality for surface channel strained-Si n-MOSFETs, fabricated using a high thermal budget CMOS process.

84 citations


Cites background from "Fabrication and analysis of deep su..."

  • ...CMOS platform because of enhancements of in-plane mobility of both electrons and holes compared to bulk Si [1]–[4]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the technological issues associated with the likely high-κ materials which are under consideration as well as challenges, and solution to them, they bring about in the fabrication of Si MOSFETs are discussed.
Abstract: With scaling of the gate length downward to increase speed and density, the gate dielectric thickness must also be reduced. However, this practice which has been in effect for many decades has reached a fundamental limitation because gate dielectric thicknesses in the range of tunneling have been reached with the SiO2 dielectric layer for MOSFETs. Consequently, the gate dielectrics with higher dielectric constants, dubbed the “high-κ”, which allow scaling with much larger thicknesses have become active research and development topics. In this review technological issues associated with the likely high-κ materials which are under consideration as well as challenges, and solution to them, they bring about in the fabrication of Si MOSFET are discussed. Moreover, in order to squeeze more speed out of CMOS, channels for both n- and p-type MOSFET enhanced with appropriate strain and the concepts behind them are discussed succinctly. Finally, the longer term approach of replacing Si with other channel materials such as GaAs (InGaAs) for n-channel and Ge for p-channel along with technological developments of their preparation on Si and likely gate oxide developments are treated in some detail.

84 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2000
TL;DR: In this paper, a novel sub-100 nm CMOS technology with strained-Si/sub 0.76/Ge/ sub 0.24/Si heterostructure channels formed by ultra-high-vacuum chemical-vapor-deposition (UHV-CVD) was presented.
Abstract: We report the demonstration of a novel sub-100 nm CMOS technology with strained-Si/sub 0.76/Ge/sub 0.24//Si heterostructure channels formed by ultra-high-vacuum chemical-vapor-deposition (UHV-CVD). The incorporation of 24% Ge in the channel provides a 25% enhancement in PMOSFET drive current for channel lengths down to 0.1 /spl mu/m. Enhancement in NMOSFET drive current is concomitantly observed for channel lengths below 0.4 /spl mu/m.

82 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compute the band structure and shear deformation potentials of strained Si, Ge, and SiGe alloys, and fit the theoretical results to experimental data on the phonon-limited carrier mobilities in bulk Si and Ge.
Abstract: Using nonlocal empirical pseudopotentials, we compute the band structure and shear deformation potentials of strained Si, Ge, and SiGe alloys. Fitting the theoretical results to experimental data on the phonon‐limited carrier mobilities in bulk Si and Ge, the dilatation deformation potential Ξd is found to be 1.1 eV for the Si Δ minima, −4.4 eV for the Ge L minima, corresponding to a value for the valence band dilatation deformation potential a of approximately 2 eV for both Si and Ge. The optical deformation potential d0 is found to be 41.45 and 41.75 eV for Si and Ge, respectively. Carrier mobilities in strained Si and Ge are then evaluated. The results show a large enhancement of the hole mobility for both tensile and compressive strain along the [001] direction, but only a modest enhancement (approximately 60%) of the electron mobility for tensile biaxial strain in Si. Finally, from a fit to carrier mobilities in relaxed SiGe alloys, the effective alloy scattering potential is determined to be about 0...

1,500 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the inversion layer mobility in n-and p-channel Si MOSFETs with a wide range of substrate impurity concentrations (10/sup 15/ to 10/sup 18/ cm/sup -3/) was examined.
Abstract: This paper reports the studies of the inversion layer mobility in n- and p-channel Si MOSFET's with a wide range of substrate impurity concentrations (10/sup 15/ to 10/sup 18/ cm/sup -3/). The validity and limitations of the universal relationship between the inversion layer mobility and the effective normal field (E/sub eff/) are examined. It is found that the universality of both the electron and hole mobilities does hold up to 10/sup 18/ cm/sup -3/. The E/sub eff/ dependences of the universal curves are observed to differ between electrons and holes, particularly at lower temperatures. This result means a different influence of surface roughness scattering on the electron and hole transports. On substrates with higher impurity concentrations, the electron and hole mobilities significantly deviate from the universal curves at lower surface carrier concentrations because of Coulomb scattering by the substrate impurity. Also, the deviation caused by the charged centers at the Si/SiO/sub 2/ interface is observed in the mobility of MOSFET's degraded by Fowler-Nordheim electron injection. >

1,389 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the thermal resistivity, Seebeck coefficient, electrical resistivity and Hall mobility of GeSi alloys have been measured throughout the GeSi alloy system as functions of impurity concentration in the range 2×1018−4×1020cm−3, and of temperature in range 300°-1300°K.
Abstract: The thermal resistivity, Seebeck coefficient, electrical resistivity, and Hall mobility of Ge‐Si alloys have been measured throughout the Ge‐Si alloy system as functions of impurity concentration in the range 2×1018−4×1020cm−3, and of temperature in the range 300°–1300°K. A qualitative interpretation of these properties is given. For power conversion, boron and phosphorus were found to be useful p‐type and n‐type impurities, respectively, because of their high solid solubilities. At 1200°K, the maximum values of the dimensionless figure of merit zT were 0.8 for p‐type Ge0.15‐Si0.85 alloy doped to 2.1×1020cm−3 holes, and 1.0 for n‐type Ge0.15‐Si0.85 alloy doped to 2.7×1020cm−3 electrons. The maximum over‐all efficiency of a stable generator operating between 300°–1200°K, using the best p‐type and n‐type materials was computed to be 10%.

556 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the phonon-limited mobility of strained Si metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs) through theoretical calculations including two-dimensional quantization.
Abstract: The phonon‐limited mobility of strained Si metal–oxide–semiconductor field‐effect transistors (MOSFETs) fabricated on a SiGe substrate is investigated through theoretical calculations including two‐dimensional quantization, and compared with the mobility of conventional (unstrained) Si MOSFETs. In order to match both the mobility of unstrained Si MOSFETs and the mobility enhancement in strained Si MOSFETs, it is necessary to increase the coupling of electrons in the two‐dimensional gas with intervalley phonons, compared to the values used in conventional models. The mobility enhancement associated with strain in Si is attributed to the following two factors: the suppression of intervalley phonon scattering due to the strain‐induced band splitting, and the decrease in the occupancy of the fourfold valleys which exhibit a lower mobility due to the stronger interaction with intervalley phonons. While the decrease in the averaged conductivity mass, caused by the decrease in the occupancy of the fourfold valle...

454 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a technique for measuring the thermal conductivity of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) transistors and provided data for layers in wafers fabricated using bond-and-etch-back (BESOI) technology.
Abstract: Self heating diminishes the reliability of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) transistors, particularly those that must withstand electrostatic discharge (ESD) pulses. This problem is alleviated by lateral thermal conduction in the silicon device layer, whose thermal conductivity is not known. The present work develops a technique for measuring this property, and provides data for layers in wafers fabricated using bond-and-etch-back (BESOI) technology. The room-temperature thermal conductivity data decrease with decreasing layer thickness, d s , to a value nearly 40 percent less than that of bulk silicon for d s = 0.42 μm, The agreement of the data with the predictions of phonon transport analysis between 20 and 300 K strongly indicates that phonon scattering on layer boundaries is responsible for a large part of the reduction. The reduction is also due in part to concentrations of imperfections larger than those in bulk samples. The data show that the buried oxide in BESOI wafers has a thermal conductivity that is nearly equal to that of bulk fused quartz. The present work will lead to more accurate thermal simulations of SOI transistors and cantilever MEMS structures.

358 citations