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Separate and independent reductions in direct tunneling in oxide/nitride stacks with monolayer interface nitridation associated with the (i) interface nitridation and (ii) increased physical thickness
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2000
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Monolayer Interface NitridationEngineeringDirect TunnelingSemiconductor DeviceTunneling MicroscopyMaterials ScienceOxide HeterostructuresElectrical EngineeringSemiconductor TechnologyPhysicsOxide ElectronicsMicroelectronicsInterface NitridationSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsMultilayer HeterostructuresThin FilmsRemote Plasma ProcessingInterface StructureLimits Aggressive Scaling
Direct tunneling limits aggressive scaling of thermally grown oxides to about 1.6 nm, a thickness at which the tunneling current density Jg at 1 V is ∼1 A/cm2. This article demonstrates that stacked gate dielectrics prepared by remote plasma processing and including (i) ultrathin nitrided SiO2 interfacial layers and (ii) either silicon nitride or oxynitride bulk dielectrics can extend the equivalent oxide thickness to 1.1–1.0 nm before Jg exceeds 1 A/cm2. Significant reductions in direct tunneling are derived from (i) interface nitridation at the monolayer level and (ii) the increased physical thickness of the nitride or oxynitride alloy layers. The “portability” of the interface contribution is demonstrated by combining the nitrided SiO2 interface layers with transition-metal oxides, e.g., Ta2O5, in stacked gate dielectric structures and obtaining essentially the same reductions in tunneling current on n- and p-type substrates with respect to non-nitrided plasma-grown interface layers.
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