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Toshimasa MATSUOKA Shigenari TAGUCHI Kenji TANIGUCHI Chihiro HAMAGUCHI Seizo KAKIMOTO Junkou TAKAGI
Thickness dependence of breakdown properties in control and N2O-Oxynitrided oxides was investigated. Nitrogen atoms piled up at the Si/SiO2 interface increase charge-to-breakdown (QBD) under substrate injection conditions for oxide thickness below 10 nm, while no meaningful improvement is observed above 10 nm. This thickness dependence is explained by the fact that N2O-oxynitridation reduces oxide defects near the Si/SiO2 interface. N2O-oxynitridation of the oxides reduces the number of neutral electron traps due to the chemical reaction of oxide defect with nitrogen atoms. Electron trapping of N2O-oxynitrided oxides is significantly suppressed; the reduction of electron trapping events into neutral electron traps increases QBD under substrate injection. On the other hand, under gate injection, N2O-oxynitrided oxides show low rate of hole trapping during the initial stress period. However, in heavily injected condition, electron trapping is not suppressed, resulting in little improvement of QBD. In addition, the control and N2O-oxynitrided oxides show quite similar dependence of QBD on stress current density, which is related primarily to the carrier transport phenomena (tunneling, traveling, impact ionization and hole injection).
Two kinds of nitrided ultrathin (510 nm) SiO2 films were formed on the silicon (100) face using rapid thermal NH3-nitridation (RTN) and rapid thermal N2O-oxynitridation (RTON) technologies. The MOS capacitors with RTN SiO2 film showed that by Fowler-Nordheim (F-N) electron injection, both electron trap density and low-field leakage increase by the NH3-nitridation. In addition, the charge-to-breakdown (QBD) value decreases owing to NH3-nitridation. By contrast, RTON SiO2 films exhibited extremely low electron trap density, almost no increase of the leakage current, and large QBD value above 200C/cm2. The oxide film composition was evaluated by secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS). The chemical bonding states were also examined by Fourier transform-infrared reflection attenuated total reflectance (FT-IR ATR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements. These results indicate that although a large number of nitrogen (N) atoms are incorporated by the RTN and RTON, only the RTN process generates the hydrogen-related species such as NH and SiH bounds in the film, whereas the RTON film indicates only SiN bonds in bulk SiO2. From the dielectric and physical properties of the oxide films, it is considered that the oxide wearout by high-field stress is the result of the electron trapping process, in which anomalous leakage due to trap-assisted tunneling near the injected interface rapidly increases, leading to irreversible oxide failure.