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Reliability of High Mobility SiGe Channel MOSFETs for Future CMOS Applications [electronic resource] / by Jacopo Franco, Ben Kaczer, Guido Groeseneken.

By: Franco, Jacopo [author.].
Contributor(s): Kaczer, Ben [author.] | Groeseneken, Guido [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Springer Series in Advanced Microelectronics: 47Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XIX, 187 p. 219 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9789400776630.Subject(s): Physics | Systems engineering | Optical materials | Physics | Semiconductors | Circuits and Systems | Optical and Electronic Materials | Electronic Circuits and DevicesDDC classification: 537.622 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
1 Introduction -- 2 Degradation mechanisms -- 3 Techniques and devices -- 4 Negative Bias Temperature Instability in (Si)Ge pMOSFETs -- 5 Negative Bias Temperature Instability in nanoscale devices -- 6 Channel Hot Carriers and other reliability mechanisms -- 7 Conclusions and perspectives.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Due to the ever increasing electric fields in scaled CMOS devices, reliability is becoming a showstopper for further scaled technology nodes. Although several groups have already demonstrated functional Si channel devices with aggressively scaled Equivalent Oxide Thickness (EOT) down to 5Å, a 10 year reliable device operation cannot be guaranteed anymore due to severe Negative Bias Temperature Instability. This book focuses on the reliability of the novel (Si)Ge channel quantum well pMOSFET technology. This technology is being considered for possible implementation in next CMOS technology nodes, thanks to its benefit in terms of carrier mobility and device threshold voltage tuning. We observe that it also opens a degree of freedom for device reliability optimization. By properly tuning the device gate stack, sufficiently reliable ultra-thin EOT devices with a 10 years lifetime at operating conditions are demonstrated. The extensive experimental datasets collected on a variety of processed 300mm wafers and presented here show the reliability improvement to be process- and architecture-independent and, as such, readily transferable to advanced device architectures as Tri-Gate (finFET) devices. We propose a physical model to understand the intrinsically superior reliability of the MOS system consisting of a Ge-based channel and a SiO2/HfO2 dielectric stack. The improved reliability properties here discussed strongly support (Si)Ge technology as a clear frontrunner for future CMOS technology nodes.
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1 Introduction -- 2 Degradation mechanisms -- 3 Techniques and devices -- 4 Negative Bias Temperature Instability in (Si)Ge pMOSFETs -- 5 Negative Bias Temperature Instability in nanoscale devices -- 6 Channel Hot Carriers and other reliability mechanisms -- 7 Conclusions and perspectives.

Due to the ever increasing electric fields in scaled CMOS devices, reliability is becoming a showstopper for further scaled technology nodes. Although several groups have already demonstrated functional Si channel devices with aggressively scaled Equivalent Oxide Thickness (EOT) down to 5Å, a 10 year reliable device operation cannot be guaranteed anymore due to severe Negative Bias Temperature Instability. This book focuses on the reliability of the novel (Si)Ge channel quantum well pMOSFET technology. This technology is being considered for possible implementation in next CMOS technology nodes, thanks to its benefit in terms of carrier mobility and device threshold voltage tuning. We observe that it also opens a degree of freedom for device reliability optimization. By properly tuning the device gate stack, sufficiently reliable ultra-thin EOT devices with a 10 years lifetime at operating conditions are demonstrated. The extensive experimental datasets collected on a variety of processed 300mm wafers and presented here show the reliability improvement to be process- and architecture-independent and, as such, readily transferable to advanced device architectures as Tri-Gate (finFET) devices. We propose a physical model to understand the intrinsically superior reliability of the MOS system consisting of a Ge-based channel and a SiO2/HfO2 dielectric stack. The improved reliability properties here discussed strongly support (Si)Ge technology as a clear frontrunner for future CMOS technology nodes.

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