Title :
Fast and long retention-time nano-crystal memory
Author :
Hanafi, Hussein I. ; Tiwari, Sandip ; Khan, Imran
Author_Institution :
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
fDate :
9/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A threshold-shifting, single transistor memory structure with fast read and write times and long retention time is described. The structure consists of a silicon field-effect transistor with nano-crystals of germanium or silicon placed in the gate oxide in close proximity of the inversion surface. Electron charge is stored in these isolated 2-5 nm size nano-crystals which are separated from each other by greater than 5 nm of SiO2 and from the inversion layer of the substrate surface by less than 5 nm of SiO2. Direct tunneling of charge from the inversion layer and its storage in the nano-crystal causes a shift in the threshold voltage which is detected via current sensing. The nano-crystals are formed using implantation and annealing or using direct deposition of the distributed floating gate region. Threshold shift of 0.3 V is obtained in Ge-implanted devices with 2 nm of SiO2 injection layer by a 4 V write pulse of 300 ns duration. The nano-crystal memories achieve improved programming characteristics as a nonvolatile memory as well as simplicity of the single poly-Si-gate process. The VT window is scarcely degraded after greater than 109 write/erase cycles or greater than 105 s retention time. Nano-crystal memories are promising for nonvolatile memory applications
Keywords :
MOSFET; annealing; elemental semiconductors; germanium; inversion layers; ion implantation; nanostructured materials; semiconductor storage; silicon; silicon compounds; tunnelling; 0.3 V; 2 to 5 nm; 300 ns; 4 V; Si-SiO2:Ge; Si-SiO2:Si; annealing; current sensing; direct tunneling; distributed floating gate region deposition; field-effect transistor; gate oxide; inversion surface; nano-crystal memory; nonvolatile memory applications; programming characteristics; read time; retention time; single transistor memory structure; threshold-shifting structure; write time; write/erase cycles; Annealing; Degradation; Electrons; FETs; Germanium; Nonvolatile memory; Read-write memory; Silicon; Threshold voltage; Tunneling;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on