DocumentCode
2617582
Title
Reliability challenges of high performance PD SOI CMOS with ultra-thin gate dielectrics
Author
Zhao, E. ; Salman, A. ; Zhang, J. ; Subba, N. ; Chan, J. ; Marathe, A. ; Beebe, S. ; Taylor, K.
Author_Institution
AMD, Sunnyvale, CA, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
10-12 Dec. 2003
Firstpage
357
Lastpage
358
Abstract
In this paper we have discussed various reliability issues in developing cutting edge SOI technologies with ultra-thin gate dielectrics such as DC-HCI (hot carrier injection), TDDB, NBTI, and ESD. Floating body and body tied structures on partially depleted SOI substrate are investigated. The correlation between the AC and DC HCI degradation are compared and found to have a larger voltage scaling factor that can be explained by self-heating. The reliability of the gate dielectric is evaluated by time dependent dielectric breakdown (TDDB). The results imply that the addition of a T-gate shortens gate dielectric lifetime, this is because part of the gate dielectric is biased in accumulation and thus has shorter lifetime. Negative bias temperature instability (NBTI) lifetime improves with higher nitrogen concentration in the GOX but it is found that it can cause more positive charge generation during NBTI stress. Electrostatic discharge (ESD) is the major reliability issue, ESD failure mechanism is thermal runaway that is due to the increased self-heating. A typical protection of the increased self-heating is the lateral diode. Change in design of the lateral diode to floating gate electrode enhanced the charged device model (CDM) protection capability.
Keywords
MOSFET; electric breakdown; electrostatic discharge; hot carriers; semiconductor device models; semiconductor device reliability; semiconductor diodes; silicon-on-insulator; PD SOI CMOS performance; Si; charged device model; complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor; electrostatic discharge; floating body effects; floating gate electrode; gate dielectric lifetime; hot carrier injection; lateral diode; negative bias temperature instability; partial discharge silicon-on-insulator CMOS; partially depleted SOI substrate; self-heating; semiconductor device reliability; thermal runaway; time dependent dielectric breakdown; ultra-thin gate dielectrics; CMOS technology; Dielectric substrates; Diodes; Electrostatic discharge; Hot carrier injection; Niobium compounds; Partial discharges; Protection; Substrate hot electron injection; Titanium compounds;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Semiconductor Device Research Symposium, 2003 International
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8139-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISDRS.2003.1272134
Filename
1272134
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