DocumentCode :
3192980
Title :
Quality degradation for gate oxides grown on slightly damaged silicon surfaces
Author :
Shuto, Susumu ; McVittie, James P.
Author_Institution :
Memory LSI Res. & Dev. Center, Toshiba Corp., Yokohama, Japan
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
86
Lastpage :
89
Abstract :
The quality of the gate oxide grown on a damaged silicon surface is investigated. The damage was created by exposing samples to CF4 or C2ClF5 plasmas prior to the gate oxidation. Although only a slight change in C-V characteristics was observed in the damaged samples, both leakage current and breakdown voltage were significantly degraded for most of the conditions investigated. The leakage current mechanism was identified to be trap-assisted tunneling. We also observed that the damaged samples were more vulnerable to later plasma process damage, i.e. the damage is latent when it is created and can become active when subjected to electrical stress during subsequent plasma processing. This suggests that one can have oxide degradation due to the combination of pre-oxidation surface damage and the subsequent process damage even if one uses low damage plasma processing for cleaning or etching
Keywords :
capacitance; dielectric thin films; electric breakdown; integrated circuit reliability; integrated circuit testing; oxidation; plasma materials processing; quality control; silicon compounds; sputter etching; surface cleaning; tunnelling; C-V characteristics; SiO2-Si; breakdown voltage; chloropentafluoroethane plasma exposure; cleaning; damaged samples; damaged silicon surface; electrical stress; etching; gate oxidation; gate oxide growth; gate oxide quality; latent damage; leakage current; leakage current mechanism; low damage plasma processing; oxide degradation; plasma exposure; plasma process damage; plasma processing; pre-oxidation surface damage; process damage; quality degradation; slightly damaged silicon surfaces; tetrafluoromethane plasma exposure; trap-assisted tunneling; Capacitance-voltage characteristics; Degradation; Leakage current; Oxidation; Plasma applications; Plasma materials processing; Plasma properties; Silicon; Stress; Tunneling;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Plasma- and Process-Induced Damage, 2001 6th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Monterey, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-9651577-5-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PPID.2001.929985
Filename :
929985
Link To Document :
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