DocumentCode
75857
Title
NBTI in Nanoscale MOSFETs—The Ultimate Modeling Benchmark
Author
Grasser, Tibor ; Rott, Karsten ; Reisinger, H. ; Waltl, M. ; Schanovsky, Franz ; Kaczer, Ben
Author_Institution
Inst. for Microelectron., Tech. Univ. Wien, Vienna, Austria
Volume
61
Issue
11
fYear
2014
fDate
Nov. 2014
Firstpage
3586
Lastpage
3593
Abstract
After nearly half a century of research into the bias temperature instability, two classes of models have emerged as the strongest contenders. One class of models, the reaction-diffusion models, is built around the idea that hydrogen is released from the interface and that it is the diffusion of some form of hydrogen that controls both degradation and recovery. Although various variants of the reaction-diffusion idea have been published over the years, the most commonly used recent models are based on nondispersive reaction rates and nondispersive diffusion. The other class of models is based on the idea that degradation is controlled by first-order reactions with widely distributed (dispersive) reaction rates. We demonstrate that these two classes give fundamentally different predictions for the stochastic degradation and recovery of nanoscale devices, therefore providing the ultimate modeling benchmark. Using detailed experimental time-dependent defect spectroscopy data obtained on such nanoscale devices, we investigate the compatibility of these models with experiment. Our results show that the diffusion of hydrogen (or any other species) is unlikely to be the limiting aspect that determines degradation. On the other hand, the data are fully consistent with reaction-limited models. We finally argue that only the correct understanding of the physical mechanisms leading to the significant device-to-device variation observed in the degradation in nanoscale devices will enable accurate reliability projections and device optimization.
Keywords
MOSFET; diffusion; nanoelectronics; negative bias temperature instability; semiconductor device models; semiconductor device reliability; NBTI; device optimization; nanoscale MOSFET; negative bias temperature instability; nondispersive diffusion; nondispersive reaction rates; reaction-diffusion models; reliability projections; stochastic degradation; time-dependent defect spectroscopy; Annealing; Data models; Degradation; Dispersion; Nanoscale devices; Predictive models; Stress; Bias temperature instability; NBTI; PBTI; charge trapping; dispersive reaction rates; first-order processes; oxide defects; reaction-diffusion;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9383
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TED.2014.2353578
Filename
6902764
Link To Document