Effect of Gate Oxide Material Variability on The Analog Performance of T-Gate GaN-MOS-HEMT with Graded Buffer

Author(s):  
Megha Sharma ◽  
Bhavya Kumar ◽  
Rishu Chaujar
Silicon ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2251-2257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnab Mondal ◽  
Akash Roy ◽  
Rajrup Mitra ◽  
Atanu Kundu

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit Kumar ◽  
Anil Kumar Rajput ◽  
Manisha Pattanaik ◽  
Pankaj Srivast

Abstract In the research paper, the semi-analytical modelling is done for low drain-induced barrier lowering (DIBL) dual-metal gate all around FET (DM GAAFET). Vacuum and silicon nitride are considered in the act of the gate oxide material near drain region for dual-metal vacuum oxide gate all around FET (DM-VO GAAFET) and dual-metal nitride oxide gate all around FET (DM-NO GAAFET) respectively, in which surface potential, threshold voltage, and DIBL are modelled for both the devices. The proposed models are validated by comparing DM-NO GAAFET with DM-VO GAAFET. DM-NO GAAFET shows the better device performance than DM-VO GAAFET as the threshold voltage increased by 10% and DIBL decreased by 50% in simulated as well as analytical results. The obtained results are having very close agreement with simulated results for both the GAAFETs.


Author(s):  
Y. Pan

The D defect, which causes the degradation of gate oxide integrities (GOI), can be revealed by Secco etching as flow pattern defect (FPD) in both float zone (FZ) and Czochralski (Cz) silicon crystal or as crystal originated particles (COP) by a multiple-step SC-1 cleaning process. By decreasing the crystal growth rate or high temperature annealing, the FPD density can be reduced, while the D defectsize increased. During the etching, the FPD surface density and etch pit size (FPD #1) increased withthe etch depth, while the wedge shaped contours do not change their positions and curvatures (FIG.l).In this paper, with atomic force microscopy (AFM), a simple model for FPD morphology by non-crystallographic preferential etching, such as Secco etching, was established.One sample wafer (FPD #2) was Secco etched with surface removed by 4 μm (FIG.2). The cross section view shows the FPD has a circular saucer pit and the wedge contours are actually the side surfaces of a terrace structure with very small slopes. Note that the scale in z direction is purposely enhanced in the AFM images. The pit dimensions are listed in TABLE 1.


2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 57-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Cretu ◽  
F. Balestra ◽  
G. Ghibaudo ◽  
G. Guégan

1997 ◽  
Vol 473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heng-Chih Lin ◽  
Edwin C. Kan ◽  
Toshiaki Yamanaka ◽  
Simon J. Fang ◽  
Kwame N. Eason ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTFor future CMOS GSI technology, Si/SiO2 interface micro-roughness becomes a non-negligible problem. Interface roughness causes fluctuations of the surface normal electric field, which, in turn, change the gate oxide Fowler-Nordheim tunneling behavior. In this research, we used a simple two-spheres model and a three-dimensional Laplace solver to simulate the electric field and the tunneling current in the oxide region. Our results show that both quantities are strong functions of roughness spatial wavelength, associated amplitude, and oxide thickness. We found that RMS roughness itself cannot fully characterize surface roughness and that roughness has a larger effect for thicker oxide in terms of surface electric field and tunneling behavior.


Author(s):  
Hua Younan ◽  
Chu Susan ◽  
Gui Dong ◽  
Mo Zhiqiang ◽  
Xing Zhenxiang ◽  
...  

Abstract As device feature size continues to shrink, the reducing gate oxide thickness puts more stringent requirements on gate dielectric quality in terms of defect density and contamination concentration. As a result, analyzing gate oxide integrity and dielectric breakdown failures during wafer fabrication becomes more difficult. Using a traditional FA flow and methods some defects were observed after electrical fault isolation using emission microscopic tools such as EMMI and TIVA. Even with some success with conventional FA the root cause was unclear. In this paper, we will propose an analysis flow for GOI failures to improve FA’s success rate. In this new proposed flow both a chemical method, Wright Etch, and SIMS analysis techniques are employed to identify root cause of the GOI failures after EFA fault isolation. In general, the shape of the defect might provide information as to the root cause of the GOI failure, whether related to PID or contamination. However, Wright Etch results are inadequate to answer the questions of whether the failure is caused by contamination or not. If there is a contaminate another technique is required to determine what the contaminant is and where it comes from. If the failure is confirmed to be due to contamination, SIMS is used to further determine the contamination source at the ppm-ppb level. In this paper, a real case of GOI failure will be discussed and presented. Using the new failure analysis flow, the root cause was identified to be iron contamination introduced from a worn out part made of stainless steel.


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