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Hot Carrier Effects in Deep Submicron CMOS

Hot Carrier Effects in Deep Submicron CMOS. By Abhijit Sil . Out Lines. CMOS Scaling, different types ,Limiting factors . Hot carrier Effect & reason behind that. Different type of hot carrier injection

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Hot Carrier Effects in Deep Submicron CMOS

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  1. Hot Carrier Effects in Deep Submicron CMOS By Abhijit Sil

  2. Out Lines • CMOS Scaling, different types ,Limiting factors . • Hot carrier Effect & reason behind that. • Different type of hot carrier injection • Different type charge generation inside gate oxide • Degradation in N-MOS & PMOS performance • Hot Carrier Induced Punch through • Effect of oxide field in hot carrier injection • Hot Carrier Effect in Low temperature • How we can suppress this effect • Different Suppression Techniques

  3. CMOS Scaling • Definesas reduction of the dimension of different parameters of MOSFET . • Why Scaling ?? • Increase device packing density. • Improve speed or frequency response (1/L) • Improve current drive (Transconductance Gm ) • Decrease Power consumption

  4. Types of Scaling • Constant field scaling – Requires to reduce power supply voltage with the reduction of feature size . • Constant voltage scaling – • Provides voltage compatibility with older circuit technologies . • Increasing electric field leads to velocity saturation , mobility degradation , sub threshold leakage

  5. Parameter Trends

  6. Limiting Factors of CMOS scaling • Punch Through • Drain Induced Barrier Lowering(DIBL) • Gate Induced Barrier Lowering (GIBL) • Hot Carrier Effect

  7. Hot Carrier Effect • As feature size decreases , Electric field in channel region increases which leads to gain high kinetic energy by holes & electron (Hot carrier) . • High kinetic energy helps them to inject inside gate oxide and form interface states , which in turns causes degradation of circuit performance . This effect is calledHot Carrier Effect .

  8. Cause of Hot Carrier Effect • In submicron device , channel doping is increased to reduce the channel depletion region (DLBL effect ) . • High doping increases threshold voltage . • Gate oxide thickness reduces to control the threshold voltage . • Due to channeling doping concentration , decreased channel length & reduced gate oxide thickness , hot carrier generated & injected to gate oxide.

  9. Different type of Hot carrier Injection • Drain Avalanche Hot carrier (DAHC) Injection • Channel Hot Electron (CHE) Injection • Substrate Hot Electron (SHE) Injection • Secondary generated hot electron (SGHE) injection

  10. Substrate Hot Electron (SHE) Injection • Occurs when the substrate back bias is very positive or very negative • Carriers of one type in the substrate are driven by the substrate field toward the Si-SiO2 interface. • Gain high kinetic energy from and injected to SiO2.

  11. Channel Hot Electron (CHE) Injection • When both VG & VD very higher than source voltage , some electrons driven towards gate oxide .

  12. Drain Avalanche Hot carrier (DAHC) Injection • When VD>VG , the acceleration of channel carrier causes Impact Ionization . • The generated electron –holes pair gain energy to break the barrier in Si-SiO2 interface

  13. Charge Generation inside SiO2 • Negative charge generation • Interface State Generation • Positive charge Generation

  14. Negative Charge Generation • Hot electron trapping results negative charge buildup in the oxide near the drain • Forming an extension of the p+ drain region

  15. Interface State Generation • At SiO2 interface , some Si-H , Si—Si and Si-O bonds only need less energy to break. X:H + e** ---> Xo+ He + e* Xo + e ----> X: - • Any electron with energy > 2eV capable to release H2 and create interface states . • The degradation is caused by electron trapping by acceptor type Interface traps at the Si- SiO2 interface

  16. Positive Charge Generation • Injection of holes into the oxide generates positive charge . • The source of holes is impact ionization by electrons in the high field region near drain .

  17. P-MOSFET Degradation • Channel length Degradation • Transconductance Degradation • Threshold Shift

  18. Continue.. • Interface state generation is most prominent threat for deep submicron P-MOSFET • The max allowable voltages for 10% change in 10 yrs are 4.7v for +ve , 4.2 for –Ve & 3.3 v for interface state generation

  19. N-MOS Degradation • Trapped electrons in the oxides result in the increase of Vth & Leff.

  20. Hot Carrier Induced Punch through

  21. Effect of Oxide Field • As the oxide field increases , initially VG shifts increases (electron charge trapping ). • When field becomes 6MV/cm , VG shifts towards negative .(positive charge trapping)(considering n-mos)

  22. Continue..

  23. Hot Carrier Effect in Low Temperature • Low Temperature technology is required in Space Technology . • Hot carrier effects significantly worst in low temp . • Primary reason for the huge reduction of device performance is that a given amount of damage (induced at high or low temp ) induces greater reduction on device performance in low temp .

  24. N-MOS Hot Carrier Effect in Low Temperature

  25. Reason Behind Degradation • Damaged increased due to Columbic scattering at low temp . Increase scattering leads to mobility degradation . • At low temp , inversion fermi level lies closer to conduction band .Hot carrier induced interface which located near the the conduction level will have great impact on device performance.

  26. P-MOS Hot Carrier Effect in Low Temperature

  27. Suppression of Hot Carrier Effect (Device structure aspect) • Reductionof Hot-Carrier Generation • Reduce the high drain field • Separate main current path away from maximum field . • Reduction of Hot-Carrier Injection • Push impact ionization region deep into silicon. • Position the injection inside the gate edge .

  28. Suppression of Hot Carrier Effect (Processing aspect) • Reduction Hot Carrier Trapping • Use High quality gate oxide • Maintain good oxide during processing by reducing radiation damage • Reduce bond breakage rate during hot carrier injection

  29. Hot Carrier Reduction Technique • Gate Oxide thickness reduction • Lightly Doped MOSFET structure • Double Diffused MOSFET structure • Incorporating Si3N4 as the gate oxide • Deuterium Post –Metal Annealing

  30. Gate Oxide thickness reduction

  31. Continue.. • As the oxide thickness is reduced , the point of peak of electron injection moves further into the drain region , the damage region over the channel is reduced .

  32. Lightly Doped MOSFET structure • As the drain edge has less carrier concentration , reduces the drain induced depletion width & lateral electric field .

  33. Different type of LDD structure • P+poly gate buried channel N-LDD device -Broader conduction channel resulting deeper position of maximum avalanche generation . • Buried LDD (B-LDD) – Retrograde LDD profile with peak concentration below the Si- surface which suppress hot carrier injection by driving current away from the surface . • Inverse T-gate LDD – Improve current capability & hot carrier resistance .

  34. Double Diffused MOSFET structure • Deeper n- phosphorous profile than N+As profile . • The path of maximum current away from the position of the maximum field to reduce the impact ionization .

  35. Continue..

  36. Incorporating Si3N4 as the gate oxide • High die electric gate insulator can significantly reduce gate leakage because of the fact higher k has higher physical thickness for the same electrical oxide thickness . • Compatible with silicon technology • The Si-N bonds are harder to break than Si-H bonds

  37. Deuterium Post –Metal Annealing • Low temperature post metalization anneals in hydrogen ambient are critical in reducing Si-Sio2 interface trap . • Under Hot Carrier stress , bond to deuterium are more difficult to break than bonds to protium

  38. Conclusion • Three types of hot carrier Injection (DAHC) Injection, (CHE) Injection, (SHE) Injection, (SGHE) injection • Three types of charge generation inside gate oxide . Negative charge generation Interface State Generation Positive charge Generation • Interface state generation is most prominent threat for P-MOSFET & Hot electron is for N-MOSFET

  39. Continue .. • In low temperature , same amount of damage (induced at high or low temp ) induces greater reduction on device performance. • Different reduction techniques proposed- Gate Oxide thickness reduction ,Lightly Doped MOSFET structure ,Double Diffused MOSFET structure , Si3N4 as the gate oxide ,Deuterium Post –Metal Annealing

  40. References • Hot-Electron and Hole-Emission Effects in Short n-Channel MOSFET‘s - KARL R. HOFMANN, MEMBER, IEEE, CHRISTOPH WERNER, WERNER WEBER, AND GERHARD DORDA , IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. ED-32, NO. 3 , MARCH 1985 • Effect of oxide field on hot carrier induced degradation in CMOS gate oxide- S.P. Zhao and S.Tayfor , 1995 IEEE 91 5th IPFA '95: Singapore • Performance and Hot-Carrier Reliability of 100 nm Channel Length Jet Vapor Deposited Si3N4 MNSFETs –S. Mahapatra, Student Member, IEEE, V. Ramgopal Rao, Member, IEEE, B. Cheng, M. Khare, Chetan D. Parikh, J. C. S. Woo, and Juzer M. Vasi, Senior Member, IEEE , IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 48, NO. 4, APRIL 2001 • Suppression of Hot-Carrier Effects in Submicrometer CMOS Technology MIN-LIANG CHEN, MEMBER, IEEE, CHUNG-WAI LEUNG, MEMBER, IEEE, W. T. COCHRAN, MEMBER, IEEE, WERNER JUNGLING, MEMBER, IEEE, CHARLES DZIUBA, AND TUNGSHENG YANG, IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 35, NO. 12. DECEMBER 1988

  41. References • Comparison of NMOS and PMOS Hot Carrier Effects From 300 to 77 K -Miryeong Song, Kenneth P. MacWilliams, Member, IEEE, and Jason C. S. Woo, IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 44, NO. 2, FEBRUARY,1997 • Deuterium Post-Metal Annealing of MOSFET’s for Improved Hot Carrier Reliability -I. C. Kizilyalli, J. W. Lyding, and K. Hess , IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 18, NO. 3, MARCH 1997 • An As-P(n’-n-) Doublk Diffused Drain MOSFET for VLSI’S -EIJI TAKEDA, MEMBER, IEEE, HITOSHI KUME, YOSIII[NOBU NAKAGOME, TOHACHI MAKINO, AKIHIRO SHIMIZU, AND SHOJIR.0 ASAI, MEMBER, IEEE , IEEE TI. TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. ED-30, NO. 6 , JUNE 1983 • A New Mode of Hot Carrier Degradation in 0.18pm CMOS Technologies-C.T. Liu, E.J. Lloyd, C.P. Chang, K.P.Cheung, J.I. Colonell, W.Y.C. Lai, R. Liu, C.S. Pai, H. Vaidya, and J.T. Clemens Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies, 700 Mountain Ave., Murray Hill, NJ 07974

  42. References • “Three hot-carrier degradation mechanisms in deep- Submicron PMOSFET's “, Woltjer, Paulzen, Pomp, Lifka, Woerlee,IEEE transactions on electron devices, Jan 1995. • ,” Positive Oxide charge generation during .25µm PMOSFET hot carrier degradation Woltjer, Paulzen, Pomp, Lifka, Woerlee, , IEEE Electron Device Letters, Oct 1994. • ““Analysis of gate oxide thickness hot Carrier effects in surface channel P-MOSFET's “Doyle, B.S.  Mistry, K.R.  Cheng-Liang Huang, IEEE Transactions on ElectronDevices, Jan 1995. • “Hot-carrier degradation of submicrometer p-MOSFETs witThermal/LPCVD composite oxide “Lee, Yung-Huei , IEEE transactions on electron devices, Jan 1993 • http://www.semiconfareast.com/hotcarriers2.htm

  43. Thank You For Your Time

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