Next Article in Journal
Thermally Fully Developed Electroosmotic Flow of Power-Law Nanofluid in a Rectangular Microchannel
Previous Article in Journal
A Low-Cost, Rapidly Integrated Debubbler (RID) Module for Microfluidic Cell Culture Applications
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Characterization of Al Incorporation into HfO2 Dielectric by Atomic Layer Deposition

1
School of Electrical Engineering, University of Ulsan, Ulsan 44610, Korea
2
School of Electronics Engineering, Kyungpook National University, Daegu 702-701, Korea
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Micromachines 2019, 10(6), 361; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10060361
Submission received: 30 April 2019 / Revised: 22 May 2019 / Accepted: 27 May 2019 / Published: 30 May 2019
(This article belongs to the Section D:Materials and Processing)

Abstract

:
This study presents the characteristics of HfAlO films for a series of Al incorporation ratios into a HfO2 dielectric by atomic layer deposition on a Si substrate. A small amount of Al doping into the HfO2 film can stabilize the tetragonal phase of the HfO2, which helps to achieve a higher dielectric constant (k) and lower leakage current density, as well as a higher breakdown voltage than HfO2 film on its own. Moreover, assimilation of Al2O3 into HfO2 can reduce the hysteresis width and frequency dispersion. These are indications of border trap reduction, which was also verified by the border trap extraction mechanism. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis also verified the HfAlO microstructural properties for various Al compositions. In addition, higher amounts of Al2O3 in HfAlO resulted in better interface and dielectric behavior through trap minimization, although the equivalent-oxide-thickness (EOT) values show the opposite trend.

1. Introduction

The traditional dielectric material SiO2 has inherent chemical and thermal stability on Si wafers, in addition to a large band gap and elevated barrier height between the dielectric and Si [1,2,3]. However, SiO2 thickness has reached an optimum as an insulating material due to miniaturization of metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect-transistors (MOSFETs). Thus, low-power application devices mainly suffer from higher leakage current due to direct tunneling through the SiO2 film [4]. However, a thicker oxide layer with a high dielectric constant (k) can decrease the leakage current and the equivalent-oxide-thickness (EOT), which are related to the speed of the transistor.
Among the different deposition techniques such as physical-vapor-deposition (PVD), chemical-vapor-deposition (CVD), and atomic-layer-deposition (ALD) for high-k oxides, ALD [5,6,7,8,9] is considered the most promising for realization of microelectronics and nanotechnology. ALD is a subclass of CVD and is unique in that the precursors and oxidants are not present in the deposition chamber at the same time. Rather, the precursor and oxidant are introduced into the chamber in a sequential and non-overlapping way. Between the precursor and oxidant injections, a purge gas flow is maintained to remove the remaining precursor and reactant species. The combination of a precursor/oxidant pulse and purge gas flow is known as a half-cycle. Film deposition occurs through a self-saturating half-cycle since the reactions terminate by themselves once all reactive elements on the surface are consumed [9]. Therefore, unlike CVD where the deposition occurs on a time basis, in ALD it occurs on a cyclic basis [5]. The thickness of the deposited film can be adjusted according to the number of deposition cycles. Thus, the self-saturating nature and cyclic deposition provides a conformal, controlled, uniform high-quality, dense, and pinhole-free thin film deposition with a thickness error of less than 1%; this film growth is independent of precursor and oxidant fluxes [7,10]. A detailed comparison of different deposition techniques, including ALD, is described in [9].
Among the reported high-k oxides, Al2O3 and HfO2 are considered the most promising replacements for SiO2 because of their ease of manufacture by ALD [11]. Al2O3 has a larger band gap (~8.8 eV) and band alignment similar to SiO2, good thermal stability, and reduced oxygen and ionic transport, but it suffers from a moderate dielectric constant (k = 6–9) [12]. On the other hand, HfO2 has a higher dielectric constant (k = 20–25) and moderate band gap (~5.68 eV), but it suffers from low crystallization temperature, poor thermal stability, and poor blocking of oxygen diffusion through the HfO2 [13,14]. It has been reported that incorporation of Al2O3 into HfO2 in the form of a bilayer (Al2O3/HfO2) can increase the thermal stability up to 900 °C; this value can increase further to 1000 °C when the material is in the form of a nanolaminate (HfAlO) [15,16]. Al incorporation also increases the dielectric constant and band gap while reducing hysteresis and electrical defects [13,17,18]. In addition, incorporation of Al in alloy form (HfAlO) provides better EOT scaling, lower interface state density (Dit), and a diminished gate leakage current in comparison to the bilayer arrangement [19,20]. As a result, HfAlO has potential benefits, including simultaneous lower interface state density and EOT scaling.
Among the available HfAlO reports, most of the cases involve incorporation of Al into HfO2 by maintaining some discrete Al: Hf ratio. Therefore, it is difficult to consider the overall scenario based on Al composition. In addition to the interface state density (Dit), the border trap density (Nbt) of the dielectric is currently attracting attention. Border traps are those inside the dielectric, especially in high-k oxides, that cause dispersion in the accumulation region at the capacitance–voltage (C–V) behavior due to charge transport between the semiconductor and insulating material via tunneling [21,22,23]. These traps affect the on-state device performance by threshold voltage shifting and degradation of transconductance [23]. The interface states have very small time constants that cannot retort in the typical measurement frequency range (1 kHz to 1 MHz) at functional voltage; thus, the conventional interface state phenomenon is unable to explain these observations [24]. It has already been reported that HfO2 suffers more severely from these types of traps than does Al2O3, and that Al incorporation into HfO2 effectively reduces border traps [25,26]. In this paper, a change in the electrical behavior of HfAlO dielectric films was achieved by varying the Al insertion amount from 10–50%. In addition, quantification of the interface and border trap density was performed according to the Al: Hf ratio.

2. Materials and Methods

Single Al2O3, HfO2, and HfAlO alloy thin films were deposited by a thermal ALD system, at a deposition temperature of 250 °C, on n-type Si (100) substrate (SEHYOUNG Wafer Co. Ltd., Seoul, Korea) with resistivity of 1–10 Ω-cm using trimethylaluminum (TMA) and tetrakis (ethymethylamino) hafnium (TEMAH) as metal precursors of Al2O3 and HfO2, respectively, while H2O was used as an oxidant. N2 was used as both the carrier and purge gas. The Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) number for TMA is 75-24-1, while that for TEMAH is 352535-01-4. Both precursors were claimed to have a 99.9999% purity as provided by UP Chemical Co., Ltd. (Pyeongtaek, Korea). The ALD system is a thermal ALD process (“Atomic Classic”, CN1, Hwaseong, Korea), having a maximum deposition temperature of 450 °C and an allocation system of 4 sets of precursor canisters. The TMA precursor canister was kept at room temperature, and the TEMAH precursor was at 60 °C. The carrier and purge gas flow rates were 300 sccm for Al2O3 deposition and 100 sccm for HfO2. The pulse times were 0.1 s and 2 s for Al2O3 and HfO2 precursors, respectively, while the purge time was 20 s in both cases. The oxidant (H2O) pulse times were 0.1 s and 0.2 s for Al2O3 and HfO2 cases, respectively. All the depositions were performed at a chamber pressure of 3.6 millitorr. Before deposition, the substrates were processed by standard pre-cleaning and diluted hydrofluoric acid (HF) (CAS number:7664-39-3, purity:49.2%, J.T. Baker-a division of Mallinckrodt Baker Inc.; Phillipsburg, NJ, USA) stripping for native oxide removal. They were then rinsed in deionized (DI) water and finally dried in a N2 environment for the prevention of water mask formation on the surface. A total of seven HfAlO alloy oxide samples were grown following the supercycle concept for precise control of composition, where all deposition started with Al2O3 to improve the interface quality [13]. The deposition cycles consisted of a pre-nitrogen purge as a first step, m cycles of Al2O3 deposition as a second step, n cycles of HfO2 deposition as step 3, and finally a post-nitrogen purge as step 4. Steps 2 and 3 together are called supercycle and were repeated to form (m. Al2O3 + n. HfO2) x, where m is the number of Al2O3 cycles, n is the number of HfO2 cycles, and x is the quantity of supercycle. The number of supercycle was adjusted according to the calculated growth rate-per-cycle (GPC) of Al2O3 and HfO2 obtained from 50 individual cycle depositions to maintain a similar level of thickness. The thickness of the ALD deposited films was measured by ellipsometry at an incident angle of 70°. Design of the supercycle and the thickness summary are listed in Table 1. An X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) system (ThermoFisher, Waltham, MA, USA, model: K-alpha) equipped with monochromatic Al Kα with a photon energy of 1.4866 keV was used for examination of microstructural properties. The surface morphology investigation was performed using an atomic force microscopy (AFM) system (WITec, Ulm, Germany, model: alpha300S). For MOSCAP device formation, a 1500 Å thick aluminum (Al) metal layer was deposited by e-beam evaporation (Temescal, Zeus Co, Ltd.; Yongin, Korea, model: FC-2000) on the dielectric for a front electrode with an area of 2.5 × 10−4 cm2 using a shadow mask. The same type of metal layer was also deposited as a backside contact. Electrical characterizations, including capacitance-voltage and current-voltage measurements, were performed using a Keithley 4200A-SCS parameter analyzer (Tektronix, Inc., Beaverton, OR, USA) at a sufficient gate voltage.

3. Results and Discussion

Figure 1a shows the capacitance–voltage (C–V) characteristics at high frequency (1 MHz) for the HfAlO MOS capacitors with single Al2O3 and HfO2 capacitors. The solid lines represent the capacitance values of Al2O3 and HfO2 MOSCAPs, while the dotted lines signify the capacitance of HfAlO alloy cases. The figure shows that the single Al2O3 (sample A) MOSCAP had the lowest capacitance, whereas sample F, which had an Al: Hf ratio of 1:9, showed the maximum capacitance. However, without these two extreme points, the other C–V curves cannot explain the full scenario due to the different thicknesses, as mentioned in Table 1. For all the samples, thickness measurement was done at five different points on a wafer and the thickness value represented here is the average thickness of the five points with the standard deviation. According to the thickness values listed in Table 1, the single HfO2 layer (sample I) had the lowest thickness, while the HfAlO alloy with an Al: Hf = 3:3 ratio (sample H) had the highest. These data indicate that the thickness clearly depends on Al content. The values for the other samples are within these ranges. This thickness difference is mainly due to the different GPCs of Al2O3 and HfO2 as well as the different numbers of supercycle, which depend on the Al: Hf ratio. Since the supercycle consists of both Al2O3 and HfO2 deposition, cycles had to be completed (rather than comparing precise thicknesses) in some cases to avoid the fractional case. The multifrequency (10 kHz–1 MHz) capacitance–voltage responses are plotted in Figure 1b. From the figure, it is evident that the Al inclusion has minimized the C–V dispersion in accumulation which represents the border trap reduction. Also, in highly HfO2 rich samples (samples D, E, F, I) there is some hump in the weak inversion region, which depicts a high number of interface state traps [27]. In addition, it is also apparent from the figure that the flat band voltage shifted in the positive direction after incorporation of Al due to the addition of negatively charged dipoles [28].
E O T t o t a l = A ε 0 ε S i O 2 C o x
E O T h i g h k = E O T t o t a l T S i O 2
ε h i g h k = T h i g h k E O T h i g h k ε S i O 2
The impact of Al incorporation can be better understood by extracting the dielectric constant (k) and equivalent-oxide-thickness (EOT) of all the samples. The dielectric constant (k) and EOT are calculated by the following equations as described in [29]:
Here, A is the area of the electrode, Cox is the accumulation capacitance measured at 1 MHz, Thigh-k and Tsio2 are the thickness of high-k dielectric layer and SiO2 layer, respectively, and εhigh-k and εsio2 are the permittivity of the high-k layer and SiO2 layer. The thickness of the as-grown SiO2 layer during ALD deposition was measured at ~0.8 nm using ellipsometry, and its permittivity was considered to be 3.9. Figure 1c illustrates the summary of the dielectric constant (k) and EOT of all splits. Pure Al2O3 and HfO2 had dielectric constants of 5.78 and 16.64, respectively, which are a little lower than the reported ones. This may be attributed to formation of some interfacial layer (IL). The dielectric constant (k) improved with higher Hf fraction in the alloy films. Sample E (Al: Hf = 1:4) showed a slightly higher k value than HfO2, which was 17.42, and sample F (Al: Hf = 1:9) showed the highest value (21.23). The increase in the dielectric constant of HfAlO films was attributed to the change in microstructure caused by the phase transition of the deposited film. It has been reported that the smaller radius Al atom can diffuse into HfO2 film, which can change the HfO2 phase from monoclinic to tetragonal, which has a higher dielectric constant [k] [13,30]. Interestingly, sample B (Al: Hf = 1:1) showed the lowest permittivity among the HfAlO films, although the apparent formulas of sample B (Al: Hf = 1:1) and sample H (Al: Hf = 3:3) are the same. This may be attributed to the change in film stoichiometry and in Al and Hf mole fractions according to supercycle design. The EOT values followed a trend similar to those of permittivity.
Figure 2a illustrates a comparison of the measured C–V hysteresis of Al-incorporated HfO2 film-based MOSCAPs along with Al2O3 and HfO2 ones. The C–V hysteresis was measured by performing the sweep from inversion to accumulation and (without any delay) again sweeping back to inversion at a frequency of 1 MHz to exclude the response of interface traps. It is obvious from the figure that Al incorporation reduces the hysteresis of HfO2 due to the charges trapped at the oxide/semiconductor interface, as well as inside the dielectric. This reduction can be explained as follows, Al2O3 exhibits micromolecular properties, while TMA has high reactivity, which allows the pinholes of HfO2 to be filled with Al ions and promotes formation of a more condensed film during ALD deposition [31]. Interestingly, sample H (3:3) showed slightly higher hysteresis than expected. The surface charge density as illustrated in Figure 2b was quantified according to the following equation:
Q t r a p p e d = C o x × Δ V q
where Qtrapped denotes the trapped charge density per cm2, Cox represents the oxide capacitance in F/cm2, ΔV is the voltage shift as measured at V, and q is the elementary electron charge in C. This surface charge includes the charges located near or at the dielectric/semiconductor interface, which are differentiated as fixed charge, ionized traps, and mobile ions. These fixed charges cause a C–V curve shift along the voltage axis in the parallel direction, and the two-dimensional distribution of these traps contributes to the overall capacitance. Since the high frequency hysteresis measurement excludes the small signal voltage information, it is represented in cm−2 rather than cm−2 eV−1. However, it is clear from the figure that the trapped charge density follows almost the same pattern as Figure 2a, since it is proportional to the hysteresis width even though it is affected by different Cox values. The single Al2O3 layer showed the smallest number of traps (1.81 × 1011/cm2), and HfO2 had the highest (1.72 × 1012/cm2), while HfAlO samples were within these two boundary points. Sample B (Al: Hf = 1:1) alloy showed the lowest trap density among the HfAlO alloys, while sample F (Al: Hf = 1:9) showed the largest. Sample H (3:3) also showed a higher value, as previously mentioned.
Figure 3 shows the X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis for HfAlO films to understand the bonding structure and film stoichiometry. Among all the HfAlO splits, we chose two cases based on Al2O3 concentration according to the deposition cycle ratio of Al2O3 and HfO2. Figure 3a–c shows the Hf-4f, Al-2p, and O-1s core level spectra for sample G, which has an Al: Hf = 2:6 ratio and is supposed to have a higher Al2O3 concentration. Figure 3a for the Hf-4f spectra shows that the two peaks of 4f7/2 and 4f5/2, which are located at 17.52 eV and 18.9 eV, respectively, correspond to Hf bonding to oxygen, as reported in [32]. The higher binding energy movement of Hf-4f peaks compared with the reported pure HfO2 cases was attributed to Al incorporation, which changes the bonding characteristics due to formation of Hf-Al-O bonds [33,34,35]. This shift is because the electron density to the Al-O bond in the HfAlO alloy increased due to the difference in electron negativity of Hf, Al, and O [36]. The Al-2p core level spectra in Figure 3b were also deconvoluted into two peaks at 74.42 eV and 74.88 eV, which correspond to Hf-Al-O and Al-O bonds, respectively [37]. Similarly, after deconvolution of O-1s spectra, two peaks appear at 530.78 eV and 531.68 eV. The lower peak indicates the Hf-Al-O bond based on an amalgamation of Al2O3 and HfO2 layers, and its position is between those of pure HfO2 and Al2O3 [17]. The higher peak corresponds to C-O bonding due to surface contamination by hydrocarbons [32]. However, the same core level XPS spectra for sample F having Al: Hf = 1:9 are shown in Figure 3d–f. The peaks follow the same configuration as in previous cases, although the binding energy shifted to slightly lower values in almost all cases. This is due to a reduction in Al concentration as dictated by deposition cycle ratio, where the binding energies experience a similar shift due to a decrease of Al2O3 in the structure, as reported in [38]. Table 2 summarizes the bond binding energies according to peak position in the core level spectra.
Figure 4 illustrates the 3D AFM images for surface morphology analysis in tapping mode on the HfAlO samples, with a scan area of 1 μm × 1 μm and a resolution of 256 points × 256 lines. For better understanding, both Al2O3 and HfO2 films were also analyzed. The root-mean-square (RMS) and the average roughness (Ra) of the surface in the figures indicate the roughness measurement of the films. It is observed that the surface of the Al2O3 is quite flat and uniform compared to the HfO2 surface. The RMS value for Al2O3 is 55.77 pm while for HfO2, it is 75.55 pm. The HfO2 films with Al incorporated show a smoother surface than the HfO2 film without Al. Among the HfAlO films, sample H (3:3) has the lowest RMS roughness (57.18 pm) while sample F (1:9) has the highest (70.69 pm). The average roughness (Ra) follows the same trend as RMS roughness. The decrease of surface roughness in the HfAlO film compared to the HfO2 film indicates a structural change.
Figure 5 shows the interface trap density and border trap characterization along with an illustration of frequency dispersion. The conductance method was used to calculate the interface traps by measuring the parallel conductance (Gp/ωmax) with series resistance correction [39]. Then, the interface trap density (Dit) was calculated using the following equation:
D i t = 2.5 ( G p / ω ) max A q
Here, A is the electrode area, while q is the elemental electron charge. From Figure 5a, it is evident that Al incorporation helps to passivate the dangling bonds as the HfAlO films showed fewer defects than the pure HfO2 film. Also, the increased Al amount in the HfAlO film provides a better interface as the single Al2O3 showed the lowest Dit value. Moreover, characterization of border traps (Nbt) mainly highlights the accumulation frequency dispersion rather than hysteresis width. It has been reported that border traps are only probed by accumulation frequency dispersion around a solitary energy level at the maximum accumulation bias voltage based on the assumption of spatial distribution of traps inside the oxide; in contrast, border traps with energy levels below the fermi energy at the maximum bias voltage are filled during C–V hysteresis measurements, and these traps are at such distances that they do not re-emit the captured charges during the reverse sweep hysteresis analysis [25]. The frequency dispersions shown in the inset of Figure 5b are calculated according to the following equation:
% D i s p = ( C low C high ) C high log ( ω high ω low )
Here, Clow is the capacitance value at ωlow, which is 10 kHz, while Chigh is for a ωhigh value of 1 MHz. The border traps were extracted using the distributive border trap model suggested by Yuan et al. [40]. Specifically, we determined the best fit among the measured capacitance and the model capacitance value obtained by numerically solving the following equation:
d y d x = Y 2 j ω ε o x + q 2 N b t ln ( 1 + j ω τ ) τ
The above equation has a boundary condition Y = j ω C s at x = 0, where Y is the total admittance at any distance x from the oxide–semiconductor interface, ω is the angular ac frequency, and Cs is the semiconductor capacitance at any surface potential ψs. Nbt is the volume concentration of oxide border traps at a distance x from the oxide–semiconductor interface at any energy level, and τ is the average time constant for electron capturing. The effective electron masses of the Al2O3, HfO2, and HfAlO films were 0.23 m0, 0.22 m0, and 0.18 m0, respectively, where m0 is the electron mass at rest [25,41]. The semiconductor capacitance Cs was measured at the extraction voltage of border traps by the one-dimensional Poisson-Schrodinger solver simulation tool (Nextnano) [42]. From the figure, it is evident that incorporation of Al into HfO2 reduces the traps inside the dielectric by filling it with TMA atoms, as discussed earlier, which is depicted in the frequency dispersion and border trap comparison curves, where both were calculated at 2V. Here also, the HfAlO alloy with the same apparent composition showed some differences, while single Al2O3 and HfO2 occupy the extreme points of the border traps at 2.35 × 1019 cm−3 ev−1 and 1.35 × 1020 cm−3 ev−1, respectively. All HfAlO alloys are within the boundaries set by the pure components.
Figure 6 shows the leakage current densities and breakdown voltage characteristics of HfAlO alloy films with Al2O3 and HfO2 films after applying a positive bias voltage. The HfO2 film showed a two-order-higher leakage current and the lowest breakdown voltage of 4.8 MV/cm (located around 2.43 V). Single Al2O3 showed a leakage current in the 10−11 A/cm2 range and a breakdown voltage around 8.2 MV/cm. It is evident that Al incorporation into HfO2 reduced the leakage current and increased the breakdown voltage by providing a defect-free dielectric (as discussed earlier), greater dangling bond passivation, and increased band gap. Here, sample B [1,1] and sample H [3:3] showed higher breakdown voltages as they have higher thicknesses and greater Al content based on deposition cycle design.

4. Conclusions

The behavior of the HfAlO alloy with respect to the Al: Hf ratio was verified, along with that of the single Al2O3 and HfO2 stacks. Lower Al incorporation increased the dielectric constant of HfO2 film though phase transition, while relative permittivity decreased with an increasing Al2O3 amount. Furthermore, leakage current decreased with breakdown voltage augmentation by Al2O3 assimilation since it provides better trap minimization and a bandgap increase for the pure HfO2 film. Both the border trap and interface traps were better minimized with an increased amount of Al2O3 in the HfAlO alloy, and a similar trend was observed in hysteresis and frequency dispersion analyses. In almost all cases, the HfAlO alloy showed behavior within the range set by single Al2O3 and HfO2 films.

Author Contributions

M.M.R. conducted most of the experiments and wrote the manuscript including preparing figures; J.-G.K. assisted with capacitor fabrication, metal deposition and electrical characterization; D.-H.K. supervised the work and reviewed the manuscript; T.-W.K. initiated the work, provided the main idea, and supervised the entire process. All authors analyzed and discussed the results.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korea government (MSIP; Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning, NRF-2019R1A2C1009816) and Nano-Material Technology Development Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (2009-0082580).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Khandelwal, A.; Niimi, H.; Lucovsky, G.; Lamb, H.H. Low-temperature Ar/N2 remote plasma nitridation of SiO2 thin films. J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 2002, 20, 1989–1996. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Muller, D.A.; Sorsch, T.; Moccio, S.; Baumann, F.H.; Lutterodt, K.E.; Timp, G. The electronic structure at the atomic scale of ultrathin gate oxides. Nature 1999, 399, 758–761. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Ho, M.-Y.; Gong, H.; Wilk, G.D.; Busch, B.W.; Green, M.L.; Lin, W.H.; See, A.; Lahiri, S.K.; Loomans, M.E.; Räisänen, P.I.; et al. Suppressed crystallization of Hf-based gate dielectrics by controlled addition of Al2O3 using atomic layer deposition. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2002, 81, 4218–4220. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Copel, M.; Gribelyuk, M.; Gusev, E. Structure and stability of ultrathin zirconium oxide layers on Si(001). Appl. Phys. Lett. 2000, 76, 436–438. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Clark, R. Emerging Applications for High K Materials in VLSI Technology. Materials 2014, 7, 2913–2944. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Croizier, G.; Martins, P.; Le Baillif, M.; Aubry, R.; Bansropun, S.; Fryziel, M.; Rolland, N.; Ziaei, A. Advantages of ALD over evaporation deposition for high-k materials integration in high power capacitive RF MEMS. In Proceedings of the 19th International Conference on Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems (TRANSDUCERS), Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 18–22 June 2017; pp. 1237–1240. [Google Scholar]
  7. Mackus, A.J.M.; Schneider, J.R.; MacIsaac, C.; Baker, J.G.; Bent, S.F. Synthesis of Doped, Ternary, and Quaternary Materials by Atomic Layer Deposition: A Review. Chem. Mater. 2019, 31, 1142–1183. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Knoops, H.C.M.; Faraz, T.; Arts, K.; Kessels, W.M.M. (Erwin) Status and prospects of plasma-assisted atomic layer deposition. J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 2019, 37, 030902. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Oviroh, P.O.; Akbarzadeh, R.; Pan, D.; Coetzee, R.A.M.; Jen, T.C. New development of atomic layer deposition: Processes, methods and applications. Sci. Technol. Adv. Mater. 2019, 20, 465–496. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Shim, J.H.; Choi, H.J.; Kim, Y.; Torgersen, J.; An, J.; Lee, M.H.; Prinz, F.B. Process–property relationship in high-k ALD SrTiO3 and BaTiO3: A review. J. Mater. Chem. C 2017, 5, 8000–8013. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Choi, J.S.; Park, J.G. Effect of NH3 Plasma Passivation on the Electrical Characteristics of a Nanolaminated ALD HfAlO on InGaAs MOS Capacitor. J. Korean Phys. Soc. 2015, 66, 1885–1888. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Koo, J.; Lee, J.; Kim, S.; Kim, Y.D.; Jeon, H.; Kim, D.; Kim, Y. Characteristics of Hafnium-Aluminum-Oxide Thin Films Deposited by Using Atomic Layer Deposition with Various Aluminum Compositions. J. Korean Phys. Soc. 2005, 47, 501–507. [Google Scholar]
  13. Park, P.K.; Kang, S. Enhancement of dielectric constant in HfO2 thin films by the addition of Al2O3. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2006, 89, 192905. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  14. He, G.; Sun, Z.; Li, G.; Zhang, L. Review and Perspective of Hf-based High-k Gate Dielectrics on Silicon Review and Perspective of Hf-based High- k Gate Dielectrics on Silicon. Crit. Rev. Solid State Mater. Sci. 2012, 37, 131–157. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Bhuyian, M.N.U.; Misra, D. Multilayered ALD HfAlOx and HfO2 for High-Quality Gate Stacks. IEEE Trans. Device Mater. Reliab. 2015, 15, 229–235. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Chiou, Y.; Chang, C.; Wang, C.; Lee, K.; Wu, T.; Kwo, R.; Hong, M. Effect of Al Incorporation in the Thermal Stability of Atomic-Layer-Deposited HfO2 for Gate Dielectric Applications. J. Electrochem. Soc. 2007, 154, G99–G102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Yu, H.Y.; Li, M.F.; Cho, B.J.; Yeo, C.C.; Joo, M.S.; Kwong, D.-L.; Pan, J.S.; Ang, C.H.; Zheng, J.Z.; Ramanathan, S. Energy gap and band alignment for (HfO2)x(Al2O3)1−x on (100) Si. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2002, 81, 376–378. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Park, T.J.; Kim, J.H.; Jang, J.H.; Lee, C.-K.; Na, K.D.; Lee, S.Y.; Jung, H.; Kim, M.; Han, S.; Hwang, C.S. Reduction of Electrical Defects in Atomic Layer Deposited HfO2 Films by Al Doping. Chem. Mater. 2010, 22, 4175–4184. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Ding, Y.M.; Misra, D. Oxide structure-dependent interfacial layer defects of HfAlO/SiO2/Si stack analyzed by conductance method. J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 2015, 33, 021203. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Lu, B.; Lv, H.; Zhang, Y.; Zhang, Y.; Liu, C. Comparison of HfAlO, HfO2/Al2O3, and HfO2 on n-type GaAs using atomic layer deposition. Superlattices Microstruct. 2016, 99, 54–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Fleetwood, D.M. “Border Traps” in MOS Devices. IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 1992, 39, 269–271. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Gan, J. Extraction of Border Trap Density in InAs Nanowire Transistors. Master’s Thesis, Lund University, Lund, Sweden, 2012. [Google Scholar]
  23. Fleetwood, D.M. Border traps and bias-temperature instabilities in MOS devices. Microelectron. Reliab. 2018, 80, 266–277. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Lu, H.-H.; Xu, J.-P.; Liu, L.; Lai, P.-T.; Tang, W.-M. Equivalent distributed capacitance model of oxide traps on frequency dispersion of C–V curve for MOS capacitors. Chin. Phys. B 2016, 25, 118502. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Lin, J.; Monaghan, S.; Cherkaoui, K.; Povey, I.M.; Sheehan, B.; Hurley, P.K. Examining the relationship between capacitance-voltage hysteresis and accumulation frequency dispersion in InGaAs metal-oxidesemiconductor structures based on the response to post-metal annealing. Microelectron. Eng. 2017, 178, 204–208. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Zhu, W.J.; Tamagawa, T.; Gibson, M.; Furukawa, T.; Ma, T.P. Effect of Al inclusion in HfO2 on the physical and electrical properties of the dielectrics. IEEE Electron Device Lett. 2002, 23, 649–651. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Chang, C.-Y.; Ichikawa, O.; Osada, T.; Hata, M.; Yamada, H.; Takenaka, M.; Takagi, S. Impact of La2O3 interfacial layers on InGaAs metal-oxide-semiconductor interface properties in Al2O3/La2O3/InGaAs gate stacks deposited by atomic-layer-deposition. J. Appl. Phys. 2015, 118, 085309. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Huang, A.; Zheng, X.; Xiao, Z.; Wang, M.; Di, Z.; Chu, P.K. Interface dipole engineering in metal gate/highk stacks. Chin. Sci. Bull. 2012, 57, 2872–2878. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Fan, J.-B.; Liu, H.-X.; Ma, F.; Zhuo, Q.-Q.; Hao, Y. Influences of different oxidants on the characteristics of HfAlOx films deposited by atomic layer deposition. Chin. Phys. B 2013, 22, 027702. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Lee, C.-K.; Cho, E.; Lee, H.; Hwang, C.S.; Han, S. First-principles study on doping and phase stability of HfO2. Phys. Rev. B 2008, 78, 012102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Zheng, L.; Cheng, X.; Yu, Y.; Xie, Y.; Li, X.; Wang, Z. Controlled direct growth of Al2O3-doped HfO2 films on graphene by H2O-based atomic layer deposition. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2015, 17, 3179–3185. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  32. Hota, M.K.; Mahata, C.; Sarkar, C.K.; Maiti, C.K. High Density MIM Capacitors Using HfAlOx. ECS Trans. 2009, 25, 201–207. [Google Scholar]
  33. He, G.; Liu, M.; Zhu, L.Q.; Chang, M.; Fang, Q.; Zhang, L.D. Effect of postdeposition annealing on the thermal stability and structural characteristics of sputtered HfO2 films on Si (100). Surf. Sci. 2005, 576, 67–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Cho, M.-H.; Chang, H.S.; Moon, D.W.; Kang, S.K.; Min, B.K.; Ko, D.-H.; Kim, H.S.; McIntyre, P.C.; Lee, J.H.; Ku, J.H.; et al. Interfacial characteristics of HfO2 films grown on strained Si0.7Ge0.3 by atomic-layer deposition. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2004, 84, 1171–1173. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Cho, M.-H.; Moon, D.W.; Park, S.A.; Kim, Y.K.; Jeong, K.; Kang, S.K.; Ko, D.-H.; Doh, S.J.; Lee, J.H.; Lee, N.I. Interfacial characteristics of N-incorporated HfAlO high-k thin films. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2004, 84, 5243–5245. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. He, G.; Zhang, L.D.; Meng, G.W.; Li, G.H.; Fang, Q.; Zhang, J.P. Temperature-dependent structural stability and optical properties of ultrathin Hf–Al–O films grown by facing-target reactive sputtering. J. Appl. Phys. 2007, 102, 094103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Suri, R.; Kirkpatrick, C.J.; Lichtenwalner, D.J.; Misra, V. Energy-band alignment of Al2O3 and HfAlO gate dielectrics deposited by atomic layer deposition on 4H–SiC. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2010, 96, 042903. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Mallik, S.; Mahata, C.; Hota, M.K.; Dalapati, G.K.; Chi, D.Z.; Sarkar, C.K.; Maiti, C.K. HfAlOx high-k gate dielectric on SiGe: Interfacial reaction, energy-band alignment, and charge trapping properties. Microelectron. Eng. 2010, 87, 2234–2240. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Nicollian, E.H.; Goetzberger, A. The Si-SiO2 Interface—Electrical Properties as Determined by the Metal-Insulator-Silicon Conductance Technique. Bell Syst. Tech. J. 1967, 46, 1055–1133. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Yuan, Y.; Wang, L.; Yu, B.; Shin, B.; Ahn, J.; McIntyre, P.C.; Asbeck, P.M.; Rodwell, M.J.W.; Taur, Y. A Distributed Model for Border Traps in Al2O3—InGaAs MOS Devices. IEEE Electron Device Lett. 2011, 32, 485–487. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Hou, Y.T.; Li, M.F.; Yu, H.Y.; Kwong, D.-L. Modeling of Tunneling Currents Through HfO2 and (HfO2)x(Al2O3)1-x Gate Stacks. IEEE Electron Device Lett. 2003, 24, 96–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Birner, S. The Nextnano Software for the Simulation of Semiconductor Heterostructures. Available online: https://www.nextnano.de/downloads/publications/abstracts/Abstract_TopologicalNanodeviceModeling_2014_Delft_Birner.pdf (accessed on 15 March 2019).
Figure 1. (a) Capacitance–voltage (C–V) behavior of the HfAlO MOS capacitors with single Al2O3 and HfO2 ones at 1 MHz frequency. (b) Multifrequency (10 kHz–1 MHz) capacitance–voltage (C–V) response of all deposition cases. (c) Extracted dielectric constant (k) and equivalent-oxide-thickness (EOT) values for all reported splits.
Figure 1. (a) Capacitance–voltage (C–V) behavior of the HfAlO MOS capacitors with single Al2O3 and HfO2 ones at 1 MHz frequency. (b) Multifrequency (10 kHz–1 MHz) capacitance–voltage (C–V) response of all deposition cases. (c) Extracted dielectric constant (k) and equivalent-oxide-thickness (EOT) values for all reported splits.
Micromachines 10 00361 g001
Figure 2. (a) Comparison of measured C-V hysteresis of Al/HfAlO/Si MOSCAPs with varying Al content (0–100%) at 1 MHz frequency. (b) Surface trapped charge density (from C–V hysteresis) of Al/HfAlO/Si MOSCAPs according to Al2O3 and HfO2 intermixing ratio.
Figure 2. (a) Comparison of measured C-V hysteresis of Al/HfAlO/Si MOSCAPs with varying Al content (0–100%) at 1 MHz frequency. (b) Surface trapped charge density (from C–V hysteresis) of Al/HfAlO/Si MOSCAPs according to Al2O3 and HfO2 intermixing ratio.
Micromachines 10 00361 g002
Figure 3. Hf-4f, Al-2p, and O-1s XPS core level spectra: (ac) sample G (Al: Hf = 2:6) and (df) sample E (Al: Hf = 1:9).
Figure 3. Hf-4f, Al-2p, and O-1s XPS core level spectra: (ac) sample G (Al: Hf = 2:6) and (df) sample E (Al: Hf = 1:9).
Micromachines 10 00361 g003
Figure 4. 3D AFM images for the HfAlO samples, along with Al2O3 and HfO2 stacks. AL incorporation into HfO2 provides a smoother surface.
Figure 4. 3D AFM images for the HfAlO samples, along with Al2O3 and HfO2 stacks. AL incorporation into HfO2 provides a smoother surface.
Micromachines 10 00361 g004
Figure 5. Trap characterization of HfAlO films with different Hf concentrations assumed by atomic-layer-deposition (ALD) cycle ratio: (a) interface trap density (Dit) and (b) border tap density (Nbt). Inset: frequency dispersion of accumulation capacitance at an applied bias of 2 V.
Figure 5. Trap characterization of HfAlO films with different Hf concentrations assumed by atomic-layer-deposition (ALD) cycle ratio: (a) interface trap density (Dit) and (b) border tap density (Nbt). Inset: frequency dispersion of accumulation capacitance at an applied bias of 2 V.
Micromachines 10 00361 g005
Figure 6. Leakage current density and breakdown voltage measurements under applied positive bias voltage for all the MOS capacitors.
Figure 6. Leakage current density and breakdown voltage measurements under applied positive bias voltage for all the MOS capacitors.
Micromachines 10 00361 g006
Table 1. Supercycle design summary for formation of HfAlO alloy along with deposited physical thickness.
Table 1. Supercycle design summary for formation of HfAlO alloy along with deposited physical thickness.
Samples ID (m,n)Al2O3 (m)HfO2 (n)Number of Super Cycles (x)Thickness (nm)Standard Deviation (nm)
A (1,0) [Al2O3]10505.8670.125
B (1,1)11256.7150.040
C (1,2)12175.8250.063
D (1,3)13135.7220.095
E (1,4)14105.6260.101
F (1,9)1955.1700.043
G (2,6)2676.7100.022
H (3,3)3397.3630.093
I (0,1) [HfO2]01505.1000.089
Table 2. The binding energies of different bonds according to peak position.
Table 2. The binding energies of different bonds according to peak position.
Samples IDAl-O [Al-2p] (eV)Hf-O [4f7/2; 4f5/2] (eV)Hf-Al-O [Al-2p; O-1s] (eV)C-O [Al-2p; O-1s] (eV)
G (2,6)74.8817.52; 18.974.42; 530.78531.68
F (1,9)74.7217.4;18.6574.3; 530.68531.6

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Rahman, M.M.; Kim, J.-G.; Kim, D.-H.; Kim, T.-W. Characterization of Al Incorporation into HfO2 Dielectric by Atomic Layer Deposition. Micromachines 2019, 10, 361. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10060361

AMA Style

Rahman MM, Kim J-G, Kim D-H, Kim T-W. Characterization of Al Incorporation into HfO2 Dielectric by Atomic Layer Deposition. Micromachines. 2019; 10(6):361. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10060361

Chicago/Turabian Style

Rahman, Md. Mamunur, Jun-Gyu Kim, Dae-Hyun Kim, and Tae-Woo Kim. 2019. "Characterization of Al Incorporation into HfO2 Dielectric by Atomic Layer Deposition" Micromachines 10, no. 6: 361. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10060361

APA Style

Rahman, M. M., Kim, J. -G., Kim, D. -H., & Kim, T. -W. (2019). Characterization of Al Incorporation into HfO2 Dielectric by Atomic Layer Deposition. Micromachines, 10(6), 361. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10060361

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop