1. Nitridation of the SiO2/SiC Interface by N+ Implantation: Hall versus Field Effect Mobility in n-Channel Planar 4H-SiC MOSFETs
- Author
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Luca Belsito, Francesco Moscatelli, Antonella Poggi, Aldo Armigliato, Sandro Solmi, and Roberta Nipoti
- Subjects
Thermal oxidation ,Electron mobility ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Reverse short-channel effect ,Mechanical Engineering ,Electrical engineering ,Field effect ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Threshold voltage ,Mechanics of Materials ,Gate oxide ,Hall effect ,MOSFET ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,business - Abstract
In this paper the electrical and structural characteristics of n-MOSFETs fabricated on 4H SiC with a process based on nitrogen (N) implantation in the channel region before the growth of the gate oxide are reported for low (5x1018 cm-3) and high (6x1019 cm-3) N concentration at the SiO2/SiC interface. The electron mobility and the free carrier concentration in the MOSFET channel were evaluated by Hall effect measurement. The MOSFETs with the higher N concentration had the best electrical characteristics in terms of threshold voltage and field effect mobility, in spite of a lowering of the electron mobility in the channel. The latter is a negative drawback of the fabrication process that probably can be ascribed to an incomplete recovery of the implantation damage or to a high density of interstitial N atoms present in the channel region. In fact, the MOSFETs with the superior electrical performances were fabricated with the higher N+ dose and the shorter thermal oxidation time. However, no evidence of extended defects, clusters or nano-particles in SiC at the interface with the gate oxide was found in every SiC MOSFETs devices observed by electron transmission microscopy
- Published
- 2010
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