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Microscopic nature of border traps in MOS oxides

Authors :
J.R. Schwank
R. A. B. Devine
William L. Warren
Marty R. Shaneyfelt
P.S. Winokur
Daniel M. Fleetwood
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science. 41:1817-1827
Publication Year :
1994
Publisher :
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 1994.

Abstract

We show that enhanced hole-, electron-, interface-, and border-trap generation in irradiated Si/SiO/sub 2//Si systems that have received a high-temperature anneal during device fabrication is related either directly, or indirectly, to the presence of anneal-created oxygen vacancies. The high-temperature anneal results are shown to be relevant to understanding defect creation in zone-melt-recrystallized silicon on insulator materials. We observe the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) of trap-assisted hole transfer between two different oxygen vacancy-type defects (E'/sub /spl delta///spl rarr/3 E'/sub /spl gamma// precursor) in hole injected thermal SiO/sub 2/ films. Upon annealing the hole injected Si/SiO/sub 2/ structures at room temperature, the E'/sub /spl delta// center transfers its hole to a previously neutral oxygen vacancy (O/sub 3//spl equiv/Si-Si/spl equiv/O/sub 3/) site forming an E'/sub /spl gamma// center. This process, also monitored electrically, shows a concomitant increase in the border-trap density that mimics the growth kinetics of the transfer-activated E'/sub /spl gamma// centers. This suggests that both effects are correlated and that some of the transfer-created E'/sub /spl gamma// centers are the entities responsible for the border traps in these devices. One implication of these results is that delayed defect growth processes can occur via slow trap-assisted hole motion in SiO/sub 2/. >

Details

ISSN :
15581578 and 00189499
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........507d297c99c8d83b1fad453e52b32f31
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/23.340513