4.7 Article

Insight into over Repair of Hot Carrier Degradation by GIDL Current in Si p-FinFETs Using Ultra-Fast Measurement Technique

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano13071259

Keywords

reliability; hot carrier degradation (HCD); Si p-FinFETs; gate-induced drain leakage (GIDL); recovery; oxide trap generation; energy distribution

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In this article, an experimental study was conducted on the gate-induced drain leakage (GIDL) current repairing worst hot carrier degradation (HCD) in Si p-FinFETs using an ultra-fast measurement (UFM) technique. It was found that increasing the GIDL bias from 3 V to 4 V achieved a 114.7% V-T recovery ratio from HCD. The over-repair phenomenon of HCD by UFM GIDL was discussed through oxide trap behaviors. The results provide insights into the transistor repairing technique and its implications for the reliable operation of ICs.
In this article, an experimental study on the gate-induced drain leakage (GIDL) current repairing worst hot carrier degradation (HCD) in Si p-FinFETs is investigated with the aid of an ultra-fast measurement (UFM) technique (similar to 30 mu s). It is found that increasing GIDL bias from 3 V to 4 V achieves a 114.7% V-T recovery ratio from HCD. This over-repair phenomenon of HCD by UFM GIDL is deeply discussed through oxide trap behaviors. When the applied gate-to-drain GIDL bias reaches 4 V, a significant electron trapping and interface trap generation of the fresh device with GIDL repair is observed, which greatly contributes to the approximate 114.7% over-repair V-T ratio of the device under worst HCD stress (-2.0 V, 200 s). Based on the TCAD simulation results, the increase in the vertical electric field on the surface of the channel oxide layer is the direct cause of an extraordinary electron trapping effect accompanied by the over-repair phenomenon. Under a high positive electric field, a part of channel electrons is captured by oxide traps in the gate dielectric, leading to further V-T recovery. Through the discharge-based multi-pulse (DMP) technique, the energy distribution of oxide traps after GIDL recovery is obtained. It is found that over-repair results in a 34% increment in oxide traps around the conduction energy band (E-c) of silicon, which corresponds to a higher stabilized V-T shift under multi-cycle HCD-GIDL tests. The results provide a trap-based understanding of the transistor repairing technique, which could provide guidance for the reliable long-term operation of ICs.

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