4.6 Article

Random telegraph signal noise mechanisms in reverse base current of hot carrier-degraded submicron bipolar transistors: Effect of carrier trapping during stress on noise characteristics

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 89, Issue 7, Pages 4049-4058

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.1352560

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We investigate physical mechanisms of random telegraph signal (RTS) noise in reverse base current of hot carrier-degraded polysilicon emitter bipolar junction transistors. RTS noise, analyzed in the time domain, is studied as a function of reverse base-emitter bias, temperature, and additional reverse-bias stress. Two-level RTS with a relative amplitude as high as 100% is observed at room temperature. The RTS amplitude varies exponentially with the applied reverse base-emitter voltage and depends weakly on temperature. The additional hot carrier stress is observed to induce changes in RTS amplitude and mean pulse widths (independent or correlated), and a disappearance/reappearance of the RTS fluctuations. The results are interpreted by a model where the RTS noise is caused by fluctuations of generation-recombination (g-r) parameters (i.e., capture cross sections and energy position in the gap) of a stress-induced complex bistable defect (CBD) at the Si/SiO2 interface. The complex defect is assumed to be either a two-state fast interface state or an interacting pair of a fast interface state with a slow neighboring border trap. The RTS amplitude is well explained by fluctuations in a single-defect electric-field-enhanced g-r rate between a finite value and naught. The RTS amplitude-bias characteristics and their temperature dependence are satisfactorily accounted for by an expression for a phonon-assisted tunneling current via a single deep-level state. The model parameters are the g-r parameters of the defect and its spatial position in the base-emitter p-n junction. The stress-induced changes in the RTS noise are attributed to the influence of log-time trapping of hot carriers on border states laying in the vicinity of a CBD center. The charged border traps interact with a CBD, changing both its g-r parameters and the RTS switching behavior. The variations in RTS parameters are related to the microscopic nature of the interaction and are discussed for the two types of the CBDs. (C) 2001 American Institute of Physics.

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