2,339 research outputs found

    Closed-loop compensation of charge trapping induced by ionizing radiation in MOS capacitors

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    The objective of this work is to explore the capability of a charge trapping control loop to continuously compensate charge induced by ionizing radiation in the dielectric of MOS capacitors. To this effect, two devices made with silicon oxide have been simultaneously irradiated with gamma radiation: one with constant voltage bias, and the other working under a dielectric charge control. The experiment shows substantial charge trapping in the uncontrolled device whereas, at the same time, the control loop is able to compensate the charge induced by gamma radiation in the second device.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Sigma-Delta control of charge trapping in heterogeneous devices

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    Dielectric charging represents a major reliability issue in a variety of semiconductor devices. The accumulation of charge in dielectric layers of a device often alters its performance, affecting its circuital features and even reducing its effective lifetime. Although several contributions have been made in order to mitigate the undesired effects of charge trapping on circuit performance, dielectric charge trapping still remains an open reliability issue in several applications. The research work underlying this Thesis mainly focuses on the design, analysis and experimental validation of control strategies to compensate dielectric charging in heterogeneous devices. These control methods are based on the application of specifically designed voltage waveforms that produce complementary effects on the charge dynamics. Using sigma-delta loops, these controls allow to set and maintain, within some limits, the net trapped charge in the dielectric to desired levels that can be changed with time. This allows mitigating long-term reliability issues such as capacitance-voltage (C-V) shifts in MOS and MIM capacitors. Additionally, the bit streams generated by the control loops provide real-time information on the evolution of the trapped charge. The proposed controls also allow compensating the effects of the charge trapping due to external disturbances such as radiation. This has been demonstrated experimentally with MOS capacitors subjected to various types of ionizing radiation (X-rays and gamma rays) while a charge control is being applied. This approach opens up the possibility of establishing techniques for active compensation of radiation-induced charge in MOS structures as well as a new strategy for radiation sensing. A modeling strategy to characterize the dynamics of the dielectric charge in MOS capacitors is also presented. The diffusive nature of the charge trapping phenomena allows their behavioral characterization using Diffusive Representation tools. The experiments carried out demonstrate a very good matching between the predictions of the model and the experimental results obtained. The time variations in the charge dynamics due to changes in the volatges applied and/or due to external disturbances have been also investigated and modeled. Moreover, the charge dynamics of MOS capacitors under sigma-delta control is analyzed using the tools of Sliding Mode Controllers for an infinite sampling frequency approximation. A phenomenological analytical model is obtained which allows to predict and analyze the sequence of control signals. This model has been successfully validated with experimental data. Finally, the above control strategies are extended to other devices such as eMIM capacitors and perovskite solar cells. Preliminary results including open loop and closed loop control experiments are presented. These results demonstrate that the application of the controls allows to set and stabilize both the C-V characteristic of an eMIM capacitor and the current-voltage characteristic (J-V) of a perovskite solar cell.La carga atrapada en dieléctricos suele implicar un problema importante de fiabilidad en muchos dispositivos semiconductores. La acumulación de dicha carga, normalmente provocada por las tensiones aplicadas durante el uso del dispositivo, suele alterar el rendimiento de éste con el tiempo, afectar sus prestaciones a nivel de circuital e, incluso, reducir su vida útil. Aunque durante años se han realizado muchos trabajos para mitigar sus efectos no deseados, sobre todo a nivel circuital, la carga atrapada en dieléctricos sigue siendo un problema abierto que frena la aplicabilidad práctica de algunos dispositivos. El trabajo de investigación realizado en esta Tesis se centra principalmente en el diseño, análisis y validación experimental de estrategias de control para compensar la carga atrapada en dieléctricos de diversos tipos de dispositivos, incluyendo condensadores MOS, condensadores MIM fabricados con nanotecnología y dispositivos basados en perovskitas. Los controles propuestos se basan en utilizar formas de onda de tensión, específicamente diseñadas, que producen efectos complementarios en la dinámica de la carga. Mediante el uso de lazos sigma-delta, estos controles permiten establecer y mantener, dentro de unos límites, la carga neta atrapada en el dieléctrico a valores prefijados, que pueden cambiarse con el tiempo. Esto permite mitigar problemas de fiabilidad a largo plazo como por ejemplo las derivas de la curva capacidad-tensión (C-V) en condensadores MOS y MIM. Adicionalmente, las tramas de bits generadas por los lazos de control proporcionan información en tiempo real sobre la evolución de la carga. Los controles propuestos permiten también compensar los efectos de la carga atrapada en dieléctricos debida a perturbaciones externas como la radiación. Esto se ha demostrado experimentalmente con condesadores MOS sometidos a diversos tipos de radiación ionizante (rayos X y gamma) mientras se les aplicaba un control de carga. Este resultado abre la posibilidad tanto de establecer técnicas de compensación activa de carga inducida por radiación en estructuras MOS, como una nueva estrategia de sensado de radiación. Se presenta también una estrategia de modelado para caracterizar la dinámica de la carga dieléctrica en condensadores MOS. La naturaleza difusiva de los fenómenos de captura y eliminación de carga en dieléctricos permite caracterizar dichos fenómenos empleando herramientas de Representación Difusiva. Los experimentos realizados demuestran una muy buena correspondencia entre las predicciones del modelo y los resultados experimentales obtenidos. Se muestra también como las variaciones temporales de los modelos son debidas a cambios en las formas de onda de actuación del dispositivo y/o a perturbaciones externas. Además, la dinámica de carga en condensadores MOS bajo control sigma-delta se analiza utilizando herramientas de control en modo deslizante (SMC), considerando la aproximación de frecuencia de muestreo infinita. Con ello se obtiene un modelo analítico simplificado que permite predecir y analizar con éxito la secuencia de señales de control. Este modelo se ha validado satisfactoriamente con datos experimentales. Finalmente, las estrategias de control anteriores se han extendido a otros dispositivos susceptibles de sufrir efectos de carga atrapada que pueden afectar su fiabilidad. Así, se han llevado a cabo experimentos preliminares cuyos resultados demuestran que la aplicación de controles de carga permite controlar y estabilizar la característica C-V de un condensador eMIM y la característica corriente-tensión (J-V) de una célula solar basada en perovskitas

    Sigma-Delta control of charge trapping in heterogeneous devices

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    Dielectric charging represents a major reliability issue in a variety of semiconductor devices. The accumulation of charge in dielectric layers of a device often alters its performance, affecting its circuital features and even reducing its effective lifetime. Although several contributions have been made in order to mitigate the undesired effects of charge trapping on circuit performance, dielectric charge trapping still remains an open reliability issue in several applications. The research work underlying this Thesis mainly focuses on the design, analysis and experimental validation of control strategies to compensate dielectric charging in heterogeneous devices. These control methods are based on the application of specifically designed voltage waveforms that produce complementary effects on the charge dynamics. Using sigma-delta loops, these controls allow to set and maintain, within some limits, the net trapped charge in the dielectric to desired levels that can be changed with time. This allows mitigating long-term reliability issues such as capacitance-voltage (C-V) shifts in MOS and MIM capacitors. Additionally, the bit streams generated by the control loops provide real-time information on the evolution of the trapped charge. The proposed controls also allow compensating the effects of the charge trapping due to external disturbances such as radiation. This has been demonstrated experimentally with MOS capacitors subjected to various types of ionizing radiation (X-rays and gamma rays) while a charge control is being applied. This approach opens up the possibility of establishing techniques for active compensation of radiation-induced charge in MOS structures as well as a new strategy for radiation sensing. A modeling strategy to characterize the dynamics of the dielectric charge in MOS capacitors is also presented. The diffusive nature of the charge trapping phenomena allows their behavioral characterization using Diffusive Representation tools. The experiments carried out demonstrate a very good matching between the predictions of the model and the experimental results obtained. The time variations in the charge dynamics due to changes in the volatges applied and/or due to external disturbances have been also investigated and modeled. Moreover, the charge dynamics of MOS capacitors under sigma-delta control is analyzed using the tools of Sliding Mode Controllers for an infinite sampling frequency approximation. A phenomenological analytical model is obtained which allows to predict and analyze the sequence of control signals. This model has been successfully validated with experimental data. Finally, the above control strategies are extended to other devices such as eMIM capacitors and perovskite solar cells. Preliminary results including open loop and closed loop control experiments are presented. These results demonstrate that the application of the controls allows to set and stabilize both the C-V characteristic of an eMIM capacitor and the current-voltage characteristic (J-V) of a perovskite solar cell.La carga atrapada en dieléctricos suele implicar un problema importante de fiabilidad en muchos dispositivos semiconductores. La acumulación de dicha carga, normalmente provocada por las tensiones aplicadas durante el uso del dispositivo, suele alterar el rendimiento de éste con el tiempo, afectar sus prestaciones a nivel de circuital e, incluso, reducir su vida útil. Aunque durante años se han realizado muchos trabajos para mitigar sus efectos no deseados, sobre todo a nivel circuital, la carga atrapada en dieléctricos sigue siendo un problema abierto que frena la aplicabilidad práctica de algunos dispositivos. El trabajo de investigación realizado en esta Tesis se centra principalmente en el diseño, análisis y validación experimental de estrategias de control para compensar la carga atrapada en dieléctricos de diversos tipos de dispositivos, incluyendo condensadores MOS, condensadores MIM fabricados con nanotecnología y dispositivos basados en perovskitas. Los controles propuestos se basan en utilizar formas de onda de tensión, específicamente diseñadas, que producen efectos complementarios en la dinámica de la carga. Mediante el uso de lazos sigma-delta, estos controles permiten establecer y mantener, dentro de unos límites, la carga neta atrapada en el dieléctrico a valores prefijados, que pueden cambiarse con el tiempo. Esto permite mitigar problemas de fiabilidad a largo plazo como por ejemplo las derivas de la curva capacidad-tensión (C-V) en condensadores MOS y MIM. Adicionalmente, las tramas de bits generadas por los lazos de control proporcionan información en tiempo real sobre la evolución de la carga. Los controles propuestos permiten también compensar los efectos de la carga atrapada en dieléctricos debida a perturbaciones externas como la radiación. Esto se ha demostrado experimentalmente con condesadores MOS sometidos a diversos tipos de radiación ionizante (rayos X y gamma) mientras se les aplicaba un control de carga. Este resultado abre la posibilidad tanto de establecer técnicas de compensación activa de carga inducida por radiación en estructuras MOS, como una nueva estrategia de sensado de radiación. Se presenta también una estrategia de modelado para caracterizar la dinámica de la carga dieléctrica en condensadores MOS. La naturaleza difusiva de los fenómenos de captura y eliminación de carga en dieléctricos permite caracterizar dichos fenómenos empleando herramientas de Representación Difusiva. Los experimentos realizados demuestran una muy buena correspondencia entre las predicciones del modelo y los resultados experimentales obtenidos. Se muestra también como las variaciones temporales de los modelos son debidas a cambios en las formas de onda de actuación del dispositivo y/o a perturbaciones externas. Además, la dinámica de carga en condensadores MOS bajo control sigma-delta se analiza utilizando herramientas de control en modo deslizante (SMC), considerando la aproximación de frecuencia de muestreo infinita. Con ello se obtiene un modelo analítico simplificado que permite predecir y analizar con éxito la secuencia de señales de control. Este modelo se ha validado satisfactoriamente con datos experimentales. Finalmente, las estrategias de control anteriores se han extendido a otros dispositivos susceptibles de sufrir efectos de carga atrapada que pueden afectar su fiabilidad. Así, se han llevado a cabo experimentos preliminares cuyos resultados demuestran que la aplicación de controles de carga permite controlar y estabilizar la característica C-V de un condensador eMIM y la característica corriente-tensión (J-V) de una célula solar basada en perovskitas.Postprint (published version

    MIS capacitor studies on silicon carbide single crystals

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    Cubic SIC metal-insulator-semiconductor (MIS) capacitors with thermally grown or chemical-vapor-deposited (CVD) insulators were characterized by capacitance-voltage (C-V), conductance-voltage (G-V), and current-voltage (I-V) measurements. The purpose of these measurements was to determine the four charge densities commonly present in an MIS capacitor (oxide fixed charge, N(f); interface trap level density, D(it); oxide trapped charge, N(ot); and mobile ionic charge, N(m)) and to determine the stability of the device properties with electric-field stress and temperature. The section headings in the report include the following: Capacitance-voltage and conductance-voltage measurements; Current-voltage measurements; Deep-level transient spectroscopy; and Conclusions (Electrical characteristics of SiC MIS capacitors)

    OXIDATION OF SILICON - THE VLSI GATE DIELECTRIC

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    Silicon dominates the semiconductor industry for good reasons. One factor is the stable, easily formed, insulating oxide, which aids high performance and allows practical processing. How well can these virtues survive as new demands are made on integrity, on smallness of feature sizes and other dimensions, and on constraints on processing and manufacturing methods? These demands make it critical to identify, quantify and predict the key controlling growth and defect processes on an atomic scale.The combination of theory and novel experiments (isotope methods, electronic noise, spin resonance, pulsed laser atom probes and other desorption methods, and especially scanning tunnelling or atomic force microscopies) provide tools whose impact on models is just being appreciated. We discuss the current unified model for silicon oxidation, which goes beyond the traditional descriptions of kinetic and ellipsometric data by explicitly addressing the issues raised in isotope experiments. The framework is still the Deal-Grove model, which provides a phenomenology to describe the major regimes of behaviour, and gives a base from which the substantial deviations can be characterized. In this model, growth is limited by diffusion and interfacial reactions operating in series. The deviations from Deal-Grove are most significant for just those first tens of atomic layers of oxide which are critical for the ultra-thin oxide layers now demanded. Several features emerge as important. First is the role of stress and stress relaxation. Second is the nature of the oxide closest to the Si, both its defects and its differences from the amorphous stoichiometric oxide further out, whether in composition, in network topology, or otherwise. Thirdly, we must consider the charge states of both fixed and mobile species. In thin films with very different dielectric constants, image terms can be important; these terms affect interpretation of spectroscopies, the injection of oxidant species and relative defect stabilities. This has added importance now that P-b concentrations have been correlated with interfacial stress. This raises further issues about the perfection of the oxide random network and the incorporation of interstitial species like molecular oxygen.Finally, the roles of contamination, particles, metals, hydrocarbons etc are important, as is interface roughness. These features depend on pre-gate oxide cleaning and define the Si surface that is to be oxidized which may have an influence on the features listed above

    Study of X-ray Radiation Damage in Silicon Sensors

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    The European X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) will deliver 30,000 fully coherent, high brilliance X-ray pulses per second each with a duration below 100 fs. This will allow the recording of diffraction patterns of single complex molecules and the study of ultra-fast processes. Silicon pixel sensors will be used to record the diffraction images. In 3 years of operation the sensors will be exposed to doses of up to 1 GGy of 12 keV X-rays. At this X-ray energy no bulk damage in silicon is expected. However fixed oxide charges in the insulating layer covering the silicon and interface traps at the Si-SiO2 interface will be introduced by the irradiation and build up over time. We have investigated the microscopic defects in test structures and the macroscopic electrical properties of segmented detectors as a function of the X-ray dose. From the test structures we determine the oxide charge density and the densities of interface traps as a function of dose. We find that both saturate (and even decrease) for doses between 10 and 100 MGy. For segmented sensors the defects introduced by the X-rays increase the full depletion voltage, the surface leakage current and the inter-pixel capacitance. We observe that an electron accumulation layer forms at the Si-SiO2 interface. Its width increases with dose and decreases with applied bias voltage. Using TCAD simulations with the dose dependent parameters obtained from the test structures, we are able to reproduce the observed results. This allows us to optimize the sensor design for the XFEL requirements

    A novel technique of N2O-treatment on NH3-nitrided oxide as gate dielectric for nMOS transistors

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    A novel technique of N2O treatment on NH3-nitrided oxide is used to prepare thin gate oxide. Experiments on MOS capacitors and nMOSFET's with this kind of gate dielectric show that N2O treatment is superior to conventional reoxidation step in suppressing both electron and hole trappings and interface trap creation under high-field stress. Interface hardness against hot-carrier bombardment and neutral electron trap generation are also improved. Thus, N2O treatment on NH3 -nitrided oxide shows excellent electrical and reliability properties, while maintaining sufficiently high nitrogen concentration in gate oxide which offers good resistance to dopant penetration.published_or_final_versio

    Diffusive representation and sliding mode control of charge trapping in Al2O3MOS capacitors

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    © 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.The objective of this paper is to introduce a modeling strategy to characterize the dynamics of the charge trapped in the dielectric of MOS capacitors, using Diffusive Representation. Experimental corroboration is presented with MOS capacitors made of Alumina in three different scenarios. First, the model predictions are compared with the trapped charge evolution due to arbitrary voltage excitation. Second, the predictions are compared with the measurements of a device in which a sigma-delta control of trapped charge is implemented. Finally, the time evolution when the device is simultaneously controlled and irradiated with X-rays is compared with the predictions. In all cases, a good matching between the models and the measurements is obtained.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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