77 research outputs found

    Hafnium Silicate dielectrics fabricated by RF magnetron sputtering.

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    International audienceStructural and composition properties of hafnium silicate layers fabricated by RF magnetron sputtering were studied by means of spectroscopic ellipsometry, X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy and attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy with respect to the deposition parameters and postdeposition annealing treatment. The variation of the deposition conditions allows the temperature of amorphous-crystalline phase transformation of pure hafnium oxide layers to be controlled. It is shown that the silicon incorporation in oxide matrix prevents the formation of interfacial silicon oxide layer and plays a major role in the stability of the structure of hafnium based layers remaining an amorphous state upon annealing at 900-950 °C

    Hf-based high-k materials for Si nanocrystal floating gate memories

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    Pure and Si-rich HfO2 layers fabricated by radio frequency sputtering were utilized as alternative tunnel oxide layers for high-k/Si-nanocrystals-SiO2/SiO2 memory structures. The effect of Si incorporation on the properties of Hf-based tunnel layer was investigated. The Si-rich SiO2 active layers were used as charge storage layers, and their properties were studied versus deposition conditions and annealing treatment. The capacitance-voltage measurements were performed to study the charge trapping characteristics of these structures. It was shown that with specific deposition conditions and annealing treatment, a large memory window of about 6.8 V is achievable at a sweeping voltage of ± 6 V, indicating the utility of these stack structures for low-operating-voltage nonvolatile memory devices

    Chemical composition and light emission properties of Si-rich-SiOx layers prepared by magnetron sputtering

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    The process of thermal decomposition of SiOx layers prepared by magnetron sputtering is studied with the use of photoluminescence and Auger and SIMS spectroscopies. From these measurements, we obtained the distributions of the emission properties and the chemical composition over the depth. The effect of the redistribution of silicon and oxygen over the depth is found after the high-temperature annealing which results in the formation of a Si nanocrystal. These redistributions result in the appearance of a Si-depleted region near the layer-substrate interface. The formation of a depletion layer is dependent on the excess of Si. A decrease of the silicon content over the depth of annealed layers is accompanied by a decrease of the Si nanocrystal size, as it is evidenced by the blue shift of the photoluminescence maximum. The mechanism of decomposition of SiOx and the possible reasons for the appearance of a Si-depleted region are discussed

    Optical and structural characterization of Ge clusters embedded in ZrO2

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    The change of optical and structural properties of Ge nanoclusters in ZrO2 matrix have been investigated by spectroscopic ellipsometry versus annealing temperatures. Radio-frequency top-down magnetron sputtering approach was used to produce the samples of different types, i.e. single-layers of pure Ge, pure ZrO2 and Ge-rich-ZrO2 as well as multi-layers stacked of 40 periods of 5-nm-Ge-rich-ZrO2 layers alternated by 5-nm-ZrO2 ones. Germanium nanoclusters in ZrO2 host were formed by rapid-thermal annealing at 600-800 ∘C during 30 s in nitrogen atmosphere. Reference optical properties for pure ZrO2 and pure Ge have been extracted using single-layer samples. As-deposited multi-layer structures can be perfectly modeled using the effective medium theory. However, annealed multi-layers demonstrated a significant diffusion of elements that was confirmed by medium energy ion scattering measurements. This fact prevents fitting of such annealed structure either by homogeneous or by periodic multi-layer model

    SiOx/SiNy multilayers for photovoltaic and photonic applications

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    Microstructural, electrical, and optical properties of undoped and Nd3+-doped SiOx/SiNy multilayers fabricated by reactive radio frequency magnetron co-sputtering have been investigated with regard to thermal treatment. This letter demonstrates the advantages of using SiNy as the alternating sublayer instead of SiO2. A high density of silicon nanoclusters of the order 1019 nc/cm3 is achieved in the SiOx sublayers. Enhanced conductivity, emission, and absorption are attained at low thermal budget, which are promising for photovoltaic applications. Furthermore, the enhancement of Nd3+ emission in these multilayers in comparison with the SiOx/SiO2 counterparts offers promising future photonic applications

    Gadolinium oxide nanocrystal nonvolatile memory with HfO2/Al2O3 nanostructure tunneling layers

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    In this study, Gd2O3 nanocrystal (Gd2O3-NC) memories with nanostructure tunneling layers are fabricated to examine their performance. A higher programming speed for Gd2O3-NC memories with nanostructure tunneling layers is obtained when compared with that of memories using a single tunneling layer. A longer data retention (< 15% charge loss after 104 s) is also observed. This is due to the increased physical thickness of the nanostructure tunneling layer. The activation energy of charge loss at different temperatures is estimated. The higher activation energy value (0.13 to 0.17 eV) observed at the initial charge loss stage is attributed to the thermionic emission mechanism, while the lower one (0.07 to 0.08 eV) observed at the later charge loss stage is attributed to the direct tunneling mechanism. Gd2O3-NC memories with nanostructure tunneling layers can be operated without degradation over several operation cycles. Such NC structures could potentially be used in future nonvolatile memory applications

    ZnO nanostructured microspheres and elongated structures grown by thermal treatment of ZnS powder

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    ZnO microspheres, with surfaces covered with nanowalls, as well as nano- and microrods, have been grown by thermal treatment of ZnS powder. The structures have been grown at temperatures in the range of 750-900 ºC in a catalyst-free process. Previous mechanical treatment of the ZnS powder by ball milling has been found to influence the morphology and size of the obtained structures. Cathodoluminescence in the scanning electron microscope has shown that spheres and elongated structures have an inhomogeneous luminescence emission
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