Band-to-band tunneling was studied in ion-implanted P/N junction diodes with profiles representative of present and future silicon complementary metal–oxide–silicon (CMOS) field effect transistors. Measurements were done over a wide range of temperatures and implant parameters. Profile parameters were derived from analysis of capacitance versus voltage characteristics, and compared to secondary-ion mass spectroscopy analysis. When the tunneling current was plotted against the effective tunneling distance (tunneling distance corrected for band curvature) a quasi-universal exponential reduction of tunneling current versus, tunneling distance was found with an attenuation length of 0.38 nm, corresponding to a tunneling effective mass of 0.29 times the free electron mass (m0), and an extrapolated tunneling current at zero tunnel distance of 5.3×107 A/cm2 at 300 K. These results are directly applicable for predicting drain to substrate currents in CMOS transistors on bulk silicon, and body currents in CMOS transistors in silicon-on-insulator.
We have examined the stability of Al2O3/Si heterostructures and show that significant Al diffusion occurs into the silicon for temperatures of 1000 °C and more. This may be caused by dissociation of small quantities of Al2O3 and subsequent dissolution of the Al into the silicon. Such diffusion may be reduced, though not eliminated via an interfacial silicon oxynitride diffusion barrier. Using long channel metal gate Al2O3/Si n field effect transistor data, we show that anneals at 1000 °C result in a degradation of the electron mobility by a factor of 2.
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