Articles you may be interested inElectrical characteristics and reliability properties of metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors with Zr O 2 gate dielectric Lifetime-limited current in Cu-gate metal-oxide-semiconductor capacitors subjected to bias thermal stress J. Appl. Phys. 99, 034504 (2006); 10.1063/1.2168034 Temperature-induced voltage drop rearrangement and its effect on oxide breakdown in metal-oxidesemiconductor capacitor structure A diodelike conduction model for the postbreakdown current in metal-oxide-semiconductor structures J. Appl. Phys. 96, 6940 (2004); 10.1063/1.1812584Localization of gate oxide integrity defects in silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor structures with lock-in IR thermography Thin oxide property in a metal-oxide-semiconductor structure subjected to substrate injection from semiconductor into oxide is investigated by means of ramp-up and ramp-down current-voltage (I -V) measurements. Generally, gate injection causes catastrophic dielectric breakdown, and the damaged oxide suffers from permanent destruction which exhibits resistorlike behavior in the I -V curve. For substrate injection, however, there are three distinct modes existing in I -V characteristics. They are resistorlike, hysteresislike, and saturation, i.e., no breakdown. Their occurrence frequencies are dependent on the oxide thickness. For oxides thinner than 2.4 nm, in general, the gate current nearly saturates due to the limitation of minority carriers. For 3.9 nm oxide, the minority carrier generation rate increases due to trap generation near the Si surface. Thus the oxide sustains higher field and larger carrier injection causing destructive damage, i.e., resistorlike mode. For 3 nm oxide, sometimes a hysteresislike mode appears due to light damage in the oxide. The related characteristics of these three modes are studied and exhibit oxide thickness dependence. These phenomena are important to recent studies on devices with ultrathin gate oxides.