Reliability Engineering of High‐Mobility IGZO Transistors via Gate Insulator Heterostructures Grown by Atomic Layer Deposition
Yoon‐Seo Kim, Taewon Hwang, Hye‐Jin Oh, Joon Seok Park, Jin‐Seong Park
Abstract
Abstract The reliability of oxide‐semiconductor (OS) thin‐film transistors (TFTs) is significantly influenced by the gate insulator (GI). During electrical bias stress, the defect sites near the semiconductor/GI interface and/or within the GI may trap electrons, which makes the threshold voltage (V th ) shift toward positive values. On the other hand, carbon (C) or hydrogen (H) atoms may diffuse from the GI into the active layer, and act as shallow donors, which induce negative V th shifts (Δ V th ). In this paper, an in situ atomic layer deposition (ALD)‐based GI heterostructure is introduced, which consists of a stack of two complementary materials, namely Al 2 O 3 and SiO 2 . Here, a competition occurs between electron trapping in Al 2 O 3 (positive Δ V th ) and carrier generation from H atoms in SiO 2 (negative Δ V th ) which allows the achievement of nearly zero Δ V th under positive bias temperature stress (PBTS). This strategy is successfully applied to a high‐mobility (>50 cm 2 Vs −1 ) ALD‐based indium‐gallium‐zinc oxide (IGZO) device, resulting in a net ∆ V th of −0.02 V under PBTS and drain current variation (∆I D ) of +0.49% under constant current stress (CCS). The application of an in situ ALD process thus offers valuable insights to resolve the mobility versus reliability trade‐off in high‐performance oxide TFTs.