Gate Dielectric Engineering with an Ultrathin Silicon-oxide Interfacial Dipole Layer for Low-Leakage Oxide-Semiconductor Memories
Abstract
We demonstrate a gate dielectric engineering approach leveraging an ultrathin, atomic layer deposited (ALD) silicon oxide interfacial layer (SiL) between the amorphous oxide semiconductor (AOS) channel and the high-k gate dielectric. SiL positively shifts the threshold voltage (VT) of AOS transistors, providing at least four distinct VT levels with a maximum increase of 500 mV. It achieves stable VT control without significantly degrading critical device parameters such as mobility, on-state current, all while keeping the process temperature below 225 C and requiring no additional heat treatment to activate the dipole. Positive-bias temperature instability tests at 85 C indicate a significant reduction in negative VT shifts for SiL-integrated devices, highlighting enhanced reliability. Incorporating this SiL gate stack into two-transistor gain-cell (GC) memory maintains a more stable storage node voltage (VSN) (reduces VSN drop by 67\%), by limiting unwanted charge losses. SiL-engineered GCs also reach retention times up to 10,000 s at room temperature and reduce standby leakage current by three orders of magnitude relative to baseline device, substantially lowering refresh energy consumption.
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