2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session N39: Focus Session: Emerging Research Devices and Materials for the Microelectronics Industry I
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: 502
Sponsoring
Unit:
FIAP
Chair: Jean Heremans, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.N39.1
Abstract: N39.00001 : Silicide Nanowires for Low-Resistance CMOS Transistor Contacts.
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Stefan Zollner
(Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.)
Transition metal (TM) silicide nanowires are used as contacts for
modern
CMOS transistors. (Our smallest wires are $\sim$20 nm thick and
$\sim$50
nm wide.) While much research on thick TM silicides was conducted
long ago,
materials perform differently at the nanoscale. For example, the
usual phase
transformation sequences (e.g., Ni, Ni2Si, NiSi, NiSi2) for the
reaction of
thick metal films on Si no longer apply to nanostructures,
because the
surface and interface energies compete with the bulk energy of a
given
crystal structure. Therefore, a NiSi film will agglomerate into
hemispherical droplets of NiSi by annealing before it reaches the
lowest-energy (NiSi2) crystalline structure. These dynamics can
be tuned by
addition of impurities (such as Pt in Ni). The Si surface
preparation is
also a more important factor for nanowires than for silicidation
of thick TM
films. Ni nanowires formed on Si surfaces that were cleaned and
amorphized
by sputtering with Ar ions have a tendency to form NiSi2 pyramids
(``spikes'') even at moderate temperatures
($\sim$400$^{\circ}$C), while similar
Ni films formed on atomically clean or hydrogen-terminated Si
form uniform
NiSi nanowires. Another issue affecting TM silicides is the
barrier height
between the silicide contact and the silicon transistor. For most TM
silicides, the Fermi level of the silicide is aligned with the
center of the
Si band gap. Therefore, silicide contacts experience Schottky
barrier
heights of around 0.5 eV for both n-type and p-type Si. The
resulting
contact resistance becomes a significant term for the overall
resistance of
modern CMOS transistors. Lowering this contact resistance is an
important
goal in CMOS research. New materials are under investigation (for
example
PtSi, which has a barrier height of only 0.3 eV to p-type Si).
This talk
will describe recent results, with special emphasis on
characterization
techniques and electrical testing useful for the development of
silicide
nanowires for CMOS contacts.
\newline
\newline
In collaboration with: P. Grudowski, D. Jawarani, R. Garcia, M.L.
Kottke,
R.B. Gregory, X.-D. Wang, D. Theodore, P. Fejes, W.J. Taylor,
B.Y. Nguyen,
C. Capasso, M. Raymond, D. Denning, K. Chang, R. Noble, M.
Jahanbani, S.
Bolton, P. Crabtree, D. Goedeke, M. Rossow, M. Chowdhury, H.
Desjardins,
A.Thean.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.N39.1