Effect of Al2O3 passivation layer and optimization of atomic-layer-deposited Zn–Sn–O and Al–Zn–Sn–O thin-film transistors
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of aluminum oxide (Al2O3) passivation layers on amorphous zinc tin oxide (a-ZTO) and amorphous aluminum zinc tin oxide (a-AZTO) thin films, along with their corresponding thin-film transistor (TFT) performances. Unoptimized passivation layers facilitated hydrogen incorporation in the a-ZTO channel, inducing a significant threshold voltage shift (ΔVth) in the negative bias direction of −0.50 V to −6.63 V. The optimized passivation layer mitigated hydrogen inflow into the channel but caused oxygen deprivation within the a-ZTO channel, still causing a negative ΔVth of −0.50 V to −3.89 V. In contrast, the presence of Al–O bonds in the a-AZTO TFT's channel suppressed oxygen deprivation, leading to a negligible ΔVth of −0.40 V to −0.29 V. Nonetheless, Al diffusion from the passivation layer into the channel increased the channel resistance per unit length and the source/drain contact resistance, leading to decreased saturation mobility (μsat). Also, hydrogen diffused into the HfO2 gate insulator induced an abnormal hump under positive gate bias stress tests. These issues were effectively addressed through post-deposition annealing of the a-AZTO channel and adopting the Al2O3 gate insulator, eliminating the observed degradation and anomaly. The optimized Al2O3 passivated a-AZTO TFT with a 10-nm-thick Al2O3/30-nm-thick SiO2 gate insulator demonstrated a Vth of 0.16 V, a μsat of 9.11 cm2 V−1 s−1, a subthreshold swing of 113 mV per decade, and minimal ΔVths of −0.054 V and 0.11 V during 1000 seconds of negative and positive gate bias stress tests, respectively.

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