Suppression of short channel effects in ferroelectric Si junctionless transistors with a sub-10 nm gate length defined by helium ion beam lithography†
Abstract
The performance enhancements of Si junctionless transistors (JLTs) with a short gate length (LG) below 10 nm by a pronounced ferroelectric (FE) gate dielectric were demonstrated for the first time. A TiN gate with LG = ∼8 nm was defined by helium ion beam lithography (HIBL) using hydrogen silsesquioxane as a resist. As compared with the paraelectric HfO2 gate oxide, the FE Hf0.5Zr0.5O2 gate dielectric leads to a suppression of the off-state current (IOFF) by ∼2 orders of magnitude and a reduction of the minimum subthreshold swing (SS) to ∼33 mV dec−1, along with an enhancement of the on/off ratio in the reverse-sweep direction in JLTs with LG = ∼8 nm. JLTs with a long LG = 5 μm were also investigated for comparison, revealing a decrease of IOFF by ∼25× and the sub-60 mV dec−1 SS across ∼3 orders of drain current (ID) under a large drain voltage (VD = 0.5 V) operation during the reverse sweep in FE JLTs. A time domain analysis indicated that the transient negative capacitance (TNC) effect takes place in the FE gate dielectric. A physical model was proposed to account for the TNC effect and the sub-60 mV dec−1 SS based on the capacitance increase during the FE polarization switching. This study also demonstrates for the first time the fabrication of nanoelectronic devices with a sub-10 nm critical dimension by using the HIBL technique with a damage-free dose.