Lihua Dai, Xiaonian Liu, Mengying Zhang, Leqing Zhang, Zhiyuan Hu, Dawei Bi, Zhengxuan Zhang, Shichan Zou
Abstract Hot-carrier reliability for devices operating in radiation environment must be considered. In this paper, we investigate how total ionizing dose impacts the hot-carrier reliability of partially-depleted SOI I/O NMOSFETs, highlighting the effect of buried oxide. Firstly, radiation-induced damage on short channel SOI devices with 100 nm thick Si film was investigated. After low total dose irradiation, incomplete fully-depleted state has been formed due to the non-uniformly distributed positive charges in the buried oxide. Furthermore, as the dominated factor of hot-carrier injection, the body current reduces after irradiation. Subsequently, the irradiated SOI devices were subjected to hot-carrier stress for 9000-s long time. Compared with unirradiated devices, the irradiated samples display enhanced hot-carrier degradation. We attribute this phenomenon to that radiation lowers the barrier for hot-carrier injection. Therefore, in order to ensure the reliability of SOI devices operating in harsh radiation environments, SOI devices with higher quality or corresponding hardness design should be taken.
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados