Affiliation:
1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering National Tsing‐Hua University 30013 Hsinchu Taiwan
2. Colleage of Semiconductor Research National Tsing‐Hua University 30013 Hsinchu Taiwan
3. Department of Physics National Sun Yat‐Sen University 80424 Kaohsiung Taiwan
4. National Applied Research Laboratories Taiwan Semiconductor Research Institute Hsinchu 300091 Taiwan
Abstract
AbstractA pulsed laser annealing method is utilized to directly synthesize nickel silicide (NiSi) as a contact material to improve the contact of electric devices. Three laser wavelengths, 355 nm (ultraviolet laser), 532 nm (green laser), and 1064 nm (infrared laser), are used for the NiSi synthesis during the pulsed laser annealing process. A NiSi phase with low sheet resistance is formed by an ultraviolet laser annealing (ULA) process without damaging the polyimide (PI) substrate. With the integration of the ULA process‐induced NiSi into p‐nnel MOSFET (PMOS) and n‐channel MOSFET (NMOS) devices, the on/off ratio improves significantly, and the field‐effect mobility increases by 30% because of the reduction in contact resistance from 21 to 8.5 kΩ. In addition to the PMOS and NMOS, the gains of the CMOS inverter at different Vdd values are improved by at least 30%. Moreover, the static noise margin of 6T‐SRAM is elevated from 0.82 to 1 V at Vdd = 4 V. The ability of the ULA process to synthesize a high‐quality NiSi layer on a flexible substrate is demonstrated. The integration of NiSi into electrical devices offers a new pathway for improving the electrical behavior of flexible devices.
Funder
National Science and Technology Council
Subject
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials