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Dielectric Ceramics

This document discusses dielectric materials and their properties. It begins by defining dielectric materials as electrical insulators that can store electric charge. It then discusses key dielectric properties including the dielectric constant, dielectric loss, and dielectric strength. The document provides equations for capacitance, dielectric loss factor, and quality factor. It also discusses different types of capacitors including ceramic multilayer capacitors and capacitors used in integrated circuits.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views38 pages

Dielectric Ceramics

This document discusses dielectric materials and their properties. It begins by defining dielectric materials as electrical insulators that can store electric charge. It then discusses key dielectric properties including the dielectric constant, dielectric loss, and dielectric strength. The document provides equations for capacitance, dielectric loss factor, and quality factor. It also discusses different types of capacitors including ceramic multilayer capacitors and capacitors used in integrated circuits.

Uploaded by

Shin Nguyen
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EBB 443

Dr. Sabar D. Hutagalung


School of Materials & Mineral Resources
Engineering, Universiti Sains Malaysia
Introduction
• Dielectric materials: high electrical resistivities, but an
efficient supporter of electrostatic fields.
• Can store energy/charge.
• Able to support an electrostatic field while dissipating
minimal energy in the form of heat.
• The lower the dielectric loss (proportion of energy lost
as heat), the more effective is a dielectric material.
• Another consideration is the dielectric constant, the
extent to which a substance concentrates the
electrostatic lines of flux.
Dielectric Constant
• The capacitance, C, of a capacitor formed by two parallel plates
of area A spaced d apart with the area between the plates filled
with dielectric material with a relative dielectric constant of cis:

c = Ef:oA
. d

42

,'" IDOOO
Dielectric Loss
• For a lossy (imperfect) dielectric the dielectric
constant can be represented by a complex
relative dielectric constant:
g = e:ll-~E
• The imaginary part of this complex dielectric
constant, E at a frequency, (l) is equivalent to a
frequency-dependent conductivity, a( co), given
by:
Dielectric Loss
• €"is also known as the loss factor.
• The small difference in phase from ideal behaviour is
defined by an angle 0, defined through the equation
~I

- = tan 115
E'

• tan 0 is known as the loss tangent or dissipation factor.


• A quality factor, Q, for the dielectric is given by the
reciprocal of tan o.
Dielectric Loss
R

-
d
fiR V -
\!c
V
C
(b) (c)
(a)

Equivalent circuit diagrams: (a) capacitive cell, (b)


charging and loss current, (c) loss tangent for a typical
dielectric
Dielectric Loss
• From Q = 8 8fiVId = CV

• If V being sinusoidal, total charge Q may be written as

Q=CVo eiM
• Current flow on discharge of the capacitive cell in time, t:

I=dQ=iwCV
dt
• For a real dielectric the current I has vector components Ie and IR:
I = Ie + Ij?
Dielectric Loss
• From magnitude of these currents, also we can define a
dissipation factor, tan 8, as
I
tan6= R
Ie
• Quality factor Q is:
Q= 1 averageenergy stored
tan 8 energy dissipated per cycle
Alternating Current Theory

• Impedance of a resistance =R
• Impedance of a capacitance = 1Ii we
• Mean power, P, dissipated over a cycle in a lossy
capacitor with plates of area A separated by a distance
d:

2E/ Cr)
- ro -. . ." ,) 1 « ) ~1.,
,- . . :It: -'1
II A,
L.
.... ~
p=- Re {V) _Re'(l dr ,=-. Re tv]. = -, eoe EO -J!;o
2n: " ) 2 '" 2 d
o
Dielectric Strength
• Dielectric materials are insulators (conduction cannot
generally occur).
• However, under certain conditions, dielectric materials
can break down and conduct a significant current.
• Generally, the lattice of a dielectric has sufficient strength
to absorb the energy from impacting electrons that are
accelerated by the applied electric field.
• However, under a sufficiently large electric field, some
electrons present in the dielectric will have sufficient
kinetic energy to ionize the lattice atoms causing an
avalanching effect.
• As a result, the dielectric will begin to conduct a
significant amount of current.
Dielectric Strength
• This phenomenon is called dielectric breakdown and the
corresponding field intensity is referred to as the
dielectric breakdown strength.
• Dielectric strength may be defined as the maximum
potential gradient to which a material can be subjected
without insulating breakdown, that is

dV
DS=
dx max

where OS is the dielectric strength in kV/mm,


VBthe breakdown voltage, and dthe thickness.
B
BREAKDOWN
REGION
CL
E 6
o
l7>

b
--;; 4

°O~------~--~--~--~
10 20
__~30
VOLTAGE (Kvl

current-voltage characteristic up to breakdown for


a typical dielectric materials
Dielectric Strength
• Dielectric strength depends on
~ material homogeneity,
~ specimen geometry,
~ electrode shape and disposition,
~ stress mode (ac, dc or pulsed) and
~ ambient condition.
Ooelccuic

Capacitors
V", 10 ..olts
...

q= 20nC

'"etal plate s Vokmeler reeds l:!. V Tantalum capacitor


Capacitors
• The basic formula for the capacitance of a parallel-plate
capacitor is: A
C = GrGo-
d
• To increase C, one either increases E, increases A, or
decreases d.
• Early capacitors consisted of metal foils separated by
wax (8 - 2.5), mica (8 - 3 - 6), steatite (8 - 5.5 - 7.5), or
glass (8- 5 -10).
• The use of titania provided a significant increase (8-
170), was followed by perovskite-based, such as BaTi03
(8 - 1000).
Capacitors
C = "capacitance"
=q/!J,.V

Units: Coulomb/Volt
= Farad (F)

The capacitance of a Michael Faraday


capacitor is constant; (1791-1867)
if q increases, !J,.
V
increases proportionately.
.~
# •
~ . . •
,.
\,

.......-...
- ... ~:
...
. ..._.-..
.....
Capacitors

++++++++ ++++++++

-------- ------- -a
E effective = E • Epolarization = -
For aJr, £==£0 ££0
,....----------,
The capacitance is
C=£oA increased by the
d factor e

E stored =
~CV2
2 ~VQ
2
SMD Compomnt

Capacitors
VI. Hille

• DRAM chips currently utilize capacitors with Si3N4or Si02


as dielectric materials.
• The electrodes are made of doped Si or poly-Si.
• Capacitors can be fabricated onto IC chips.
• They are commonly used in conjunction with transistors in
DRAM.
• The capacitors help maintain the contents of memory.
• Because of their tiny physical size, these components have
low capacitance.
• They must be recharged thousands of times per second or
the DRAM will lose its data.
Q=c,co--
AVl
dj
III
0)
L.
ro Q=CV
.c
u Q: charge (Coulomb)

V
'
......
..- _-- C: capacitance (Farad)
V: potential difference (Volt)

" ) - d: separation/thickness (meter)


eo: permitivity of vacuum =
8.854xlO-12 C2/m2 or F/m
e.: dielectric constant
Multilayer Ceramic Capacitolr

• The multilayer ceramic capacitor (MLCC):


Multi Layer Ceramic Capacitor
(MLCC)

• where N is the number of stacked plates.


• Ideally, the dielectric should have a low electrical
conductivity so that the leakage current is not too large.
Multilayer Ceramic Capacitor

Ceramic surface-mount
capacitors.
End term inal

Cut-away view of multilayer


ceramic capacitor.
High-K Dielectric
• The bit count of MOS DRAM devices is
continuously increasing. However, as bit count
goes up, capacitor cell area goes down.
• The capacitance per cell must remain in the 25-
30 fF range, which means the capacitance
density must increase.
• One approach for DRAM manufacturing is to
replace the traditional silicon nitride + silicon
oxide with a higher dielectric constant (k) such
as tantalum pentoxide (Ta20s), Hf-oxide (Hf02)
and Zr-oxide (Zr02).
0.18 Tech 0.15 Tech 0.13 Tech 0.10 Tech 0.07 Tech

t999 2002 2005 2008

o 2J.1Tl

BST

SIS C,lilllcl I HS6 s

The road map of capacitor with DRAM technology.

0.-5. Yoon et al, I Progress in Materials Science 48 (2003) 275-371


High-K Dielectric
• High-k dielectric films are anticipated to be
required for certain applications with low power
and leakage current specifications.
• High-k materials should be compatible with
conventional industry standard MOSFET
process flows using a poly-Si gate electrode.
• Hf02, Zr02, and Ta20S as high-k gate-
dielectrics.
Hf02/Poly-Si high-k transistor
~--- Ti..salicide

Oxide spac:«
-, Oxide spacer
/'

structure and sub-cxide growth underneath Hro~in the spacer region.

ftgure 10. IIR-TI:M micrograph o;howingdetml" of gate stack. (3) IOOf)''(',


I() sec itT", (b) HSO"C. 30. ec R rA,
Zr02/Poly-Si high-k transistors
SID RTA: 900C, 10 sec
PolySi

Spacer Poly-SI

FIgure -I. IE'" aucrogrnpb of Zr01IPoly gftlestack sbOWUlg 4.8run zr01


Zr02 foot
sandwiched between two interfacial layers of 1.1run each.

Figure 5. T£.'I'!micrograph showing S. crystalline defects at the Poly-S. gate


edge after complete processing. No sign of gate-undercut was observed.
Typical material stack used in aTa205
DRAM capacitor
Cntlc1IIlrterfu.
__...,. TlNrr~o" o~
dithulon
1-----!"~---1 -.......
T~O~ISI,N, SI()Jt"
rorrNltJon
-...... 51tH. "'oty
,.oty
poty r_xldlGon

Doped Potyl 20 A SIN' 100A TI't2~ with 800" C N20Arneal

~-T. ~.
TlN_ :\1
~." I ( '"
..

.-
Dap.t '
"'Cltv
A Review of High H~gh-kDielectrjes

• Gate dielectric materials having high dielectric


constant, large band gap with a favorable band
alignment, low interface state density and good
thermal stability are needed for future gate
dielectric applications .
• Ultra high-k materials such as STO (SrTi03) or
SST (SaSrTi03) may cause fringing field
induced barrier lowering effect.
A Review ot High High-k Dielectrics

• High-k gate dielectrics have a number of


difficulties:
(1) crystallization upon heating,
(2) dopant penetration,
(3) fixed charge,
(4) low channel mobility and
(5) uncontrolled oxide formation at the Si/high-k
interface.
High-K Problems

• High-K and polySi gate are incompatible due


to Fermi level pinning at the high-K and
polySi interface which causes high threshold
voltages in transistors

• High-K/polySi transistors exhibit severely


degraded channel mobility due to the
coupling of SO phonon modes in high-K to
the inversion channel charge carriers
High-K and PolySi are Incompatible

Poly Si

Interface

High-K

• Defect formation at the polySi-high-K interface


Phonon Scattering in High-K
,
45E.05T"""----"""T'"----"""'T"--------,
,,

I-
4.0E-05
+--------.-'-------,'i------,j

"0_ 3.5E-05
~
High-KlPolySi
+--------.-. ------i'i-I-_.
,
-
--I..._--------f
• Coulombic Phonon

Ilpb J, T t
Surface
Roughness

E' :
,...., .,f • I-

1------::---:
~ 3OE·05 :-"""'~'-=='i==::1::====::::;_1:::t.
;: : Phonon scattering c_1_
~~E-05. I-----~~~.~-~==~==~F=======~~
:.
-1!L I aT >
0

. ,.
• '"T:'t III
-I------'·"'"---S
2.0E-05 i02lP 0 lyS i-.----::-.+.I.__,·..__-~ I

i •• i

.'

1.5E-05 l --=------i;i----+-------f
••
+-----.--1"":'., : E-Field
,
,
10E-05~--~-~----.'----~----~'----~----~--~
I

0.1 1.1 1.3 1.5 1 1 1 1


0.3 0.5 0] 0.9 --+ +--
E-Field (MV/cm) Jiph JISR
~12
l!!J NMOS
10 ; o 0 ....1
8 0...6'
The Gate Stack &
co
e 0 ·8
...
••• ~

~...
e 0 ~8""O
.
2 0
o .0' 0'"
o 6.1 D2 0.3 6.4
Gate electrode
Gal. Length l (11m)

~~.---------------,
PMOS 0 .,.(:>
o ..§....
~. I
20

t
- 15

I 000.···9··
i 10 Q ··6
111111111111111111111111 Channel layer ..9'...~.~
5
@••, .' 0
Si substrate o .'
o 01 02 0.3 0••

Expected performance trends for complementary


metal oxidesemiconductor (CMOS) transistor
Schematic illustration of technologies. The unrelenting reduction in transistor
important regions in a CMOS size and the associated decrease in gate delay for (a)
FET gate stack an NMOS transistor and (b) a PMOS FET are
evident.
Gate Length
=
LG 45 nm
=13nm

EOT = 0.5

Source and Drain


Extension Junction
Depth = 25 nm EOT- equivalent oxide
thickness

Schematic image of MOS transistors in the year 2003 and 2013.


Hiqh-k Gate Dielectric

Gate

EOT= 1 nm
Drain
N·Channel

Physical and electrical thickness of high-k gate dielectric (ideal).


Si02 equivalent thickness EOT is smaller than high-k physical
thickness.
Ing

Poli-
Silicon
W
e(5T
Source Drain
N-Channel

The depletion region of thickness Wd forms adjacent to the


poly-Si/oxide interface.
c = J(e A
t J'
+

• For example, if the capacitor dielectric is


Si02, teq = 3.90co (AlC), Co = 8.85x1 0-3
fF/J.lm, thus a capacitance density of
CIA=34.5 fF/J.lm2 corresponds to teq =10 A .
• A dielectric with a relative permittivity of 16
o

results in a physical thickness of "'40 A, to


o

obtain teq = 10 A.
I
High-lC
layer
.. - Interfacial
.
laver
( 'iO v

Comparison of (a) stacked and (b) single-layer gate dielectrics in a


hypothetical transistor gate stack.
Either structure results in the same overall gate stack capacitance or
o

equivalent oxide thickness, teq=10 A.

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