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Semiconductor Characterization - wk.5

The document discusses the principles and measurement of the Hall effect. It describes how the Hall effect can be used to determine properties like carrier density, Hall mobility, and resistivity of a material. It also discusses different measurement techniques like the van der Pauw and Hall bar methods.

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lntdan.st12
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views49 pages

Semiconductor Characterization - wk.5

The document discusses the principles and measurement of the Hall effect. It describes how the Hall effect can be used to determine properties like carrier density, Hall mobility, and resistivity of a material. It also discusses different measurement techniques like the van der Pauw and Hall bar methods.

Uploaded by

lntdan.st12
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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Principle of Hall Measurement

 Usually works for unipolar sample (i.e n>>p or p>>n)


Consider a p-type material

P-type

Wd Vp
The resistivity is 
L I
If a magnetic field (B) along Z-direction is applied

The carrier will respond to Lorentz Force resulted from the magnetic field
Principle of Hall Measurement

P-type

The Lorentz Force


   
F  q(E v x B)
F is the force acting on the particle
q is he charge of the particle
E is the electric field (along y)
v is the velocity of carrier (along x)
vXB (Source: Wikipedia)
B is the magnetic field (along z)
(along y)
Based on right-hand rule, the positive charge experience a force in in the negative y-diection
Principle of Hall Measurement

P-type

   
The Lorentz Force F  q(E v x B)
1. Supply current I BI I = Q/t=(nqAd)/(d/vd)
2. Apply magnetic field B Ey  Bv x  =nqAvd (A= w x d)
3. Adjust VH to maintain I (along y) qwdp
(counterforce to keep VH 0 0
BI BI
Holes from being bend
by Lorentz force)
 dV  VH    Eydy    qwdp dy  qdp
0 w w

dVH
RH  (Hall Coefficient; unit: cm3/C)
BI
Principle of Hall Measurement

BI dVH
From VH  RH  (Hall Coefficient; unit: cm3/C)
qdp BI
RH can be measured through VH, B, I

1 1
Carrier Density p n
qR H qR H

1  RH
Hall Mobility: qpp   
 RH 
Hall Measurement
2
2 3
1
1 4 3
6 5 4

Hall Bar Van der Pauw


t R12,34  R 23,41
 F( )
ln 2 2
Rr  1 F exp(ln 2 / F)
 cosh1( )
Rr  1 ln 2 2
• Force current between 1 and 4
• Hall voltage between 2 & 6 and R 12 ,34
Use Symmetric sample Rr  1 F=1
between 3 & 5 R 23 ,41
V
1 2
dR 23,41
RH 
4 3 I B
R 23,41 is the difference
between with and
without Magnetic field
Outline

 Metal Semiconductor Contacts


 Contact resistance
 Contact resistance Measurement
 Schottky Barrier (& Diode)
 I-V
 C-V
(Schroder Chapter 3)
 Diode (PN Junction)
 I-V
(Schroder Chapter 4, 4-2)
Metal Semiconductor Contact
Depletion Accumulation

E0 E0 E0

FM  F FM  F  F
S S FM S
EC EC EC
EF EF EF EF EF
Ei Ei Ei
EF
EV EV EV

Metal Semiconductor Metal Semiconductor Semiconductor


Metal

qVb
FB

X X X
W W
Schottky Contact
N-type P-type

E0 E0

FM  F FM  F
S S
EC EC
EF EF
Ei Ei
EF EF
EV EV

Metal Semiconductor Metal Semiconductor

qVb
FB FB

X X
W W
Ohmic Contact
For N-type semiconductor, the Ohmic contact usually is
1. Heavily doped
2. Work function FMFS
Work Function Adjustment

FM  F
S
EF
Ei

Heavily Doped Ohmic Layer Metal Semiconductor

X
W
Emission Processes

Thermionic Low ND

Thermionic/
Medium ND
Field Emission

Field Emission
High ND
(Tunneling)
Emission Process
Characteristic Energy
q: unit of charge
h: planck’s constant
qh N
E00  N: doping concentration
4   0 r m*tun 0: Vacuum permittivity
r: Relative permittivity
11 N(cm 3 )
 1.86 x10 (eV ) m*tun: effective mass for tunneling
 0 r (mtun / m)
*

a characteristic energy that characterizes the


tunneling process

KT >> E00: Thermionic Emission (TE)

KT E00: Thermionic Field Emission (TFE)

kT<< E00: Field Emission (FE)

TE: E00 ≤ 0.5 kT,


TFE: 0.5 kT < E00 < 5 kT, (Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE
FE: E00 ≥ 5 kT. CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 130)
Emission Processes
FE TFE TE
Thermionic Emission

Thermionic/Field
Emission

Contact type and I-V


characteristic is controlled by
Doping and barrier width.
Field Emission

(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE


CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 131)
Contact Resistance

For the resistance that is very close to the contact surface (Interface)

x ->0, there is still a resistance


V

L A I

we define the L
interfacial (contact) resistivity as c
Therefore, c has a unit of RA x

Unit is -cm2
Thermionic Theory
Electron can cross the interface from S->M
Kinetic Energy  1
mv 2x  q(Vb  VA )
2
e- I 2q
B Vb (Before Bias) vx  (Vb  VA )
m*
IS M  qAv xn(v x ) at a given vx
M S vm in
JS M  q  v xn(v x )dv x

A*: Richardson Constant The carrier with speed exceeding vmin
follows Boltzman distribution
A*= 4πqk2m*/h3
 4mn*2kT  EF  Ec  mn*2v2x
=120(m*/m) A/cm2·K2 n(vx )   3
 exp( ) exp( )
 h  kT 2kT
It can be derived that
 4qmn* k 2  2  qB qV
JS M   3
T exp( ) exp( A )
 h  kT kT
 qB qV
 A * T 2 exp( ) exp( A )
kT kT
 qB qV  qB
JS M  A * T 2 exp( ) exp( A ) JMS  A * T 2 exp( ) (VA=0)
kT kT kT
 qB qV
J  JMS  JS M  A * T 2 exp( )(exp( A  1)
kT kT
Specific Contact Resistivity-Thermionic

The thermionic current density through a Schottky junction

 qB qV
J  JMS  JS M  A * T 2 exp( )(exp( A  1)
kT kT

Defining the specific contact resistivity

dJ 1 k qB qB
i  ( ) i  exp( )  1 exp( )
qA * T kT kT
dV V  0
A* is Richardson constant= 110A/cm2k2, if B=0.6V

c 1600 -cm2


Specific Interfacial (Contact) Resistivity

Thermionic

qB k  4qmn* k 2  m*
i  1 exp( ) 1  A*   3

  120
kT qA * T  h  m0

Thermionic-Field

qB
i  1C1 exp( ) E0  E00 coth E00 / kT
E0

Field Emission
eh ND C3
qB E00  c  1C2 exp( )
i  1C2 exp( ) 4 0 rm*tun ND
E00
C3 contains B
c = i
Contact Resistance
Contact to N/P type Si

(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE


CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 134)
Contact Resistance

(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE


CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 134)
Contact Resistance
Dependence of Contact Resistance on Temperature

=> Higher doping, less dependency

(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE


CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 134)
Outline

 Metal Semiconductor Contacts


 Contact resistance
 Contact resistance Measurement
 Schottky Barrier (& Diode)
 I-V
 C-V
(Schroder Chapter 3)
 Diode (PN Junction)
 I-V
(Schroder Chapter 4, 4-2)
2 Terminal Contact & Contact Chain
Cross-section Top view

N contact chain with 2N


Contacts (N~50-100)

(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE


CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 137)
Contact Chain

• Difficult to distinguish among


Rm, Rs and Rc
• Process control monitors
for layer to layer contacts

• There are also contacts between


metal to metal to check Via etch

R=N(Rm+RS+2RC)
3 Terminal Contact Resistance

RT1 RT2

Z W
d1 d2

R shdi
R Ti   2R c i=1, 2 Solve the equation
(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE
W
CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 139)
R T 2d1  R T1d2
Rc 
2(d1  d2 )

This method dose not consider current crowding, can be used to


check contact resistance (for Process Monitor) only (not contact resistivity).
Current Crowding
(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR
MATERIAL AND DEVICE
CHARACTERIZATION, D. Distributed Resistor Model
K. Schroder, 3rd Edition,
p. 141)
Metal

N-type
c

the current choosing the Rsh


path of least resistance I

(Transfer Length)

The voltage is highest near the contact edge x = 0 and


drops nearly exponentially with distance.

The “1/e” distance of the voltage curve is defined as


the transfer length LT
Contact Resistance Testkeys
V
I Contact Front I V
Contact end

Transfer Length Method Cross-bridge


Kelvin
I
V

1 W 2 Z
L
3

Circular Transmission line


Measurement of Contact resistance
From Previous Page Lx
cosh( ) c
V(x) 
I R shc LT LT 
z L R sh
sinh( )
LT
V(x): voltage at point x
X: distance from one edge
Rsh: sheet resistance V

c: Specific contact resistivity I

L: length of contact
LT: Transfer length 1 2

L x
Contact Front Method
Lx L
cosh( ) cosh( )
I R shc LT I R shc LT
V(x)  V(0) 
z L z L
sinh( ) sinh( )
LT LT
Contact front resistance (Rcf)
V
I R shc R shc L
I
V(0) 
L
coth( ) R cf  coth( )
z LT z LT

Z W c
1 2 LT 
R sh
(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR
MATERIAL AND DEVICE
c L CHARACTERIZATION, D.

0 L
x R cf  coth( ) K. Schroder, 3rd Edition,
p. 142)
LT z LT
Assume Z~ W

Typical specific contact resistivities L L c


are ρc ≤ 10−6 ohm·cm2 for good L0.5LT coth( )  T R cf 
contacts. LT L Lz
For (Make thin contact line)
The transfer length is on the order Simplification L c
of 1 μm or less for such contacts. L1.5LT coth( ) 1 R cf 
LT LT z
Contact End Method

Assume Z~ W Lx L L
cosh( ) cosh( )
I R shc LT I R shc LT
V(x)  V(L) 
z L z L
I V sinh( ) sinh( )
LT LT

1 2 Z W
I R shc cosh( 0) I R shc 1
V(L)  V(L) 
z L z L
sinh( ) sinh( )
LT LT
x
0 L
Contact end resistance (RCE)
c 1
R ce 
L T z sinh( L )
LT
Cross-Bridge Kelvin Probe
Force the current 3
I
V
1
(I:current) ZW 2
1 W 2 Z
L Practical L
(Approximation)
3

V34 c  4 (V:voltage)
Rc = = = c
I12 Ac LZ
Measured voltage
(Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL AND DEVICE across pad
CHARACTERIZATION, D. K. Schroder,
3rd Edition, p. 150)
We want to design the structure
to avoid effect from  (i.e. =0)
The textbook described the effect of mis-align
 on the measured results. 

Usually, we make want to isolate the doping area


and metal pad covers the doping area
Circular Transmission Line

d Cicular structure
L
to avoid effect
from 

It is derived that for radius L >> 4LT

Rsh LT LT d
RT = ( + + ln( 1 + ))
2 L L + d L

For L>>d

c
LT =
Rsh Rsh
RT = ( d + 2 LT )
2
L d
C = ln( 1 + ) (Ref: SEMICONDUCTOR
d L Know Rsh, RT, get LT and c
MATERIAL AND DEVICE
CHARACTERIZATION, D. K.
Schroder, 3rd Edition, p. 145)
Transfer Length Method-1
RT
d1 d2 d3 d4

Z
2Rc
d
R shd
RT   2R c
Z
Example: Ohmic Contacts for p-
channel InGaSb

• Measure the total resistance RT as


function of separation d
• The Slope is Rsh/Z, the intercept is Rc
• To avoid current crowding effect, the
nano-scale metal pads are used.
IEEE Electron Device
Letters 36, no. 6 (June 2015): 546–548
Transfer Length Method-2
RT
d1 d2 d3 d4

Z
2Rc
d
L
• For more detailed analysis:
Consider the Rsh below contact is altered by the metal
Rsk: the sheet resistance below metal contact.
R d R d 2R skL TK
R T  sh  2R c  sh 
Z Z Z
R
 sh [d  2(R sk / R sh )L TK ] Eq (1)
Z

c 1 R ce 1
c R ce   Obtain LTK by contact end and
LTK  L TKz sinh( L ) R cf cosh( L ) contact front method,
R sk L TK L TK So we know Rsk from Eq (1)
Circular Transmission Line

Multiple ring to create


(Ref: IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 36, NO. more contact interface
6, JUNE 2015)
But avoid current
crowding effect
Contact Resistance
Nanometer 3D Device
Contact area ~ 20 nm

<20 nm

Advance CMOS contact area is at the range of 20 nm x 20 nm


Ohmic Contact-Silicide

Doping Conc. + Metal Work function


(Ref: Tomonori Nishimura, Applied Physics Determines c
Letters 91, 123123 (2007))
(ref: 2015 15th International Workshop on
Junction Technology (IWJT))

Metal workfunction has to consider the N-P MOSFET balance if use


common Silicide
Ohmic Contact-Silicide

General Flow for Ohmic Contact

S/D by Epitaxy
Schottky Barrier Reduce implant
Pre-Silicide Amorphization implant
Metal Dep.
Silicide Formation
Activation anneal

(ref: 2015 15th International Workshop on


Junction Technology (IWJT))
Ohmic Contact –III-V
• Specific contact resistance by tunneling compare
C3
c  1C2 exp( )
ND
• N > 5e19 for barrier thickness ~2.5nm
• Additional process knobs usually required for better ohmic contact
InGaAs GaN
• Ni, Pt, Pd reacts with InGaAs < 300C to form stable
compound

•N diffused form TiAlN


•GaN become N-type due
to N vacancies.
Outline

 Metal Semiconductor Contacts


 Contact resistance
 Contact resistance Measurement
 Schottky Barrier (& Diode)
 I-V
 C-V
(Schroder Chapter 3)
 Diode (PN Junction)
 I-V
(Schroder Chapter 4, 4-2)
Schottky Diode

Schottky Diode is a good device for power converting application


 Low turn-on voltage compared with PN junctions
 Use wide band gap materials (SiC, GaN) to make schottky diode for
high voltage

Semiconductor Metal Semiconductor Semiconductor


Metal Metal

q(Vb-VA) q(Vb-VA)
qVb
FB FB FB

X
Schottky Barrier Height (I-V)
 qB qV
J  A * T 2 exp( )(exp( A  1)
kT nkT

 qB qV
I  AA * T 2 exp( )(exp( A  1)
kT nkT

 qB qV qV
I  AA * T 2 exp( )(exp( A  1)  Is (exp( A  1)
kT nkT nkT

 4qmn* k 2  m0
A*   3

  120( *
)
 h  mn

qVA
LogI  LogI s  ( )
nkT ln(10)

kT AA * T 2
B  ln( )
q Is
Need to obtain A*
Schottky Barrier (I-V Temp)
 qB qV
I  AA * T 2 exp( )(exp( A  1)
kT nkT

q( VA / n  B )  qB Plot Chart at constant


I  AA * T 2 (exp(  exp( ))
kT kT Forward voltage
q( VA / n  B )
I  AA * T 2 (exp( )
kT

I q( VA / n  B )
 (exp( )
AA * T 2 kT

I q( VA / n  B )
ln( )  ( )
AA * T 2 kT

I q( VA / n  B )
ln( )  ln( AA *)  ( ) Richardson Plot
T2 kT

VA k d ln(I / T 2 ) The intercept at 1/T=0, is


B  ( )
n q d(1/ T ) ln(AA*)
Schottky Barrier (I-V Temp)

I q(VA  B )
ln( 2
)  ln( AA *)  ( )
T kT

I q(VA  B )
From the slope dln( 2
) / d(1/ T)  ( )
T k

I I
VA k d(ln( T 2 )) VA 2.3kd(Log( T 2 )
B    
n q d( 1 ) n qd( 1T )
T
Schottky Barrier (C-V)
C  q0r (NA  ND )
 Metal Semiconductor
A kT
2( Vb  V  )
q qVb
FB qV0

2si (Vb  VA )
W X
qND
dW q siND
C  qND  VA= -VR (VR >0)
dVR 2(Vb  VR )
1/C2
1 2( Vb  VR )
 Slope= q N
2
C2 q siND si D

V
NC
V0  kT ln( ) Intercept Vi= -Vb-kT
ND

With Vb and ND known from the plot, B can be obtained from Vb+V0
Schottky Diode
Schottky Diode is a good device for power converting application
 Low turn-on voltage compared with PN junctions
 Use wide band gap materials (SiC, GaN) to make schottky diode for
high voltage

FET acts as a switch


with switching
Energy storage and filtering
frequency (fs) e.g.
200kHz

VIN VOUT
C RL

A step down
converter
Outline

 Metal Semiconductor Contacts


 Contact resistance
 Contact resistance Measurement
 Schottky Barrier (& Diode)
 I-V
 C-V
(Schroder Chapter 3)
 Diode (PN Junction)
 I-V
(Schroder Chapter 4, 4-2)
PN Junction Diode
DNni2 DPni2 qV
J  (q q )(exp( A )  1)
NALN NDLP kT

qVA
I  I0 (exp(  1)
nkT
qVA
I  I0 (exp( )
nkT
n=2: High injection
Log I
Ideality Factor (n)
n=1
n=1: diffusion current or
n=2: G –R thermionic current

n=2: Generation-Recombination
V
or high injection (of minority Carrier)
Diode
rs
qV
I  I0 (exp( d  1)
nkT
Vd
V= Vd + Irs

q(V  Irs )
I  I0 (exp(  1)
nkT
q(V  Irs ) q(V  Irs )
 I0,scr (exp(  1)  I0,qnr (exp(  1)
nkT nkT

High rs

qnr: quasi neutral region


V Scr: space charge region
Diode-Series Resistance

q(V  Irs )
I  I0 (exp(  1)
nkT
For V>> KT

q(V  Irs ) gd/I


I  I0 (exp( )
nkT Slope=  qrs
nkT
dI Iq(1  rsgd )
gd   1/rs
dV nkT
gd
gd q(1  rsgd ) qr q
   s gd 
I nkT nkT nkT

Plot gd/I versus gd


Back Up

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