Conduction mechanisms and charge storage in Si-nanocrystals metal-oxide-semiconductor memory devices studied with conducting atomic force microscopy

Publication date

2012-05-03T11:42:14Z

2012-05-03T11:42:14Z

2005-09-02

2012-04-20T11:36:37Z

Abstract

In this work, we demonstrate that conductive atomic force microscopy (C-AFM) is a very powerful tool to investigate, at the nanoscale, metal-oxide-semiconductor structures with silicon nanocrystals (Si-nc) embedded in the gate oxide as memory devices. The high lateral resolution of this technique allows us to study extremely small areas ( ~ 300nm2) and, therefore, the electrical properties of a reduced number of Si-nc. C-AFM experiments have demonstrated that Si-nc enhance the gate oxide electrical conduction due to trap-assisted tunneling. On the other hand, Si-nc can act as trapping centers. The amount of charge stored in Si-nc has been estimated through the change induced in the barrier height measured from the I-V characteristics. The results show that only ~ 20% of the Si-nc are charged, demonstrating that the electrical behavior at the nanoscale is consistent with the macroscopic characterization.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

American Institute of Physics

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2010626

Journal of Applied Physics, 2005, vol. 98, p. 056101-056103

http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2010626

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(c) American Institute of Physics, 2005

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