Atmospheric pressure plasma enhanced spatial ALD of ZrO2 for low-temperature, large-area applications
article
High permittivity (high-k) materials have received considerable attention as alternatives to SiO2 for CMOS and low-power flexible electronics applications. In this study, we have grown high-quality ZrO2 by using atmospheric-pressure plasma-enhanced spatial ALD (PE-sALD), which, compared to temporal ALD, offers higher effective deposition rates and uses atmospheric-pressure plasma to activate surface reactions at lower temperatures. We used tetrakis(ethylmethylamino)zirconium (TEMAZ) as precursor and O2 plasma as co-reactant at temperatures between 150 and 250◦C. Deposition rates as high as 0.17 nm/cycle were achieved with N- and C- contents as low as 0.4% and 1.5%, respectively. Growth rate, film crystallinity and impurity contents in the films were found to improve with increasing deposition temperature. The measured relative permittivity lying between 18 and 28 with leakage currents in the order of 5 × 10−8 A/cm2 demonstrates that atmospheric PE-sALD is a powerful technique to deposit ultrathin, high-quality dielectrics for low-temperature, large-scale microelectronic applications. © The Author(s) 2017.
Topics
Atmospheric pressureAtomic layer depositionDeposition ratesFilm growthFlexible electronicsHigh-k dielectricLeakage currentsMicroelectronicsPermittivitySilicaSurface reactionsZirconiaAtmospheric pressure plasmasDeposition temperaturesElectronics applicationsFilm crystallinityHigh permittivityLower temperaturesMicroelectronic applicationsRelative permittivityAtmospheric temperature
TNO Identifier
810148
ISSN
21628769
Source
ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology, 6(12), pp. N243-N249.
Publisher
Electrochemical Society Inc.
Pages
N243-N249
Files
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