Publication
VLSI-TSA 2006
Conference paper

Ultra-thin SOI CMOS using laser spike anneal

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Abstract

We have investigated the impact of Laser Spike Anneal (LSA) on the performance of Ultra-thin SOI MOSFETs. LSA was found to significantly reduce the parasitic external resistance in UTSOI devices. Reduced external resistance in conjunction with improved gate activation resulted in a substantial improvement in nFET performance. A conventional spike RTA followed by LSA at 1300C enhances nFET drive current, Ion, by 20% and the effective drive current, Ieff, by 30 % (at Ioff = 1μA/μm). The RTA+LSA approach was found to have a smaller impact on pFET performance. This is attributed to boron loss due to segregation into the buried oxide (BOX) during the RTA. The RTA+LSA process also resulted in improved AC performance (∼ 10% improvement in ring oscillator stage delay at fixed leakage current) compared to an RTA-only process. We have found that an LSA-only process significantly suppresses boron segregation and increases dopant activation, resulting in a 50% reduction in the p-type sheet resistance when compared to a conventional high temperature RTA-only process. The introduction of LSA provides a path for high performance UTSOI CMOS. © 2006 IEEE.