IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society (Jan 2019)

Highly Reliable Contacts to Silicon Enabled by Low Temperature Sputtered Graphenic Carbon

  • Max Stelzer,
  • Moritz Jung,
  • Ursula Wurstbauer,
  • Alexander Holleitner,
  • Franz Kreupl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JEDS.2019.2894975
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 252 – 260

Abstract

Read online

Titanium silicide (TiSi) contacts are frequently used metal-silicon contacts but are known to diffuse into the active region under high current density stress pulses. Recently, we demonstrated that graphenic carbon (GC) deposited by CVD at 1000 °C on silicon has the same low Schottky barrier as TiSi, but a much improved reliability against high current density stress pulses. In this paper, we demonstrate now that the deposition of GC is possible at 100 °C - 400 °C by a sputter process. We show that the sputtered carbon-silicon contact is over 1 billion times more stable against high current density pulses than the conventionally used TiSi-Si junction, while it has the same or even a lower Schottky barrier. SC can be doped by nitrogen (CN) and this results in an even lower resistivity and improved stability. Scalability of the CN thickness down to 5 nm is demonstrated. The finding that there is a low temperature approach for using the excellent carbon properties has important consequences for the reliability of contacts to silicon and opens up the use of GC in a vast number of other applications.

Keywords