Low-temperature (≤400 °C), stackable oxide semiconductors are promising as an upper transistor ingredient for monolithic three-dimensional integration. The atomic layer deposition (ALD) route provides a low-defect, high-quality semiconducting oxide channel layer and enables accurate controllability of the chemical composition and physical thickness as well as excellent step coverage on nanoscale trench structures. Here, we report a high-mobility heterojunction transistor in a ternary indium gallium zinc oxide system using the ALD technique. The heterojunction channel structure consists of a 10 nm thick indium gallium oxide (IGO) layer as an effective transporting layer and a 3 nm thick, wide band gap ZnO layer. The formation of a two-dimensional electron gas was suggested by controlling the band gap of the IGO quantum well through In/Ga ratio tailoring and reducing the physical thickness of the ZnO film. A field-effect transistor (FET) with a ZnO/InGaO heterojunction channel exhibited the highest field-effect mobility of 63.2 ± 0.26 cm/V s, a low subthreshold gate swing of 0.26 ± 0.03 V/dec, a threshold voltage of -0.84 ± 0.85 V, and an ratio of 9 × 10. This surpasses the performance (carrier mobility of ∼41.7 ± 1.43 cm/V s) of an FET with a single InGaO channel. Furthermore, the gate bias stressing test results indicate that FETs with a ZnO/InGaO ( = 0.25 and 0.17) heterojunction channel are much more stable than those with a single InGaO ( = 0.35, 0.25, and 0.17) channel. Relevant discussion is given in detail on the basis of chemical characterization and technological computer-aided design simulation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c06382 | DOI Listing |
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