| Literature DB >> 30013880 |
Steven Folkersma1,2, Janusz Bogdanowicz1, Andreas Schulze1, Paola Favia1, Dirch H Petersen3, Ole Hansen3, Henrik H Henrichsen4, Peter F Nielsen4, Lior Shiv4, Wilfried Vandervorst1,2.
Abstract
This paper demonstrates the development of a methodology using the micro four-point probe (μ4PP) technique to electrically characterize single nanometer-wide fins arranged in dense arrays. We show that through the concept of carefully controlling the electrical contact formation process, the electrical measurement can be confined to one individual fin although the used measurement electrodes physically contact more than one fin. We demonstrate that we can precisely measure the resistance of individual ca. 20 nm wide fins and that we can correlate the measured variations in fin resistance with variations in their nanometric width. Due to the demonstrated high precision of the technique, this opens the prospect for the use of μ4PP in electrical critical dimension metrology.Entities:
Keywords: critical dimension metrology; electrical characterization; finFET; micro four-point probe; sheet resistance
Year: 2018 PMID: 30013880 PMCID: PMC6036976 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.9.178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 2(a) Measured fin resistance Rfin as a function of fin width Wfin on isolated (triangle) and dense (diamond) fins using high (red) and low (blue) punch-through currents. (b) Relative standard deviation of the measured values of Rfin of Figure 2a as a function of the fin pitch. When using a low punch-through current (blue), the relative standard deviation remains stable (≤3%) regardless of fin pitch, indicating that the electrical contact remains restricted to a single fin, even in the grey area where the electrodes are in physical contact with more than one fin.
Figure 1Top-view schematic of the four μ4pp electrodes landed on (a) a single fin and (b) two fins. The electrode contact size and the contact resistance for each electrode–fin contact are, respectively, indicated by dcontact and RC (j = 1, 2,…, 8). Note that all contact resistances are initially considered to be highly resistive because the native oxides present on both the fins and electrodes prevent current flow into the fin. Rfin is defined as the resistance of the fin between the two inner contacts, i.e., Rfin = R × s/Wfin where s is the distance between the two inner contacts and Wfin is the fin width.
Figure 3(a) TEM image of four ca. 20 nm wide Si fins where the measured Rfin is indicated on top of each fin. The measured values of Rfin correlate to the respective fin width Wfin according to Rfin = Rfin × s/Wfin. The error for each fin refers to the lowest precision (3.0%) achieved on all measured fins. (b) Measured fin resistance as a function of Wfin fitted to a constant sheet resistance Rfin using the relation Rfin= Rfin × s/Wfin (using s = 8 µm). The slope of the fitted curve at Wfin = 20 nm is indicated (ca. 4.0 kΩ/nm). (inset) Sheet resistance (Rfin) of the ten Si fins obtained using the inversed relation Rfin = Rfin × Wfin/s, plotted against fin width Wfin. For comparison, the dashed red line shows the low sheet resistance Rpad = 135 Ω measured on a large pad of the same material as the fins.