3d Sequential Low Temperature Top Tier Devices Using Dopant Activation With Excimer Laser Anneal And Strained Silicon As Performance Boosters

2020 IEEE SYMPOSIUM ON VLSI TECHNOLOGY(2020)

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Abstract
Top tier devices in a 3D sequential integration are optimized using a low temperature process flow (<525 degrees C). Bi-axial tensile strained silicon is transferred without strain relaxation to boost the top tier nmos device performance by 40-50% over the unstrained silicon devices, recovering the performance loss from the low temperature processing when using extension-less device integration. Excimer laser anneal is also shown to effectively activate both n-type and p-type dopants in the extension of thin silicon film devices using optimized, CMOS compatible, laser exposure conditions. Laser anneal is fully compatible with a replacement metal gate (RMG) process flow and with selective source/drain (SD) epitaxy. The dopant activation level is preserved during the entire process flow which results in similar I-on-I-off device performance for devices with laser and spike anneals. Excimer laser anneal benefits also from improved control short channel effects over spike annealing due to low dopant diffusion.
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Key words
strain relaxation,unstrained silicon devices,low temperature processing,silicon film devices,laser exposure conditions,replacement metal gate process flow,dopant activation level,spike anneals,excimer laser anneal benefits,spike annealing,dopant diffusion,3D sequential low temperature,top tier devices,3D sequential integration,low temperature process flow,biaxial tensile,top tier NMOS device performance,extensionless device integration,p-type dopants,n-type dopants,RMG process flow,source-drain epitaxy,SD epitaxy,Si
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