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Low-temperature n-type doping of insulating ultrathin amorphous indium oxide using H plasma-assisted annealing
  • Seo, Hojun ;
  • Lee, Sang Yeon ;
  • Lee, Jeongsu ;
  • Kim, Sunjin ;
  • Sul, Onejae ;
  • Seo, Hyungtak ;
  • Lee, Seung Beck
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Publication Year
2022-05-14
Publisher
IOP Publishing Ltd
Citation
Nanotechnology, Vol.33
Keyword
dopingIn2O3low temperature fabricationoxide semiconductorsthin-film transistor
Mesh Keyword
Amorphous indium-oxideAmorphous oxide semiconductorsC. thin film transistor (TFT)In2O3 thin filmsLow- temperature processLow-temperature fabricationLows-temperaturesn-Type dopingThermal-annealingUltra-thin
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
BioengineeringChemistry (all)Materials Science (all)Mechanics of MaterialsMechanical EngineeringElectrical and Electronic Engineering
Abstract
Low-temperature process compatibility is a key factor in successfully constructing additional functional circuits on top of pre-existing circuitry without corrupting characteristics thereof, a technique that typically requires die-to-die (wafer-to-wafer) stacking and interconnecting. And against thermal annealing, which is mandatory and is possible only globally for activating amorphous oxide semiconductors, the selective control of electrical characteristics of the oxide thin-films for integrated circuit applications is challenging. Here, a low-temperature process that enables n-type doping of the designed region of insulating In2O3 thin-film is demonstrated. A short hydrogen plasma treatment followed by low-temperature annealing is used to increase interstitial and substitutional hydrogen associated bond states creating shallow donor levels in the insulating In2O3 surface to transform the thin-film into an n-type semiconductor. As a result, an In2O3 thin-film transistor with a high on/off current ratio (>108), a field-effect mobility of 3.8 cm2 V-1 s-1, and a threshold voltage of ∼3.0 V has been developed. Compared to performing just thermal annealing, the H-plasma assisted annealing process resulted in an n-type In2O3 thin-film transistor showing similar characteristics, while the processing time was reduced by ∼1/3 and the plasma-untreated area still remained insulating. With further development, the hydrogen plasma doping process may make possible a monolithic planar process technology for amorphous oxide semiconductors.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32555
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6528/ac51ac
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This study was supported by several grants. (1) National Research Foundation of Korea with grant number: 2014M3A7B4049368. (2) National Research Foundation of Korea with grant number: 2014M3A7B4049369. (3) National Research Foundation of Korea with grant number: 2019R1I1A1A01057620. (4) 2021R1A2C1013077. (5) Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (6) Brain Korea 21 Fostering Outstanding Universities for Research (BK 21 FOUR) program.
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SEO, HYUNGTAK서형탁
Department of Materials Science Engineering
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