Oxide semiconductor
09771272 · 2017-09-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C01P2002/70
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01L29/22
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/04
ELECTRICITY
C01P2002/74
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01P2002/77
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01L29/26
ELECTRICITY
C01P2004/54
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01L29/24
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/7869
ELECTRICITY
C01P2002/60
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
H01L29/26
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/24
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/786
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/04
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
To provide an oxide semiconductor with a novel structure. Such an oxide semiconductor is composed of an aggregation of a plurality of InGaZnO.sub.4 crystals each of which is larger than or equal to 1 nm and smaller than or equal to 3 nm, and in the oxide semiconductor, the plurality of InGaZnO.sub.4 crystals have no orientation. Alternatively, such an oxide semiconductor is such that a diffraction pattern like a halo pattern is observed by electron diffraction measurement performed by using an electron beam with a probe diameter larger than or equal to 300 nm, and that a diffraction pattern having a plurality of spots arranged circularly is observed by electron diffraction measurement performed by using an electron beam with a probe diameter larger than or equal to 1 nm and smaller than or equal to 30 nm.
Claims
1. An oxide semiconductor comprising: an aggregation of a plurality of crystals, wherein the plurality of crystals includes indium, wherein each of the plurality of crystals has a size larger than or equal to 1 nm and smaller than or equal to 3 nm, and wherein half widths at half maximum of a diffraction peak of the oxide semiconductor is 0.4 nm.sup.−1 to 0.6 nm.sup.−1.
2. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 1, wherein the plurality of crystals has no orientation, and wherein a boundary between the plurality of crystals is not observed in a TEM image of the oxide semiconductor.
3. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 1, wherein the plurality of crystals further includes gallium and zinc.
4. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 3, wherein the plurality of crystals is InGaZnO4 crystals.
5. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 1, wherein a diffraction pattern having a plurality of spots is observed when an electron diffraction measurement is performed on the oxide semiconductor by using an electron beam with a probe diameter larger than or equal to 1 nm and smaller than or equal to 30 nm, and wherein a diffraction pattern with no spot is observed when an electron diffraction measurement is performed on the oxide semiconductor by using an electron beam with a probe diameter larger than or equal to 300 nm.
6. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 5, wherein the plurality of spots is circularly arranged.
7. An oxide semiconductor comprising: indium, wherein a diffraction pattern having a plurality of spots circularly arranged is observed when an electron diffraction measurement is performed on the oxide semiconductor by using an electron beam with a probe diameter larger than or equal to 1 nm and smaller than or equal to 30 nm, wherein a diffraction pattern with no spot is observed when an electron diffraction measurement is performed on the oxide semiconductor by using an electron beam with a probe diameter larger than or equal to 300 nm, wherein a grain boundary is not observed in a TEM image of the oxide semiconductor, and wherein half widths at half maximum of a diffraction peak of the oxide semiconductor is 0.4 nm.sup.−1 to 0.6 nm.sup.−1.
8. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 7, further comprising gallium and zinc.
9. The oxide semiconductor according to claim 8, wherein the plurality of spots circularly arranged is derived from InGaZnO.sub.4 crystals having no orientation.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(10) Embodiments of the present invention will be described below in detail with reference to drawings.
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(12) The TEM image was observed with use of a Hitachi H-9000NAR transmission electron microscope by setting the accelerating voltage to 300 kV and the camera length to 500 mm As a shooting medium, a film was used.
(13) It is difficult to clearly observe crystallinity of the In—Ga—Zn oxide including nanocrystal (also referred to as nanocrystalline In—Ga—Zn oxide) in
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(15) For measurement of selected area electron diffraction, a Hitachi H-9000NAR transmission electron microscope was used under conditions where the accelerating voltage was 300 kV and the camera length was 500 mm. Further, for measurement of nanobeam electron diffraction, a Hitachi HF-2000 field-emission transmission electron microscope was used under conditions where the accelerating voltage was 200 kV and the camera length was 400 mm. As a shooting medium, a film was used.
(16) According to
(17) For comparison, nanobeam electron diffraction of quartz in an amorphous state was observed using a nanobeam with a probe diameter of 1 nm As a result, an electron diffraction pattern that is a halo pattern shown in
(18) Furthermore, for more detailed structural analysis, nanobeam electron diffraction was measured in the following manner: an electron beam with a probe diameter of 1 nm was incident on a cross section of Sample B of a nanocrystalline In—Ga—Zn oxide thinned to several nanometers (approximately 5 nm or less). As a result, electron diffraction patterns having spots which indicate crystallinity and are shown in
(19) According to
(20) As described above, though an nc-OS is not distinguished from an amorphous oxide semiconductor in some cases depending on an analysis method, an exact analysis makes it possible to distinguish the nc-OS and the amorphous oxide semiconductor. Further, it is found that a microscopic region in the nc-OS has a periodic atomic order. Thus, the nc-OS is an oxide semiconductor that has high regularity as compared to an amorphous oxide semiconductor. Therefore, the nc-OS is likely to have a lower density of defect states than an amorphous oxide semiconductor.
EXAMPLE 1
(21) In this example, detailed structural analysis of an In—Ga—Zn oxide was conducted with calculation.
(22) First, a nanobeam electron diffraction pattern of a nanocrystalline In—Ga—Zn oxide was obtained.
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(25) In addition, a nanobeam with a probe diameter of 1 nm was incident on cross sections of Sample 2 to Sample 7 each of which was a nanocrystalline In—Ga—Zn oxide thinned to approximately 50 nm, whereby nanobeam electron diffraction patterns were obtained. Then, the obtained electron diffraction patterns were averaged in the uniform magnitude of a scattering vector |q| by rotating the diffraction patterns with centers thereof as an axis. Profiles of electron diffraction luminance are shown in graphs where the horizontal axes indicate the magnitude of scattering vector |q|[nm.sup.−1] and the vertical axes indicate the diffraction intensity [arbitrary unit] (see
(26) Next, as for InGaZnO.sub.4 in a crystal state (crystalline InGaZnO.sub.4) and InGaZnO.sub.4 in an amorphous state (amorphous InGaZnO.sub.4), calculation was performed. Then, graphs showing the calculation results of crystalline InGaZnO.sub.4 and amorphous InGaZnO.sub.4 were made (see
(27) For the calculation, TEM simulation software jems was used. The calculation mode was set to a mode for calculating powder patterns, and as the fitting function, Gaussian function was used. As the calculation conditions, the accelerating voltage was set to 200 kV, and the camera length was set to 400 mm.
(28) For the calculation, InGaZnO.sub.4 structure models shown in
(29) In the calculation, structure factors in each plane (hkl) of the structure models were determined, and the diffraction position and the diffraction intensity were calculated. A shape of a diffraction peak of each plane (hkl) was calculated by fitting using Gaussian function. Note that the sample shape was isotropic powder. The powder size generally relates to the half width at half maximum (HWHM) of the diffraction peak.
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(32) Next, the half widths at half maximum of the first peaks (H1) obtained from the calculation results of the crystalline InGaZnO.sub.4 and amorphous InGaZnO.sub.4 and the half widths at half maximum of the actual measured first peaks (H1) of samples of nanocrystalline In—Ga—Zn oxides (Sample 1 to Sample 7) were compared. The comparison results are shown in
(33) According to
(34) According to
(35) Further, according to
(36) Moreover, the half width at half maximum of the first peak (H1) was compared between the nanocrystalline In—Ga—Zn oxide and the crystalline InGaZnO.sub.4. The comparison result indicated that the size of nanocrystal was about in a range from 1 nm to 3 nm.
(37) This application is based on Japanese Patent Application serial no. 2013-056952 filed with Japan Patent Office on Mar. 19, 2013, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.