Thin film activation method using electrical energy and thin film transistor fabrication method
09685543 ยท 2017-06-20
Assignee
Inventors
- Hyun Jae Kim (Seoul, KR)
- Doo Hyun Yoon (Seoul, KR)
- Tae Soo JUNG (Seoul, KR)
- Young Jun TAK (Seoul, KR)
- Heesoo LEE (Seoul, KR)
- Wongi Kim (Goyang-si, KR)
- Jeong Woo Park (Seoul, KR)
Cpc classification
H10D64/512
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/02565
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/479
ELECTRICITY
H10D99/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/477
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L29/66
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/786
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/479
ELECTRICITY
H01L29/423
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The inventive concept relates to a thin film activation method, a thin film transistor fabrication method, and a substrate processing device, and more particularly, to a method of activating a thin film by using electrical energy, a method of fabricating a thin film transistor, and a device of processing a substrate. The thin film activation method according to an embodiment of the inventive concept may include supplying electrical energy to a thin film.
Claims
1. A thin film transistor fabrication method comprising: forming a gate on a substrate; forming a gate insulating layer on the gate; forming a channel layer on the gate insulating layer; forming a source and a drain on the channel layer; and supplying electrical energy to the channel layer to activate the channel layer, wherein the forming of the channel layer comprises supplying thermal energy along with electrical energy to the channel layer, wherein the supplying thermal energy along with electrical energy to the channel layer comprises heating the channel layer while applying a voltage to at least one of the gate, the source, or the drain.
2. The thin film transistor fabrication method of claim 1, wherein the channel layer comprises a metal oxide thin film.
3. The thin film transistor fabrication method of claim 2, wherein the forming of the channel layer comprises vacuum-depositing the metal oxide thin film on the gate insulating layer.
4. The thin film transistor fabrication method of claim 3, wherein the vacuum-depositing of the metal oxide thin film comprises sputtering-depositing the metal oxide thin film on the gate insulating layer.
5. The thin film transistor fabrication method of claim 1, wherein the heating of the channel layer while applying the voltage to at least one of the gate, the source, or the drain comprises heating the channel layer while applying the voltage to enable a voltage difference to be formed between one or both of the gate and the drain and the source.
6. The thin film transistor fabrication method of claim 5, wherein the heating of the channel layer while applying the voltage to enable the voltage difference to be formed between one or both of the gate and the drain and the source comprises heating the channel layer while applying the voltage to enable a voltage of one or both of the gate and the drain to be higher than a voltage of the source.
7. The thin film transistor fabrication method of claim 6, wherein the heating of the channel layer while applying the voltage to enable the voltage of one or both of the gate and the drain to be higher than the voltage of the source comprises heating the channel layer while applying the voltage to enable the voltage of the source to be the lowest, the voltage of the gate to be the highest, and the voltage of the drain to be lower than or equal to the voltage of the gate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the inventive concept, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate exemplary embodiments of the inventive concept and, together with the description, serve to explain principles of the inventive concept. In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) Other advantages and features of the inventive concept, and implementation methods thereof will be clarified through following embodiments to be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. The inventive concept may, however, be embodied in different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that the present disclosure is thorough and complete and fully conveys the scope of the inventive concept to a person skilled in the art to which the inventive concept pertains. Further, the inventive concept is only defined by scopes of claims.
(10) Even if not defined, all the terms used herein (including technology or science terms) have the same meanings as those generally accepted by typical technologies in the related art to which the inventive concept pertains. The terms defined in general dictionaries may be construed as having the same meanings as those used in the related art and/or a text of the present application and even when some terms are not clearly defined, they should not be construed as being conceptual or excessively formal.
(11) The terms used herein are only for explaining embodiments and not intended to limit the inventive concept. The terms in a singular form in the present disclosure also include plural forms unless otherwise specified. The terms used herein includes, comprises, including and/or comprising do not exclude the presence or addition of one or more compositions, ingredients, components, steps, operations and/or elements other than the compositions, ingredients, components, steps, operations and/or elements that are mentioned. In the present disclosure, the term and/or indicates each of enumerated components or various combinations thereof.
(12) Embodiments of the inventive concept are described below in detail with reference to the drawings attached to the present disclosure.
(13)
(14) Referring to
(15) The thin film 11 may include an oxide thin film. According to an embodiment, the oxide thin film may include a metal oxide thin film.
(16) In particular, the metal oxide thin film may be single-component metal oxide, such as ZnO, InO, SnO, two-component metal oxide, such as InZnO, InGaO, ZnSnO, or three-component metal oxide, such as InGaZnO. According to an embodiment, the metal oxide thin film may also include at least one of the single-component metal oxide or the multi-component metal oxide.
(17) According to an embodiment of the inventive concept, the activated thin film 11 may be the thin film 11 that is vacuum-deposited. The vacuum-deposited thin film 11 may be the thin film 11 that is deposited by sputtering. The sputtering is a technique that enables ion to collide with a target to jet atoms or molecules making up of the target so that they are attached to a substrate. Thus, since materials making up the sputtering-deposited thin film 11 are coupled only physically, not chemically, there is a need to provide a semiconductor characteristic to the thin film 11 through a separate activation process.
(18) Thus, an embodiment of the inventive concept presents a new technology that supplies electrical energy to the thin film 11 to activate the thin film 11. However, the activation method according to an embodiment of the inventive concept may be applied to not only the thin film 11 that is deposited by sputtering, but also a thin film that is deposited by using other vacuum deposition techniques, such as chemical vapor deposition, atomic layer deposition, evaporation deposition and the like.
(19) According to an embodiment of the inventive concept, supplying the electrical energy to the thin film 11 may include applying a voltage to an electrode that is formed to be in contact with the thin film 11.
(20) As shown in
(21) According to another embodiment, supplying the electrical energy to the thin film 11 may include applying voltages to not only the electrodes 12 and 13 that are formed to be in contact with the thin film 11, but also an electrode (not shown) that is disposed between the thin film 11 and another thin film. In other words, the electrode to which the voltage is applied in order to activate the thin film 11 may also be an electrode that is formed on another thin film adjacent to the thin film 11 as well as the electrodes 12 and 13 that are directly formed on a corresponding thin film 11.
(22) As such, supplying the electrical energy to the thin film 11 may include applying voltages to some or all of the electrodes 12 and 13 that are formed to be in contact with the thin film 11, and electrodes that are disposed between the thin film 11 and another thin film.
(23) According to an embodiment of the inventive concept, applying the voltage to the electrode may include applying the voltages to the electrodes so that a voltage difference is formed between a first electrode and a second electrode among a plurality of electrodes.
(24) For example, in order to supply the electrical energy to the thin film 11 to activate the thin film, it is possible to apply voltages V.sub.1 and V.sub.2 to the electrodes 12 and 13, respectively so that a voltage difference V.sub.1-V.sub.2 is formed between a first electrode 12 and a second electrode 13.
(25) According to another embodiment of the inventive concept, supplying the electrical energy to the thin film 11 may include supplying other energy along with the electrical energy to the thin film 11.
(26)
(27) Referring to
(28) Supplying the thermal energy along with the electrical energy to the thin film 11 may include heating the thin film 11 while applying voltages to some or all of the electrodes 12 and 13 that are formed to be in contact with the thin film 11, and electrodes (not shown) that are disposed between the thin film 11 and another thin film.
(29) According to an embodiment of the inventive concept, heating the thin film 11 while applying the voltages to the electrodes may include heating the thin film 11 at a temperature higher than about 100 C. and lower than about 300 C. while applying the voltages to the electrodes so that a voltage difference is formed between a first electrode and a second electrode among a plurality of electrodes.
(30) Heating the thin film at the temperature higher than about 100 C. and lower than about 300 C. while applying the voltages to the electrodes so that the voltage difference is formed between the first electrode and the second electrode may include heating the thin film 11 at the temperature higher than about 100 C. and lower than about 300 C. for about half an hour to about two hours, in particular, for about one hour to about two hours while applying the voltages to the electrodes so that the voltage difference is formed between the first electrode and the second electrode.
(31)
(32) Referring to
(33) The channel layer 34 may include a metal oxide thin film.
(34) In addition, forming the channel layer 34 in step S23 may include vacuum-depositing the metal oxide thin film on the gate insulating layer 33.
(35) In this example, vacuum-depositing the metal oxide thin film may include sputtering-depositing the metal oxide thin film on the gate insulating layer 33 but the depositing of the thin film is not limited to the sputtering deposition.
(36) According to an embodiment, activating the channel layer 34 in step S25 may include supplying thermal energy along with the electrical energy to the channel layer 34.
(37) In particular, referring to
(38) Although
(39) According to an embodiment of the inventive concept, heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage to at least one of the gate 32, the source 35, or the drain 36 may include heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage so that a voltage difference is formed between one or both of the gate 32 and the drain 36 and the source 35.
(40) For example, heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage so that the voltage difference is formed between one or both of the gate 32 and the drain 36 and the source 35 may include heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage so that the voltage V.sub.G, V.sub.D of one or both of the gate 32 and the drain 36 is higher than the voltage V.sub.S of the source 35. In this case, V.sub.G>V.sub.S, V.sub.D>V.sub.S, or V.sub.G and V.sub.D>V.sub.S.
(41) Furthermore, heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage so that the voltage of one or both of the gate 32 and the drain 36 is higher than the voltage of the source 35 may include heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage so that the voltage of the source 35 is the lowest, the voltage of the gate 32 is the highest, and the voltage of the drain 36 is lower than or equal to the voltage of the gate 32. In this case, V.sub.GV.sub.D>V.sub.S.
(42) According to the present embodiment, the source 35 may be grounded, a voltage of about 50 V may be applied to the gate 32, and a voltage of about 10.1 V to about 50 V may be applied to the drain 36.
(43) Also, heating the channel layer 34 while applying the voltage to at least one of the gate 32, the source 35, or the drain 36 may include heating the channel layer 34 at a temperature higher than 100 C. and lower than 300 C. while applying the voltage to at least one of the gate 32, the source 35, or the drain 36.
(44) In this case, heating the channel layer 34 at the temperature higher than 100 C. and lower than 300 C. may include heating the channel layer 34 at the temperature higher than 100 C. and lower than 300 C. for about half an hour to about two hours, in particular, for about one hour to about two hours while applying the voltage to at least one of the gate 32, the source 35, or the drain 36.
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(46) The substrate processing device 40 is a device that processes a substrate 10 in order to activate the thin film 11 that is formed on the substrate 10 according to the embodiment of the inventive concept as described above, and may include a support 41 on which the substrate 10 is disposed, and a power supply unit (not shown) that outputs an electrical signal in order to supply electrical energy to the thin film 11.
(47) Referring to
(48) Furthermore, the substrate processing device 40 may further include a heat emitting portion that emits heat in order to supply thermal energy to the thin film 11. Although not shown, the heat emitting portion may be disposed at the support 41 to heat the substrate 10 directly.
(49) The inventor has fabricated an InGaZnO thin film transistor to measure transfer characteristics in order to examine the effect of thin film activation using electrical energy of the inventive concept.
(50) In particular, the inventor has fabricated a bottom gate type thin film transistor and used a boron doped P-type silicon wafer as a substrate to replace a gate electrode. In addition, SiO.sub.2 has grown by about 120 nm on the substrate by a dry oxidation technique to form the gate insulating layer. Then, ultrasonic washing has been performed on the P+ silicon substrate on which the gate insulating layer is formed, in order of acetone and methanol for ten minutes respectively, and then the substrate has been blurred by the using of a nitrogen gun.
(51) Then, an InGaZnO thin film has been deposited on the gate insulating layer through sputtering, in which case the mole fraction of metallic materials in the InGaZnO was In:Ga:Zn=1:1:1. A chamber was under argon atmosphere upon sputtering, and an operating pressure was 510.sup.3 Torr. In addition, the sputtering has been performed for about five minutes at about 150 W, in which case the thickness of the InGaZnO thin film was about 40 nm.
(52) Then, aluminum has been thermally deposited by about 200 nm on the InGaZnO thin film to form source and drain electrodes. In this case, the width and length of a channel were formed to be about 1000 m and about 150 m, respectively by using a shadow mask.
(53) Then, in order to activate the InGaZnO thin film according to an embodiment of the inventive concept, voltages have been applied to the source, the gate and the drain with a probe station tip, while the substrate is heated on a hot plate. For comparison, the substrate has been heated at about 200 C. for about one hour to activate the thin film.
(54)
(55) Referring to
(56) Referring to
(57) The mobility, on/off current ratio, sub-threshold swing (S.S.) and threshold voltage V.sub.th of the activated thin film transistor as shown in
(58) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 V.sub.D (V)/Processing Mobility On/Off current S.S. hour (hr) (cm.sup.2/V.sub.s) ratio (mV/decade) V.sub.th (V) 10.1/1 13.58 5.24 10.sup.7 0.78 0.87 10.1/2 11.68 3.71 10.sup.8 0.68 0.74 50/1 9.22 3.21 10.sup.6 0.67 0.28 50/2 8.84 2.06 10.sup.7 0.55 0.57
(59) According to an embodiment of the inventive concept, it is possible to activate the thin film that is formed on a substrate vulnerable to heat.
(60) According to an embodiment, it is possible to lower a heat treatment temperature needed for thin film activation to increase the availability of a plastic substrate or flexible substrate.
(61) Although the inventive concept is described above through embodiments, the embodiments above are only provided to describe the spirit of the inventive concept and not intended to limit the inventive concept. A person skilled in the art would understand that various modifications to the above-described embodiments may be implemented. The scope of the inventive concept is defined only by the following claims.