] O U R N A L OF
Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids 137&138 (1991) 515-518 North-Holland
NON-CRYSTALLINE SOLIDS
HOPPING CONDUCTIVITY DUE TO BIPOLARON$ IN A M O R P H O U S SILICON NITRIDE FILMS Yacov Roizin, Leonid Tsibeskov Odessa State University, 2 P.Velikogo st., 270100 Odessa, U S S R
W e have utilized ac conductivity versus frequency measurements to study defect centers in silicon nitride films. A physical model of bipolaron hopping in a m o r p h o u s silicon nitride was developed which accounted, for the spatial correlation in the defect center positions. W e observed a decrease in the density of deep centers in the films subjected to degrading treatment and registered the structural rearrangement in the volume of the investigated samples.
i. INTRODUCTION
2. m X P E R I M E N T A L
A m o r p h o u s silicon nitride (a-Si3N 4) has properties typical of disordered solid-state systems and, in particular, a high density of structure defects i. The presence
of
these
defects (dangling bonds, Si-Si bonds, silicon clusters incorporating hydrogen, etc.) gives rise to deep localized states in the
mobility
PROCEDURES
We i n v e s t i g a t e d a-Si3N 4 f i l m s deposited, o n t o crystalline silicon substrates. The films were fabricated in the standard low-pressure CVD process at
a
ammonolysis
of
temperature silicon
of
6500
C
tetrachloride.
thickness of films ranged from 40 to 400 nm. Metal electrodes (AI, In] were evaporated
g a p of a-Si3N 4. Due to the considerable importance of silicon nitride films in semiconductor device technology the electronic properties of
these
traps
have
been
extensively
characterized a-5 Small-signal ac conductivity measurements are efficient for the determination of the densities,
energies
and
distributions of localized states
spatial
when
the
hopping conductivity dominates in a m o r p h o u s solids. The present paper gives the results of m e a s u r e m e n t s of the dynamic conductivity gac of silicon nitride in a wide frequency range at r o o m and elevated temperatures.
Both
the
initially fabricated and subjected to degrading treatment
Si3N 4 films were investigated
in
t h i s s t u d y . We h a v e a l s o d e v e l o p e d a p h y s i c a l model o f b i p o l a r o n h o p p i n g c o n d u c t i v i t y which accounted
for
the
effects
of
spatial
correlation in the positions of traps and was consistent with our experimental observations.
by The
the surface of Si3N4 or a
special
onto
mercury
contact was brought in contact with the surface of the investigated sample. Measurements were m a d e in the frequency range iO l-iO 7 Hz using E8-2 and Wayne-Kerr B 60i ac bridges supplied with l o c k - i n d e t e c t o r s y s t e m s . A BM-560 Q m e t e r was also used. The error in determination of the active component of the ac conductivity was 2% of the m e a s u r e d quantity. The amplitude of an alternating signal across a sample did not exceed O.i V and no constant bias was used. The maximum
value oi" the electric field in these
measurements was E -< 8- iO~ V/cm, which avoided injection conduction in silicon nit,r'ide~ . The investigated structures were in the regime of charge accumulation at the silicon - silicon nitride interface. The capacitance of structures changed by less than 5%
these in
the
investigated frequency range, The
experimentally • determined
0022-3093/91/$03.50 © 1991 - Elsevier Science Publishers B.V. All rights reserved.
active
516
Y. Roizir~ L. Tsibeskov ~Hopping conductivity due to bipolarons
component of the admittance of structures with
In the range ~ -< iO a Hz it was found that the
a thin insulating layers was equal to the s u m
power exponent was s ~ 0.8-0.9, whereas in the
of the insulator conductance aac and of a term
range iOa Hz < ~ < iO 7 Hz it was s ~!.4-+ O.i.
due to a series-connected 6 contacts
At frequencies ~ > iOa Hz the inequality (la~c
resistance of the
"C R > (7ac was obeyed by s o m e of the samples [for example, in the case of
%c = %c + J c2
is the angular frequency; R is of
the
silicon
the
series
were injected into the the
the
silicon
semiconductor
nitride
substrate.
film The
quantities of charge Q* transmitted through silicon nitride films were in the range iO -2 to i C/cm 2.
corresponded
to
the
appearance of a quadratic dependence of q~*c on w. The temperature dependences of the conduc-
substrate.
To stimulate degradation p h e n o m e n a holes from
i
capacitance was C -~iO -I0 F and the resistance was R ~-5 ~]), which
where C is the capacitance of the structure; resistance
sample
from
tivity ~ c [ J obtained at low frequencies were sublinear, whereas at high frequencies (~ > iO 4 Hz)
the
value
of
~ac
was
practically
independent of T. The observed changes in Cac spectra after the charge injection are shown in Fig.2. For Q~ < i C/cm z the changes of characteristics for
8. E X P E R I M E N T A L
RESULT5
The results of our measurements
of
the
frequency dependence of the conductivity of S
G, ~-1. om-1 lO -6
M N O $ structure (Fig.i) indicated that Oac cc a) . 10-..~Q G,Q-1. ore-1
lo-lO
10-8~
,t
10 2
1
10 4
~ ,H~
lo-lO i
i
i
104 106~O,?Iz
FIGURE 2 Frequency dependencies of the degraded silicon nitride, sample~ The t~ansmitted through the f11m charge Q [C/cm ~] i - O, 2 - O.i, 3 - i, 4-3 characteristics for samples fabricated on one
FIGURE i Frequency dependence of the dynamic conductivity of various M N O S structures" i. silicon nitride layer thickness d- = 80 nm, phosphorus d o p e d (p = 4.5 2,cm) silicon substrate of thickness d=3OO~Lm; 2. d ~ lii rim, p = i ~,cm, d =iO0~rn; 8. d ~ 3 2 0 n m , p = 4 . 5 ~ . c m d ZO ~m.
substrate were identical. The value of Oac decreased in the range ~ < iO 4 Hz while in the high frequency range an increase was observed. Similar peculiarities were registered after the U V illumination. They disappeared after the annealing of the degraded samples at 300 ° C for" an hour. For the injected charge Q W >- 8 C/cm 2
Y. Roizin, L. Tsibeskov /Hopping conductivity due to bipolarons the
changes
in
irreversible and
Si~Nc differed
parameters from
sample
517
were
frequency in a crystal; ~-~ is the localization
to
radius equal to several angstromsg; r is the
sample. A characteristic "shoulder" appeared
distance between the D+ and D
on (7ac[O~)plot in this case Fig.m). An increase of the dc leakage current~accompanled--
the concentration of the centers per unit energy interval. The function g(T) represents
the observed OacI~) changes. For Q ~ > iO C/cm ?"
the energy interval in which ,jumps occur the
local leakage current channels were usually revealed under the electrode of the degraded
pair correlation function f(r) represents the states.
The
structure.
quantlty (i/2) ~" N (E)f(r)dr is equal to
the
spatial distribution of D÷, .
2
D
states; N(E) is
2
number of pairs per unit volume with dimensions 4. PHYSICAL MODEL AND DISCUSSION
from r to r + dr. In the case of closely spaced
It was shown in Refs.4,5 by ESR measurements that dominant traps in a-5i.sN 4 have negative correlation energy (U
studies~ ~8.
pairs and bipolaron jumps an allowance for the Coulomb correlations gives 2 g(T) = e /~,880r W > kT
(8)
The U
where 8 is the static
the state with two electrons and D+ is an empty
the condition ~
state. In this study it was a s s u m e d that the dependence
qac(te,T) was
due
to
tunnel
permittivity
and
the
characteristic ,jump length r ~ c a n be found from = i.
The proposed model makes it possible to use the experimental results in calculation of the
transitions of bipolarons between D_ and D+
density of states involved in the
states. Our model allowed for the contribution
process and to analyze the
of just pairs (and not of triplets,
spatial correlations of these states. W e shall
quadru-
tunneling
nature
of
the
plets, etc.) o f centers, which was j u s t i f i e d at
represent the pair correlation function in the
not too low frequencies, when the jump length
form fir)= A
was less than the average distance between the
sufficiently low frequencies such that ~r << i,
traps. It was a s s u m e d that the height of the
the spatial correlation can be ignored. Bearing
potential barrier and the length of a j u m p were
in mind that dr = (i/2 O0(d'~/~) we obtain
uncorrelated.
A
nonadiabatic
regime
was
considered in which the tunneling of carriers was the slowest process. In this case we can use the results of Refs. 6 and 9 , and show that r 4eZra ~(r)g(T)[f(r)+i]
%c=
K [
N2(E)dr
(2)
exp(-~r).
In
the
case
e4~ ~ac(W,T)= - - - lnZ[1;ph(T)/~] N2(E) 48 a ~ 88 0
which corresponds to the part of the frequency dependence
of
the
dynamic
conductivity
characterized by the power exponent s <- i. A s s u m i n g that ~ h ~ iolOHz and ~-i ~ 0.5 n m 9,
cm-3-eV -i which is in agreement with w h e r e K ~ 2; ~(r) = ~,h e x p ( 2 ~ ) i s t h e t i m e c o n s t a n t o f t h e i n t e r c e n t e r t r a n s i t i o n ; ~,h iS characteristic
similar
to
(4)
and using the experimental values Gacl~), we obtain the density of states N(E) ~ (2-8)-~019
,J
i + ~'-~2(r)
a
of
the
phonon
1,4.
In
the
case
of
strong
Refs. spatial
correlations, when f(r) = A exp(-~r) > i,
518
Y Roizir~ L. Tsibeskov / Hopping conductivity due to bipolarons
concentration.
It
means
that
long-range
structural rearangements take place in
gac(~)= - -
×
matrix of the a m o r p h o u s silicon nitride in the
cos(~/2~) a ~ e e
48
the
process of degradation. This is also consistent
×
n
N2 (E)
(5)
with an appearence of local leakage channels for large transmitted charges. 5. CONCLUSIONS
which explains the superlinear dependence range ~0 ~ iO ~ Hz. W e then find that s = i + ~/2(x and = i.6-10 -7 cm -3. Substituting in Eq.(5) the
W e have for the first time observed
the
superlinear regions on a-Si3N 4 ac conductivity versus frequency plots. This observation
value of N(E) calculated from Eq.(4), we obtain
provides convincing evidence that
A = iO0. This m e a n s that the situation which
correlated pairs of defect centers exist in the
needs allowance for the spatial correlations
investigated films. W e have developed a bipo-
changes to the case of ordinary ac hopping
larch hopping conductivity model
conductivity in the range rw->
corresponds to the condition A exp(-~r) ~ i and
consistent with the experimental data. observed changes in g(W) spectra of
a kink in the experimental dependence Oac(~)at ~ iO 4 H z .
degraded samples are explained by structural
r ~
~ 8 nm, which
spatially
which
is The the
rearrangement in the volume of silicon nitride.
It therefore follows that in the frequency .
range iO 2 Hz < a~ < iOa Hz the dependence gac[~)
REFERENCES
is governed
i. A.V. Rzhanov (ed), Silicon Nitride in Electronics (Nauka, Novosibirsk, 198,-°.,in Russian).
centers
with
by
stochastically
an
average
distributed
distance
r 0--
[T,~c/N(E)e~]I/2 ~-8 n m , where r < rw< r,:,.At frequencies ~ > iO~ Hz the main contribution to the dynamic conductivity is m a d e by spatially correlated pairs of defects with the m a x i m u m distance r~ = r
between the centers.
The presence of spatially correlated pairs of defects (incorporating
dangling
separated by the m a x i m u m distance r cleary implies the
presence
of
bonds) ~-3 n m
structural
2. J. R o b e r t s o n , M.J. Powell, J. Appl. Phys. 44 (i984) 4i5. 8. S. Fufita, A. 5asaki, J. Electrochem.5oc. 132 (1985) 898. 4. M. Numeda, H. Yokomichi, T. Shimuzu, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. Pt.2 28 (1984) LB.
5. D.T. Krick, P.M. Lenahan, J. Kamichi, J. Appl. Phys. 64 (i988) 3558.
imperfections such as pores or microcracks in
6. A.R. Long, Adv. Phys. 8i (i982) 558.
the a-SiyN~ matrix. The decrease of Oac for ~ <
7. Ya.O. Roizin, Ha Huy Dung, Photoelectronics i (1987) 8i (in Russian).
iO 4 Hz in the degraded silicon nitride
films
corresponds to the decrease
total
of
the
density of traps. At the same time the increase of Oac in the superlinear (Tac((~)region implies the increase of the closely located pairs
8. A.F. Akhmed, Ya.O. Roizin et al., Ukrainian Physical Journal. 8i (i986) 789 (in Russian). 9. A.L. Efros, Philos. Mag. 518 (i@Si) 829.