Theoretical and experimental studies were investigated on the growth characteristics and electrical properties of HfO2 films using Hf(N(CH3)2)4 and CpHf(N(CH3)2)3.
We report a fully transparent thin-film transistor utilizing a La-doped BaSnO3 channel layer that provides a drain current of 0.468 mA/μm and an on-off ratio of 1.5 × 108. The La-doped BaSnO3 channel is grown on a 100–150 nm thick unintentionally doped BaSnO3 buffer layer on a (001) MgO substrate by molecular-beam epitaxy. Unpatterned channel layers show mobilities of 127–184 cm2 V−1 s−1 at carrier concentrations in the low to mid 1019 cm−3 range. The BaSnO3 is patterned by reactive ion etching under conditions preserving the high mobility and conductivity. Using this patterning method, a sub-micron-scale thin film transistor exhibiting complete depletion at room temperature is achieved.
Capacitors based on ABO3-type perovskite oxides show considerable promise for overcoming the limitations of nanoscale integration with dynamic random access memory (DRAM) devices. Among the thermodynamically stable perovskite oxides, titanates (ATiO3) exhibit high dielectric permittivity in metal–insulator–metal (MIM) configurations. However, their performance in mitigating the large leakage current caused by their narrow bandgap (3 eV) remain under scrutiny. Herein, substantially enhanced dielectric properties of an epitaxial SrRuO3/Ba0.5Sr0.5TiO3/SrRuO3 MIM capacitor with a thin dielectric layer (10 nm) are reported. The dielectric/electrode heterointerface was engineered to realize a capacitor with a low leakage current and high dielectric permittivity. A pit-free and stoichiometric SrRuO3 bottom electrode with an atomically smooth surface was exploited to suppress defect formation at the heterointerface. The critical roles of oxygen vacancies and substituted transition-metal atoms in determining the leakage current were assessed, and a strategy for reducing the leakage current via interface engineering was established. Consequently, a dielectric permittivity of 861 and a leakage current density of 5.15 × 10−6 A/cm2 at 1 V were obtained with the thinnest dielectric layer ever reported. Our work paves the way for the development of perovskite-oxide-based capacitors in next-generation DRAM memories.
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