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Electrical Characterization of a Double Barrier Direct Tunneling Diode Structure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2011

E. M. Dons
Affiliation:
Microelectronics Research Center and Department of Physics, New Jersey Institute of Technology, University Heights, Newark, NJ 07102, emd0138@megahertz.njit.edu, farmer@njit.edu
C. S. Skowronski
Affiliation:
Microelectronics Research Center and Department of Physics, New Jersey Institute of Technology, University Heights, Newark, NJ 07102, emd0138@megahertz.njit.edu, farmer@njit.edu
K. R. Farmer
Affiliation:
Microelectronics Research Center and Department of Physics, New Jersey Institute of Technology, University Heights, Newark, NJ 07102, emd0138@megahertz.njit.edu, farmer@njit.edu
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Abstract

We report the electrical characterization of a direct tunneling diode structure that incorporates a multilayer dielectric. The dielectric consists of a stack of two thermally grown, ultrathin SiO2 layers, each ∼3.5 rin thick, separated by a deposited, continuous, undoped, ultrathin nanocrystalline Si layer ∼5.0 nm thick. Electrical measurements of this structure are reported for both n-type and p-type Si substrates. We find that the room temperature transport through this structure is accounted for by describing the intermediate Si layer as a quantum well with a continuum of states, and by otherwise assuming bulk properties for the ultrathin layers, such as the existence of a bandgap in the Si well and the usual Si-SiO2 interface potential barrier height at all interfaces. This structure is expected to be useful as the active dielectric in nonvolatile memory devices.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1999

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References

REFERENCES

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