This invention relates to semiconductor memory devices, and more particularly the invention relates to a floating gate flash memory device in which charge on a floating gate between a channel region and a control gate of a transistor controls conduction voltage of the transistor.
Aggressive scaling of semiconductor memory cells and the dramatic increase in the memory array size demand high density/low cost flash memory. Floating gate flash memory is a popular semiconductor memory device. It is available from many IC manufacturers. It is used in personal computers, cellular phones, digital cameras, smart-media, networks, automotive, global positioning systems and so on. The device structure of an industry standard floating gate memory is shown in
A heavily doped poly-silicon floating gate 10 is sandwiched between the tunnel oxide 12 and inter-poly silicon oxide 14. A control gate 16 is voltage biased to control conduction in a channel 18 in a doped well 20 between a source 22 and a drain 24.
The floating gate flash memory is programmed by either hot electron injection, where hot electrons with large kinetic energy injecting into the floating gate near the drain side, or by Fowler-Nordheim tunneling, where cold electrons tunnel through the tunnel oxide along the whole channel. Currently, commercial flash memory devices use tunnel oxide thicker than 8 nm to guarantee 10 years retention time, which in turn results in high programming voltage and slow programming speed.
Table 1 shows the 2002 International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductor flash memory. The operation voltage and the tunnel oxide will not scale at all in the coming five technology generations. And the scalability below 65 nm is still questionable.
In the conventional floating gate flash memory, the tunnel oxide limits the operation voltage scaling. The present invention overcomes this limitation.
The present invention provides improved cell programming which allows low voltage operation. In an embodiment of the memory cell, a thin sacrificial layer between the control gate and the floating gate will be released during processing, whereby the control gate can move towards and away from the floating gate freely. When appropriate bias is applied, the control gate can be pulled in and touch the floating gate.
In one embodiment, the floating gate is charged with electrons front the control gate when the control gate is biased with a negative voltage and a doped p-well is biased with a positive voltage. Once the floating gate is charged such that the potential difference between floating gate and control gate is less than the pull-in voltage, the control gate will be restored back up. The injected electrons will be stored in the floating gate which causes VT, channel threshold voltage, to increase. The writing “1” into the cell is done. Since electrons are injected from the control gate into the floating gate by contacting the floating gate instead of through the tunnel oxide, low voltage operation can be achieved with fast programming/erasing speed. By controlling the bias on the control gate and the p-well, one can precisely control the exact amount of charge injected into the floating gate, hence multi-bit operation with single memory cell is obtained.
The invention and object and features thereof will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description and appended claims when taken with the drawings.
a-2c are a top view and two section views of a flash memory cell in accordance with one embodiment of the invention.
a, 4b are a top view and section view of the memory cell of
a-7k are section views illustrating the fabrication of a memory cell in accordance with one embodiment of the invention.
a, 2b and 2c are a top view and two section views along different axes (AA and BB of
As shown in
The potential of the floating gate is determined by the coupling of the floating gate to the source, drain, well, and control gate. The coupling ratio of the floating gate to the source, drain, well, and control gate can be adjusted by properly designing the gate oxide thickness and the air gap height. The floating gate is more coupled to the source/drain/well instead of to the control gate in a properly designed memory cell. The coupling coefficients are defined as:
Here CS, CD, CB and CG are the capacitance of the floating gate to the source, drain, well and control gate, respectively, while αS, αD, αB and αG are the corresponding coupling ratio coefficients respectively. A set of typical coupling ratio coefficients for conventional flash memory are given as follows: αS=0.1, αD=0.1, αB=0.6 and αG=0.2. The floating gate potential can be expressed as:
Here Q is the charge stored in the floating gate. For simplicity, Q is assumed to be 0 at the beginning of the programming/erasing pulse. The voltage difference between the floating gate and the control gate is the programming/erasing voltage. It is expressed as:
Please note that in the proposed memory cell, the floating gate is more coupled to the well comparing to the conventional flash memory so we can control the potential on the floating gate more effectively by adjusting the well bias. Another benefit is that small floating gate can be used, so there is less coupling between adjacent floating gates in the memory array, while tall floating gate is required to achieve a large coupling to the control gate in conventional flash memory. With equation (6), we then can estimate the needed voltage in order to make the proposed memory cell functional.
For a double-supported beam, spring constant is shown below
Here, E is Young's Modulus (1.6 GPa for poly-Si), W is Channel Length, L is cell width, H is the thickness of the control gate.
Pull-in voltage of voltage-controlled parallel-plate electrostatic actuator is given as:
Here, g is gap width, and ε is permittivity of vacuum.
Plugging in the numbers as shown in the embodiment of
The factor that will affect the retention time of the proposed memory cell is discharge in the air gap. In the 19th century, Paschen, a German scientist, conducted experiments to determine electrical arc characteristics as ambient pressure changed. At higher pressure, the breakdown voltage is a function of the gas pressure and the width of the gap. And Townsend Avalanche is the dominant mechanism for breakdown.
However, Paschen curve did not predict the breakdown accurately for the narrow gaps as often used in Micro-Electro-Mechanical systems. In narrow gaps, there are few ionizable molecules which could be approximately treated as in vacuum. Field emission will be the main breakdown mechanism and is estimated to be 1V/nm for vacuum. The embodiment of this invention can stand up to 5 V. And the required voltage for proper operation is 2 V. Hence, discharging will not happen in the proposed memory cell. In operations, there are no electrons tunneling happening through gate oxide. Thus, the quality of the gate oxide is conserved.
Thus, superior retention time performance is obtained in the embodiment of this invention.
Array operation will now be described with reference to the top view of a NAND memory array is shown in
Write operation (programming “1”)—In
Vprog=−1.46V on the selected cell (WL2, PW3).
Along the word line “WL1”, “WL3” and “WM4”, Vprog=0V on the cell that shares any one of the bit line “BL1”, “BL2” and “BL4”.
Along the bit line “BL3”, Vprog=−0.66V on the cell that shares any one of the word line “WL1”, “WL3” and “WL4”.
Along the word line “WL2”, Vprog=−0.8V for every cell except the selected cell.
Since the pull-in voltage is calculated to be 1.02V, it is obvious that only the selected cell will be programmed, while all of the other cells will be immune to “soft programming”.
(b) Write operation (programming “0”)—In this operation, the bias are adjusted such that there is no pull-in happening. The floating gate remains in the previous state of no electrons, corresponding to a “0” state.
(c) Read operation—During read operation, just like conventional NAND flash memory, both select transistors are enabled, causing a conditional discharge of the bit line.
(d) Erase operation—During the erasing cycle, every word line is biased at 2.0V, every P-well is biased at 1V and the bit lines are floated. According to equation (6), the erasing voltage for each cell will be approximately 1.5V depending on the amount of electrons stored in the floating gate. Then the whole block is erased simultaneously. During erasure, all the cell modules will be programmed to become depletion devices. Individual cell erasure is possible with proper biasing.
(e) Multi-bit operation—As described in the previous section, the proposed memory cell could perform multi-bit operation. This is done by adjusting the potential difference of the control gate and the floating gate through appropriate biasing of the control gate and the well. So we could control the amount of the electrons injected into the floating gate to achieve multi-bit operation.
5) Comparison with other memory technology—Table 2 illustrates a Performance Comparison among volatile memory (DRAM and SRAM), nonvolatile memory (Flash, FRAM, MRAM and phase change memory) devices and the embodiment of this invention. Among the other nonvolatile memory technologies, flash memory is the only memory compatible with the current CMOS process flow. The observation of Table 2 is that the embodiment of this invention inherits almost all the advantages of the conventional flash memory technology. Meanwhile, it solves the problems that conventional flash memory technology faces today, such as high voltage, low speed and scaling issue. Comparing to other novel memory technology, the embodiment of this invention does not involve new materials, has good compatibility with CMOS, low power consumption, and demonstrates high performance.
In an alternative embodiment, a simpler memory cell design does not include a floating gate electrode. The moveable element mostly comprises a single gate electrode. The cell can have a thin (<1 nm) coating layer; the resistance between the source and drain will depend on the position of the gate electrode. For example, the single-gate memory device could be an n-channel MOS transistor with a high-work-function gate electrode (e.g., heavily p-type doped poly-Si). When the gate electrode is close to (or in contact) with the gate insulator overlying the channel region, the threshold voltage of the transistor is high, so that it is off (i.e., high resistance between the source and drain). When the gate electrode is suspended away from the gate insulator, the threshold voltage of the transistor is low (due to the classic “short channel effect”), so that it is on (i.e., low resistance between the source and drain).
The process flow to fabricate the MEMory is demonstrated in the following steps illustrated in the cross sections of
a) The starting material is a p-type doped silicon substrate. After N-well and P-well formation, channel implantation is done to adjust the threshold voltage of the memory cells, as shown in
A 5 nm gate oxide is grown thermally, followed by deposition of a 20 nm N+ in-situ doped amorphous silicon film layer as the floating gate. Then a 50 nm nitride is deposited and patterned as a hard mask. The nitride width defines the channel width of the memory cells.
c) A dry etching method etches holes through the floating gate, gate oxide, P-well and portion of the N-well.
d) Silicon Dioxide is deposited on top of the wafer. Chemical Mechanical Polishing method (CMP) polishes the oxide to form shallow trench isolation (STI).
(e) Nitride hard mask is selectively etched.
(f) 5 nm germanium film (sacrificial layer) deposited.
g) After germanium film is patterned, a 100 nm N+ in-situ doped Poly-silicon layer is deposited. (
(h-a) A 50 nm germanium film is deposited on top of the Poly-silicon layer, followed by deposition of 100 nm silicon dioxide hard mask. Then word lines are patterned. (
(h-b) Cross-section view along bit line direction after patterning and etching of word lines in shown in
(i) A thin layer of germanium film (−15 nm) is deposited and is etched back to form germanium spacers. The source/drain of the memory cells are implanted (
(Note: from this step on, only a cross-section along bit line direction is shown, except that cross-section along word line direction will be shown in the Poly-silicon release step.)
(j) Then a thick silicon oxide layer is deposited as the passivation layer. (
(k) After the germanium film is selectively etched by hot water, the poly-silicon word lines are released. The cross-section along the bit line direction (
The invention provides a low-voltage, high speed, superior retention time, and high density Micro-Electro-Mechanical flash memory. Since the electrons are injected into the floating gate via a direct current from the control gate, the novel flash cell offers program/erase speed as fast as nanoseconds as well as low voltage operation. The memory core density is comparable to the state-of-the-art flash memory, while the peripheral circuit can be aggressively scaled to achieve high density memory chip. Additionally, the scalability of the proposed memory is very good which offers a solution beyond the 65 nm technology node.
While the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, the description is illustrative of the invention and is not to be construed as limiting the invention. Various modifications and applications may occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US05/34206 | 9/22/2005 | WO | 00 | 12/11/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60614706 | Sep 2004 | US |