Materials Science Forum, Vol.455-456, 69-72, 2004
Sputtering preparation of silicon nitride thin films for gate dielectric applications
Silicon nitride films were produced on glass and crystalline silicon substrates using r.f. magnetron sputtering to select the best process conditions (substrate temperature, gas pressure and r.f. power) to grow dielectrics for device applications such as low temperature thin film transistors, where special care has to be taken concerning the film's compactness and bulk defects. The films produced were analysed by different techniques such as ultra violet-visible-near infrared spectroscopy Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy and capacitance measurements, aiming to correlate the films properties with its composition and degree of compactness. The role of the deposition pressure is notorious since films deposited at high pressures are more compact, presenting low oxygen incorporation after deposition. The increase of the substrate temperature up to 373 degreesK has the same effect, not changing the film's amorphous structure. These data will be discussed aiming to produce films with the required compactness and stoichiometry to grow very thin insulating layers (<10 nm) to be used in MIS structures or devices like thin film transistors.