Microscopic Analysis of Degradation and Breakdown Kinetics in HfO2 Gate Dielectric after Ions Irradiation
Journal article, 2025

We combine experiments and simulations to investigate the degradation dynamics and dielectric breakdown (BD) of SiO x /HfO2 gate stacks irradiated with varying doses of 40 MeV carbon ions. The analysis of postirradiation electrical characteristics (current-voltage, I-V, capacitance-voltage, C-V, and conductance-voltage, G-V) reveals that the HfO2 layer is the most affected by irradiation-induced damage, leading to the formation of defects consistent with oxygen vacancies. Postirradiation constant voltage stress (CVS) experiments reveal an inverse dependence of time to breakdown (t BD) and Weibull slopes (beta) on the irradiation dose. These trends are accurately reproduced by statistical physics-based breakdown simulations only when accounting for partial percolation paths induced by ion strikes during irradiation, as well as a spatially correlated defect generation process during subsequent electrical stress. Our findings are crucial for designing radiation-hardened materials and improving the resilience of electronics operating in harsh environments.

radiation effects

dielectric breakdown

Ginestra

device simulations

high-k dielectricmaterials

reliability

Author

Andrea Padovani

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

Paolo La Torraca

University College Cork

Fernando L. Aguirre

Intrinsic Semiconductor Technologies

Alok Ranjan

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Nagarajan Raghavan

Singapore University of Technology and Design

Kin L. Pey

Singapore University of Technology and Design

Felix Palumbo

Allegro MicroSystems

Francesco M. Puglisi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

1944-8244 (ISSN) 1944-8252 (eISSN)

Vol. 17 37 52814-52825

Improving energy efficiency and passenger comfort in electric vehicles

AoA Energy, 2025-01-01 -- 2025-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1021/acsami.5c09755

PubMed

40906024

More information

Latest update

10/1/2025