posted on 2022-05-10, 13:09authored byJi Won Han, Hyun Soo Jin, Yoon Jeong Kim, Ji Sun Heo, Woo-Hee Kim, Ji-Hoon Ahn, Jeong Hwan Kim, Tae Joo Park
The
ultrathin and continuous ruthenium (Ru) film was deposited
through an improved atomic layer deposition (ALD) process with a discrete
feeding method (DFM), called DF-ALD, employing a cut-in purge step
during the precursor feeding. The excess precursor molecules can be
physically adsorbed onto the chemisorbed precursors on the substrate
during precursor feeding, which screens the reactive sites on the
surface. Using DF-ALD, surface coverage of precursors was enhanced
because the cut-in purge removes the physisorbed precursors securing
the reactive sites beneath them; thus, nucleation density was greatly
increased. Therefore, the grain size decreased, which changed the
microstructure and increased oxygen impurity concentration. However,
a more metallic Ru thin film was formed due to thermodynamic stability
and improved physical density. Consequently, DF-ALD enables the deposition
of the ultrathin (3 nm) and continuous Ru film with a low resistivity
of ∼60 μΩ cm and a high effective work function
of ∼4.8 eV.