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Article

Effects of Poly-Si Grain Boundary on Retention Characteristics under Cross-Temperature Conditions in 3-D NAND Flash Memory

Department of Electrical Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Pohang 37673, Republic of Korea
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Micromachines 2023, 14(12), 2199; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi14122199
Submission received: 3 November 2023 / Revised: 28 November 2023 / Accepted: 28 November 2023 / Published: 30 November 2023
(This article belongs to the Section D1: Semiconductor Devices)

Abstract

:
Electrical characteristics with various program temperatures (TPGM) in three-dimensional (3-D) NAND flash memory are investigated. The cross-temperature conditions of the TPGM up to 120 °C and the read temperature (TREAD) at 30 °C are used to analyze the influence of grain boundaries (GB) on the bit line current (IBL) and threshold voltage (VT). The VT shift in the E-P-E pattern is successfully decomposed into the charge loss (ΔVT,CL) component and the poly-Si GB (ΔVT,GB) component. The extracted ΔVT,GB increases at higher TPGM due to the reduced GB potential barrier. Additionally, the ΔVT,GB is evaluated using the Technology Computer Aided Design (TCAD) simulation, depending on the GB position (XGB) and the bit line voltage (VBL).

1. Introduction

As NAND flash memory is widely used in smartphones and data centers, the demand for high-density, low-cost NAND flash memory continues to surge. Due to the limitations in scaling, the conventional planar two-dimensional (2-D) NAND has been rapidly substituted with three-dimensional (3-D) NAND [1,2]. In 3-D NAND, the vertical stacking of cells is less constrained by the scaling challenges, effectively boosting the storage capacity. Furthermore, multi-level cell technology has been adopted to further enhance the storage capacity and has evolved to the point of 4-bits/cell (quadruple level cell, QLC) development [3]. However, as the number of bits per cell increases, the threshold voltage (VT) window narrows, necessitating the tight VT distribution. A slight change in VT can cause a fail bit, which is greatly affected by the environmental temperature.
NAND flash memory operates within a temperature range typically from 0 °C to 85 °C. However, such as in automotive or aerospace applications, NAND flash memory can be designed to function within a broader temperature range, extending from −40 °C to 125 °C [4,5]. The NAND operations, such as program and read, need to be executed precisely within the prescribed temperature range, even if the temperatures vary during operations. The temperature change can significantly impact both the trapped charge within the nitride layer and the electrical characteristics of the channel [6,7,8]. The utilization of SiN material as a charge storage layer causes various charge loss mechanisms and VT changes during the retention in NAND flash memory. At elevated temperatures, the thermal emission of trapped electrons accelerates, consequently increasing the amount of de-trapping from the charge trap layer (CTL) to the channel. Additionally, the continuous CTL in the 3-D NAND induces additional charge migration in the lateral direction. This lateral migration is dominantly caused by Poole-Frenkel emission and becomes more pronounced at higher temperatures [9,10]. These charge loss mechanisms can change the VT and potentially influence the reliability of the NAND devices in response to temperature variations.
Three-dimensional NAND is fabricated in the following process. The multi-stacked SiN/oxide layers are deposited. The memory hole is formed through the etching process, and it is then filled by the ONO layer and channel layer deposition. Subsequently, the SiN layers are removed, and empty spaces are filled by gate stack deposition [11]. The poly-Si, which can be easily formed through the deposition process, is used as a channel material in 3-D NAND due to the difficulty of single crystalline silicon growth in the process sequence. In the poly-Si deposition process, amorphous silicon is deposited and annealed to form grains [12]. Therefore, the poly-Si channel contains grain boundaries (GBs) between the Si grains. Depending on the bias conditions, carriers can be trapped at these GBs [13]. The GB trapped charges form the potential barrier (ΦB) and interfere with carrier transport [14,15,16,17]. An elevated temperature can decrease the trap occupancy, lowering the ΦB of GB compared with room temperature [18,19]. Consequently, it leads to low VT and high bit line current (IBL) even though the channel mobility is degraded [8]. Hence, when the temperature changes during the NAND operations, the temperature-induced VT variation attributed to charge loss and poly-Si GB should be considered.
The cross-temperature is the condition where the program temperature (TPGM) differs from the subsequent read temperature (TREAD). Additional fail bits during read operation occur in cross-temperature conditions. There are many studies on controlling additional fail bits in the cross-temperature conditions at the system level. The most common methods are to use the temperature compensation circuits, which track temperature changes through sensors and then change the read reference voltages [20,21]. However, these compensation methods struggle to address all fail bits in cross-temperature conditions [22,23]. The relevant temperature coefficient in the compensation circuit differs among individual cells [24]. Even in the same cell, this coefficient varies depending on the temperature conditions: a high temperature program and low temperature read (HPLR) condition or a low temperature program and high temperature read (LPHR) condition [25,26]. Therefore, more detailed analyses at the cell level are needed to understand the cross-temperature phenomena and effectively reduce the fail bits in 3-D NAND.
Here, the retention characteristics of a programmed cell under the HPLR conditions are characterized and decomposed into the charge loss and poly-Si GB components using a neutral cell. The poly-Si GB components are further investigated with different bit line voltages (VBL). Technology Computer Aided Design (TCAD) simulation is conducted to understand the relationship between the VBL and the GB position.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Cross-Temperature Effects on Retention Characteristics

Figure 1 shows the schematic of the 3-D NAND flash memory with 24 stacked word line (WL) layers used in this experiment. It is composed of the filler oxide, poly-Si channel, bandgap-engineered tunneling oxide (BE-TOX) consisting of O1/N1/O2 layers, CTL, blocking oxide with high-κ material (BOX), and WL. Each WL is separated by the spacer. In contrast to the 2-D planar NAND structure, a poly-Si channel with randomly distributed multiple grains is used. Each grain forms GBs, where channel carriers can be trapped. The ΦB of the GB is formed due to the trapped charges at the GB and interferes with carrier transport. Both ends of the channel are connected by the source line (SL) and bit line (BL).
Figure 2a shows the time-dependent IBL versus read voltage (VREAD) characteristics at TPGM = 30 °C and 120 °C. For the read operation, VREAD was applied to the target cell as the word line voltage, and pass voltage was applied to the rest of the cells except the target cell. The VBL was applied with 1 V. The retention characteristics were measured for the E-P-E pattern, with the 7th-program verifying (PV7) level. All cells in the string were initially erased to eliminate the residual electrons in CTL to prevent any additional charge loss by electrons of the neighbor cell, and only the target cell was programmed. The initial read operation was performed at 30 s immediately after the program operation. All cases of TPGM > 30 °C are HPLR conditions. The TREAD was promptly lowered to 30 °C through cooling after the program operation in HPLR conditions. This means that the initial TREAD is the same as TPGM, and the TREAD gradually decreases over time. The final TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C. For TPGM = 30 °C, the IBL-VREAD curve shifts towards the left direction over time. For TPGM = 120 °C, the IBL-VREAD curve shifts towards the right direction over time. Figure 2b shows the retention characteristics at TPGM = 30 °C, 75 °C, and 120 °C. In all cases, the TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C. The VT was extracted using the constant current method at IBL = 1 µA. The ΔVT was calculated by subtracting the initial VT from the VT at each retention time. The negative ΔVT is observed at TPGM = 30 °C, indicating the decrease in VT over time. For TPGM = 75 °C, the ΔVT negligibly changes over time, even though trapped electrons are emitted from CTL to the channel in the vertical direction or spread from the gate to spacer in the lateral direction during the retention. For TPGM = 120 °C, the positive ΔVT over time is observed up to 4 h.
Figure 3 shows the ΔVT after 4 h (ΔVT,4h) with respect to TPGM. All cases except TPGM = 30 °C are HPLR conditions. For all TPGM values ranging from 30 °C to 120 °C, the TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C. The ΔVT,4h increases linearly with TPGM up to 120 °C. For TPGM = 30 °C, the negative ΔVT,4h is observed due to the ΔVT by charge loss (ΔVT,CL). At the elevated TPGM, the ΔVT,4h increases due to the ΔVT by poly-Si GB (ΔVT,GB). Since ΔVT,CL has a negative value at elevated TPGM, the increase in ΔVT,4h by TPGM indicates that the influence of ΔVT,GB on ΔVT,4h is higher than that of ΔVT,CL at elevated TPGM.
To decompose the ΔVT of the target cell under the E-P-E pattern into ΔVT,GB and ΔVT,CL components, the ΔVT,GB is primarily extracted by using the E-N-E pattern. The E-N-E pattern is adopted to suppress the charge loss of the target cell in CTL, which is obtained by erasing all cells and soft programming the target cell up to the VT of the fresh cell. The ΔVT,GB of E-N-E pattern (ΔVT,GBN) between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = T can be obtained by the following equation,
Δ V T , G B N = V T , N ( 30   ° C ) V T , N ( T )
where VT,N (T) is the VT of the E-N-E pattern at TREAD = T. The neutral cell has no trapped charges in CTL, which causes negligible ΔVT,CL during retention [6,27]. Figure 4a shows the IBL-VREAD curves at TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C for the E-N-E pattern. The subthreshold swing (SS) is higher at TREAD = 120 °C compared to TREAD = 30 °C. Figure 4b shows the IBL-VREAD curves at TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C for the E-P-E pattern. The SS is also higher at TREAD = 120 °C than at TREAD = 30 °C. The SS difference in the E-N-E pattern between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = 120 °C is lower than that in the E-P-E pattern.
The SS differences in the E-N-E and E-P-E patterns are analyzed using TCAD simulation [28]. The string of 3-D NAND used in the TCAD simulation consisted of a source select line, a drain select line, two dummy cells on both sides, and five word lines to minimize the simulation time. Except for the number of WLs, all dimension parameters used to construct the simulation structure were the same as the actual device dimension parameters. For the electron and hole traps in CTL, the Gaussian energy distributions were used. Hurkx band-to-band tunneling model for gate induced drain leakage (GIDL) erase, and the Shockley-Read-Hall (SRH) model for capture or emission of carriers into traps were adopted. Transient simulation with the non-local tunneling model was applied for program and erase operations [29]. Figure 5a shows the channel electron density near the BE-TOX interface along the BL direction for the neutral and programmed target cells at the subthreshold region. The VBL is applied with 1 V. For the programmed cell, the trapped charge density in the CTL is higher at the middle of the gate region than at the gate edge. The channel electron density of the programmed cell is higher than that of the neutral cell at the edge region. Figure 5b shows the conduction energy band (EC) profile in the channel near the BE-TOX interface along the BL direction for the neutral and programmed target cells at the subthreshold region. For the programmed cell, the EC peak is higher than the neutral cell and the effective channel length decreases due to the nonuniform trapped charge distribution in the CTL [30]. As the effective channel length is reduced, the influence of GB decreases and the SS difference in the E-P-E pattern between different TREAD is higher than the SS difference in the E-N-E pattern [8]. Therefore, the ΔVT,GB of the E-P-E pattern is lower than the ΔVT,GBN. The ΔVT,GB of the E-P-E pattern can be obtained using the ΔVT,GBN with the following equation,
Δ V T , G B = Δ V T , G B N V S S
where VSS value is the SS difference correction voltage, which is defined using the threshold current (IT) at VREAD = VT and off-current (IOFF) as follows:
V S S = Δ S S P Δ S S N × log 10 ( I T / I O F F )
where ΔSSP and ΔSSN are the SS difference values between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = T for the E-P-E and E-N-E patterns, respectively.
Figure 6a shows the decomposed results of ΔVT into ΔVT,GB and ΔVT,CL for TPGM = 75 °C and 120 °C. The charge loss components are obtained by subtracting the GB components from ΔVT of the E-P-E pattern, which is expressed as follows:
Δ V T , C L = Δ V T , T O T A L Δ V T , G B
where ΔVT,TOTAL is the measured ΔVT of the E-P-E pattern. The ΔVT,GB increases during the retention time for both TPGM = 75 °C and 120 °C. The ΔVT,CL has a negative value up to 4 h. Figure 6b shows the absolute values of the decomposed ΔVT,4h at TPGM = 75 °C and 120 °C. The ΔVT,CL diminishes at the elevated TPGM due to the fact that the higher TPGM results in more significant charge loss within the initial 30 s, corresponding to the range of short-term retention [26,31,32]. The ΔVT,GB increases at the elevated TPGM due to the decrease in ΦB of the GB at higher temperatures. The ΔVT,GB is 15% lower than the ΔVT,CL at TPGM = 75 °C, and the ΔVT,CL is 45% lower than the ΔVT,GB at TPGM = 120 °C. With an increase in TPGM under the HPLR condition, the influence of ΔVT,GB on ΔVT,4h becomes more pronounced.

2.2. Threshold Voltage Shift by Poly-Si GB

Figure 7a shows the ΔVT,GB observed in 50 cells as a function of VBL. In order to exclude the influence of differences in memory hole diameter that may occur depending on the location of the WL, only the middle five WLs from several different strings were used.
The physical dimensions of the measured cells are all the same. The ΔVT,GB is the VT difference between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = T. The neutral cells were used to evaluate only the ΔVT,GB. Figure 7b shows the average value of ΔVT,GB for T = 120 °C at each VBL. The average ΔVT,GB decreases by 10% with an increase in VBL from 1 V to 2 V. To further understand the effect of VBL on the ΔVT,GB, the EC profile in the channel was investigated using the TCAD simulation. A single GB was introduced in the channel under the target cell, varying the GB position (XGB) in the function of gate length (LG). The edge of the target cell on the SL side was defined as XGB = 0. The 3-D random Voronoi grain pattern was applied under the remaining channel regions [33,34]. A U-shaped GB trap profile consisting of donor-like states and acceptor-like states was used for each GB [35]. The interface traps were also considered at the BE-TOX/channel and filler oxide/channel interfaces. The constant mobility for the drift/diffusion transport within the grain and the thermionic boundary conditions at GBs were utilized in the channel [17,18].
Figure 8a shows the simulated EC profiles of the channel along the BL direction for XGB = 0. The VT of the cell with GB is applied as VREAD for both cells with GB and without GB. For the cell with GB, the ΦB induced by GB has an effect as an additional potential barrier. The ΦB of the cell with GB is higher than that of the cell without GB due to the ΦB of GB. Figure 8b shows the EC profiles for XGB = LG/2. The ΦB of the cell with GB is also higher than that of the cell without GB due to the ΦB of GB. For XGB = 0 and LG/2, the EC difference between the cells with GB and without GB is more significant for TREAD = 30 °C than TREAD = 120 °C. It is due to the increase in ΦB of GB at lower temperatures. Figure 8c shows the EC profiles for XGB = LG. When GB is located at XGB = LG, the ΦB of GB has negligible effect as the additional potential barrier. The EC difference between the cells with GB and without GB is reduced at both TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C due to the decrease in the influence of GB. Figure 8d shows the simulated ΔVT,GB for T = 120 °C at each XGB. A higher ΦB is formed at 0 < XGB < LG/2, resulting in the substantial ΔVT,GB. At LG/2 < XGB < LG, the GB effect diminishes and the ΔVT,GB decreases. When the GB is located under the spacer region, the GB has negligible influence on the ΔVT,GB.
Figure 9a shows the simulated EC profiles of the channel depending on the VBL at TREAD = 30 °C for XGB = 0. The ΦB remains consistent regardless of the VBL. Figure 9b shows the EC profiles for XGB = LG/2. As the VBL increases, the EC peak induced by the word line voltage difference between the target cell and adjacent cells shifts towards the SL side. For this reason, the additional barrier effect induced by the ΦB of GB is diminished. The EC near the SL side becomes higher and the influence of GB decreases with the increase in VBL. Figure 9c shows the EC profiles for XGB = LG. As the VBL increases, the EC peak induced by the word line voltage difference shifts towards the SL side. The GB effect, which is nearly negligible at VBL = 1 V, indicates no variation with respect to VBL. Figure 9d shows the simulated ΔVT,GB depending on VBL (= 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V) for T = 120 °C at each XGB. When the GB is located near the SL side edge under the target cell, the ΔVT,GB is less influenced by VBL. However, as the XGB shifts from 0 to LG, the ΔVT,GB decreases due to the elevated VBL. At the XGB under the spacer region, where the influence of GB is already limited, the variation in ΔVT,GB caused by VBL is not substantial. Therefore, the average ΔVT,GB decreases with the increase in VBL, as shown in Figure 7b.

3. Conclusions

The retention characteristics in HPLR conditions are investigated to understand the cross-temperature effects on the VT variation in 3-D NAND flash memory. The HPLR conditions consisting of the TPGM with a range of 30 °C to 120 °C and TREAD of 30 °C are used. The ΔVT of the programmed cell is successfully decomposed into the ΔVT,CL and the ΔVT,GB using a neutral cell. The ΔVT,GB is lower than the ΔVT,CL at TPGM = 75 °C. Compared to the ΔVT,CL, the ΔVT,GB becomes dominant at TPGM = 120 °C due to the decrease in ΦB of the GB. The average ΔVT,GB extracted from the 50 cells decreases by 10% with increasing VBL from 1 V to 2 V. The effect of VBL on ΔVT,GB varies according to the XGB. The characteristics of ΔVT,GB versus VBL can be utilized to measure the GB’s influences on the characteristics of IBL in 3-D NAND flash memory.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, U.A. and J.P.; methodology, G.Y., D.G. and D.K.; investigation, U.A. and J.K.; writing—original draft preparation, U.A., J.P. and J.-S.L.; writing—review and editing, U.A. and J.-S.L.; supervision, J.-S.L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by Samsung-POSTECH Research Center (SPRC) funded by Samsung Electronics (IO201211-08125-01), and by National R&D Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by Ministry of Science and ICT (2020M3H2A107804514).

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are available on request from the corresponding author. The data are not publicly available due to confidentiality request.

Acknowledgments

The EDA tool was supported by the IC Design Education Center.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. A schematic of the 3-D NAND flash memory used in this work. The filler oxide, poly-Si channel, bandgap-engineered tunneling oxide (BE-TOX), charge trap layer (CTL), blocking oxide with high-κ material (BOX), and word line (WL) are indicated. Randomly distributed grains and grain boundaries are indicated in the poly-Si channel.
Figure 1. A schematic of the 3-D NAND flash memory used in this work. The filler oxide, poly-Si channel, bandgap-engineered tunneling oxide (BE-TOX), charge trap layer (CTL), blocking oxide with high-κ material (BOX), and word line (WL) are indicated. Randomly distributed grains and grain boundaries are indicated in the poly-Si channel.
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Figure 2. (a) The time-dependent bit-line current (IBL) vs. read voltage (VREAD) characteristics under the E-P-E pattern at retention time of initial (=30 s), 0.5 h, and 4 h. The program temperatures (TPGM) are 30 °C and 120 °C, respectively. (b) The VT shift (ΔVT) in the target programmed cell under the E-P-E pattern at TPGM = 30 °C, 75 °C, and 120 °C. The cases of TPGM = 75 °C and TPGM = 120 °C are the high temperature program and low temperature read (HPLR) conditions. The read temperature (TREAD) after 4 h is 30 °C.
Figure 2. (a) The time-dependent bit-line current (IBL) vs. read voltage (VREAD) characteristics under the E-P-E pattern at retention time of initial (=30 s), 0.5 h, and 4 h. The program temperatures (TPGM) are 30 °C and 120 °C, respectively. (b) The VT shift (ΔVT) in the target programmed cell under the E-P-E pattern at TPGM = 30 °C, 75 °C, and 120 °C. The cases of TPGM = 75 °C and TPGM = 120 °C are the high temperature program and low temperature read (HPLR) conditions. The read temperature (TREAD) after 4 h is 30 °C.
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Figure 3. The ΔVT after 4 h (ΔVT,4h) with different TPGM under E-P-E pattern, ranging from 30 °C to 120 °C. All cases of TPGM > 30 °C are HPLR conditions. The TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C.
Figure 3. The ΔVT after 4 h (ΔVT,4h) with different TPGM under E-P-E pattern, ranging from 30 °C to 120 °C. All cases of TPGM > 30 °C are HPLR conditions. The TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C.
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Figure 4. The IBL-VREAD characteristics at TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C for the (a) E-N-E and (b) E-P-E patterns. The subthreshold swing (SS) of E-N-E and E-P-E patterns under TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C is indicated. The SS is higher at TREAD = 120 °C than at TREAD = 30 °C for both the E-N-E and E-P-E patterns. The SS difference value of the E-P-E pattern between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = 120 °C is higher than that of the E-N-E pattern.
Figure 4. The IBL-VREAD characteristics at TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C for the (a) E-N-E and (b) E-P-E patterns. The subthreshold swing (SS) of E-N-E and E-P-E patterns under TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C is indicated. The SS is higher at TREAD = 120 °C than at TREAD = 30 °C for both the E-N-E and E-P-E patterns. The SS difference value of the E-P-E pattern between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = 120 °C is higher than that of the E-N-E pattern.
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Figure 5. (a) The channel electron densities along the bit line (BL) direction for the neutral and programmed target cells using Technology Computer Aided Design (TCAD) simulations. The electron densities are obtained near the BE-TOX/channel interface at the subthreshold region under bit line voltage (VBL) = 1 V. (b) The energy band diagrams (EC) near the BE-TOX/channel interface along BL direction for the neutral and programmed target cells.
Figure 5. (a) The channel electron densities along the bit line (BL) direction for the neutral and programmed target cells using Technology Computer Aided Design (TCAD) simulations. The electron densities are obtained near the BE-TOX/channel interface at the subthreshold region under bit line voltage (VBL) = 1 V. (b) The energy band diagrams (EC) near the BE-TOX/channel interface along BL direction for the neutral and programmed target cells.
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Figure 6. (a) The decomposed retention characteristics of measured ΔVT into ΔVT by poly-Si GB (ΔVT,GB) and ΔVT by charge loss (ΔVT,CL) components under the E-P-E pattern for TPGM = 75 °C and 120 °C. (b) The absolute values of ΔVT,4h for decomposed GB and CL components with different TPGM (= 75 °C and 120 °C). The TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C.
Figure 6. (a) The decomposed retention characteristics of measured ΔVT into ΔVT by poly-Si GB (ΔVT,GB) and ΔVT by charge loss (ΔVT,CL) components under the E-P-E pattern for TPGM = 75 °C and 120 °C. (b) The absolute values of ΔVT,4h for decomposed GB and CL components with different TPGM (= 75 °C and 120 °C). The TREAD after 4 h is 30 °C.
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Figure 7. (a) The ΔVT,GB of 50 neutral cells for T = 120 °C at VBL = 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V. The ΔVT,GB is the VT difference between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = T. The box indicates the data set of ΔVT,GB ranging from 25% to 75% with the horizontal line, which is the median. The boundaries of the whiskers are minimum and maximum ΔVT,GB, which are the lowest data and highest data excluding any outliers. The single points on the diagram show the outliers. (b) The average (Avg) value of ΔVT,GB for T = 120 °C at VBL = 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V.
Figure 7. (a) The ΔVT,GB of 50 neutral cells for T = 120 °C at VBL = 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V. The ΔVT,GB is the VT difference between TREAD = 30 °C and TREAD = T. The box indicates the data set of ΔVT,GB ranging from 25% to 75% with the horizontal line, which is the median. The boundaries of the whiskers are minimum and maximum ΔVT,GB, which are the lowest data and highest data excluding any outliers. The single points on the diagram show the outliers. (b) The average (Avg) value of ΔVT,GB for T = 120 °C at VBL = 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V.
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Figure 8. The simulated EC profiles of the cells with GB (w/ GB) and without GB (w/o GB) along the BL direction at TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C. The EC profiles of each cell are obtained at the BE-TOX/channel interface. The VREAD is applied as VT of the cell with GB and VBL is fixed as 1 V. The GB position (XGB) is varied as function of gate length (LG) under the target cell, which is located at (a) XGB = 0, (b) XGB = LG/2, (c) XGB = LG. (d) The simulated ΔVT,GB depending on each XGB ranging from -LG/2 to 3LG/2 for T = 120 °C at VBL = 1 V.
Figure 8. The simulated EC profiles of the cells with GB (w/ GB) and without GB (w/o GB) along the BL direction at TREAD = 30 °C and 120 °C. The EC profiles of each cell are obtained at the BE-TOX/channel interface. The VREAD is applied as VT of the cell with GB and VBL is fixed as 1 V. The GB position (XGB) is varied as function of gate length (LG) under the target cell, which is located at (a) XGB = 0, (b) XGB = LG/2, (c) XGB = LG. (d) The simulated ΔVT,GB depending on each XGB ranging from -LG/2 to 3LG/2 for T = 120 °C at VBL = 1 V.
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Figure 9. The simulated EC profiles at the BE-TOX/channel interface along the BL direction at TREAD = 30 °C. The VREAD is fixed as VT, and the VBL varies with 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V. The GB under the target cell is located at (a) XGB = 0, (b) XGB = LG/2, and (c) XGB = LG. (d) The simulated ΔVT,GB depending on each XGB ranging from -LG/2 to 3LG/2 by VBL (= 1 V, 1.5 V, 2 V) for T = 120 °C.
Figure 9. The simulated EC profiles at the BE-TOX/channel interface along the BL direction at TREAD = 30 °C. The VREAD is fixed as VT, and the VBL varies with 1 V, 1.5 V, and 2 V. The GB under the target cell is located at (a) XGB = 0, (b) XGB = LG/2, and (c) XGB = LG. (d) The simulated ΔVT,GB depending on each XGB ranging from -LG/2 to 3LG/2 by VBL (= 1 V, 1.5 V, 2 V) for T = 120 °C.
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An, U.; Yoon, G.; Go, D.; Park, J.; Kim, D.; Kim, J.; Lee, J.-S. Effects of Poly-Si Grain Boundary on Retention Characteristics under Cross-Temperature Conditions in 3-D NAND Flash Memory. Micromachines 2023, 14, 2199. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi14122199

AMA Style

An U, Yoon G, Go D, Park J, Kim D, Kim J, Lee J-S. Effects of Poly-Si Grain Boundary on Retention Characteristics under Cross-Temperature Conditions in 3-D NAND Flash Memory. Micromachines. 2023; 14(12):2199. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi14122199

Chicago/Turabian Style

An, Ukju, Gilsang Yoon, Donghyun Go, Jounghun Park, Donghwi Kim, Jongwoo Kim, and Jeong-Soo Lee. 2023. "Effects of Poly-Si Grain Boundary on Retention Characteristics under Cross-Temperature Conditions in 3-D NAND Flash Memory" Micromachines 14, no. 12: 2199. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi14122199

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