Small Signal Capacitance in Ferroelectric HZO: Mechanisms and Physical Insights
This study presents a theoretical investigation of the physical mechanisms governing small signal capacitance in ferroelectrics, focusing on Hafnium Zirconium Oxide. Utilizing a time-dependent Ginzburg Landau formalism-based 2D multi-grain phase-field simulation framework, we simulate the capacitanc...
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Zusammenfassung: | This study presents a theoretical investigation of the physical mechanisms
governing small signal capacitance in ferroelectrics, focusing on Hafnium
Zirconium Oxide. Utilizing a time-dependent Ginzburg Landau formalism-based 2D
multi-grain phase-field simulation framework, we simulate the capacitance of
metal-ferroelectric-insulator-metal (MFIM) capacitors. Our simulation
methodology closely mirrors the experimental procedures for measuring
ferroelectric small signal capacitance, and the outcomes replicate the
characteristic butterfly capacitance-voltage behavior. We delve into the
components of the ferroelectric capacitance associated with the dielectric
response and polarization switching, discussing the primary physical mechanisms
- domain bulk response and domain wall response - contributing to the butterfly
characteristics. We explore their interplay and relative contributions to the
capacitance and correlate them to the polarization domain characteristics.
Additionally, we investigate the impact of increasing domain density with
ferroelectric thickness scaling, demonstrating an enhancement in the
polarization capacitance component (in addition to the dielectric component).
We further analyze the relative contributions of the domain bulk and domain
wall responses across different ferroelectric thicknesses. Lastly, we establish
the relation of polarization capacitance components to the capacitive memory
window (for memory applications) and reveal a non-monotonic dependence of the
maximum memory window on HZO thickness. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2407.14887 |