Yttrium Doped Hf.05Zr0.5O2 Based Ferroelectric Capacitor Exhibiting Fatigue Free (>10sub12 Cycles), Long Retention, and Imprint Immune Performance at 4 K
This work demonstrates the first electrical characterization of yttrium-doped Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 -based ferroelectric capacitors (Y-HZO caps) at cryogenic temperatures down to 4 K, highlighting their superior endurance and reliability. Owing to a decrease in oxygen vacancy (O-vacancy) distribution and less domain pinning (due to reduced trapping) at cryogenic temperatures, the fast pulse characterization reveals 2Pr ∼ 20 μ C/cm2 of Y-HZO caps at 4 K, showing >33% improvement compared to results at 300 K. Notably, the Y-HZO caps show fatigue-free endurance up to 1012 cycles at 4 K, while undoped Hf0.5 Zr0.5 O2 ferroelectric capacitors (HZO caps) exhibit slight fatigue. Both capacitors (caps) show imprint immunity an long retention ( >105 s). A key observation is that while HZO caps do not require wake-up at 4 K, Y-HZO caps show an anti-ferroelectric behavior, implying wake-up operation cannot be performed in Y-HZO caps at 4 K. The Y-HZO caps must be woken up at 300 K before further electrical analysis at 4 K. These findings point towards the reduced mobility of charged defects and O-vacancies significantly suppressing the domain de-pinning process at 4 K, which plays an essential part in the wake-up and fatigue of these ferroelectric capacitors. The time-dependent dielectric break- down (TDDB) analysis also points towards improved reliability of both the caps at 4 K. These improved characteristics and reliability of Y-HZO caps make them an attractive choice for cryogenic memory applications like quantum and neuromorphic computing.