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D.L. Pulfrey. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of British Columbia Vancouver, B.C. V6T1Z4, Canada. pulfrey@ece.ubc.ca. http://nano.ece.ubc.ca. MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation. Day 4A, May 30, 2008, Pisa. Si MOSFET features. 4 terminals
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D.L. Pulfrey Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of British Columbia Vancouver, B.C. V6T1Z4, Canada pulfrey@ece.ubc.ca http://nano.ece.ubc.ca MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation Day 4A, May 30, 2008, Pisa
Si MOSFET features • 4 terminals • 2D-device • "The most abundant object made by mankind"
NP-junctions and transistor action HBT, BJT MOSFET B G Cox RB E D C S Cs=dQs/dVaj Rj x=0 x=0 What happens ?
Transistor transfer characteristics BJT: E/B: 1E19/1E17 MOSFET: S/B: 1E20/8E17 Vbi ON Getting HOT "OFF" Sub-threshold ON Note: relative "linearities" and current ranges
- + VDS - + VGS iG + + + - - - - - - - - - + - x - - + + y iB VSB SUB-THRESHOLD CONDITION (DEPLETION) • Depletion layer forms
- - - - - - y ON CONDITION (Strong Inversion) - + VDS • Inversion layer forms - + VGS iG + + + + + + + + + iD iS - - - x VSB iB
x y Decomposing the MOSFET 1. Ignore S and D 2. Take vertical section from G → B EC y • n+ poly gate • work functions • oxide electron affinity and Eg Note:
Equilibrating the MOSCAP - electrons transfer, driven by difference in EF - electrons recombine in body at the interface - depletion layer forms - charge separation creates field in oxide Equilibration process: = -Vfb
Introducing the channel potential THE GRADUAL CHANNEL APPROXIMATION
The Drain Current Charge Sheet Approximation & Depletion Approximation DDE IEEE convention
Drain I-V characteristics • Diffusion in sub-threshold • Drift in strongly ON • Smooth curves !
Saturation and loss of inversion • In Saturation: • Qn(L) becomes very small. • Field lines from gate terminate on acceptors in body. • Drain end of channel is NOT in strong inversion, • but SPICE models assume that it is !
Development of SPICE Level 1 model From PSP: Make strong-inversion assumptions Use Binomial Expansion Threshold voltage
Comparison of PSP and SPICE VDS (V)
Improving the SPICE model • Increase sat strong inversion
SPICE Level 49: allowing for vsat v =E(x) Combining the velocities: v=vsat Putting this together with : GCA, CSM, dVCS(x)/dx
Subthreshold current From PSP: Weak inversion: Expand Qn and substitute in PSP Diffusion Equation. Convert s to VGS: Subthreshold current:
pFET nFET Si CMOS: why is it dominant for digital? 4 reasons: • "Low" OFF current. • Compact logic: few transistors and no level shifting. • Small footprint. • Industrial investment. IN OUT VSS VDD Example of small footprint
CMOS: the Industrial drive Nodes relate to the DRAM half pitch, i.e., the width, and space in between, metal lines connecting DRAM bit cells
Logic speed is about Q and I • Need: • high - certainly • Low L - but it adversely affects VT • High Cox - but low CoxZL • Low VDD - but it adversely affects ION • Low VT - but it adversely affects ISUBT
3 major concerns for digital CMOS • Increasing ION via mobility improvement • Reducing gate leakage via thicker, high-k dielectrics • Controlling VT and Isubt via suppression of the short-channel effect
Improving : direction-dependent m* • k1 is a <100> direction • k2 and k3 are orthogonal at the point of the energy minimum EC Which direction has the higher effective mass?
Conductivity effective mass mC* Electron accelerates in field E and reaches vd on next collision after time v =0 v =vd What happens when Si is biaxially tensioned? For unstrained <100> Si: mC* = 0.26m0
Effect of biaxial tensile strain on EC • 4 valleys raised in energy • 2 valleys lowered in energy Unstrained
High-k dielectrics • High COX needed for ID and S • High tOX needed to reduce gate leakage • Resolve conflict by increasing
E Electron energy y (10 nm) Tunneling through the oxide Simplify the U profile → Solve SWE in each region: write as:
Solutions for * Physically what is the "D-wave" ? What is * ? Why is it : -oscillatory in the channel ? - damped in the oxide ? - constant in the gate ? y (m)
Transmission Probability: Definition 3. Define the Transmission Probability: 1. For the channel: 2. Do the derivatives and the conjugates: What is the interpretation of this ? What do these mean ?
Tunneling current 100% improvement in Cox 50% improvement in Cox
The Short-Channel Effect s= f (L, VDS) VT = f (L, VDS) s is determined by capacitive coupling via Cox and Cbody, AND by capacitive coupling via CDS
new yj Reduce CDS by shrinking yj It's like reducing the area of a parallel plate capacitor yj
100/150 ---- 100/30 ---- 50/30 ---- 100/"0" L/yj (nm/nm) = SCE on Drain Current
Using SOI to beat SCE Alvin Loke Daryl Van Vorst