MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

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MOS Field-Effect Transistors MOS Field-Effect Transistors for for High-Speed Operation High-Speed Operation D.L. Pulfrey Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of British Columbia Vancouver, B.C. V6T1Z4, Canada [email protected] http:// nano.ece.ubc.ca Day 4A, May 30, 2008, Pisa

description

D.L. Pulfrey. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of British Columbia Vancouver, B.C. V6T1Z4, Canada. [email protected]. http://nano.ece.ubc.ca. MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation. Day 4A, May 30, 2008, Pisa. Si MOSFET features. 4 terminals - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Page 1: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

MOS Field-Effect TransistorsMOS Field-Effect Transistors

forfor

High-Speed OperationHigh-Speed Operation

D.L. Pulfrey

Department of Electrical and Computer EngineeringUniversity of British ColumbiaVancouver, B.C. V6T1Z4, Canada

[email protected]

http://nano.ece.ubc.ca

Day 4A, May 30, 2008, Pisa

Page 2: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Si MOSFET featuresSi MOSFET features

• 4 terminals

• 2D-device

• "The most abundant object made by mankind"

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What happens ?

NP-junctions and transistor actionNP-junctions and transistor action

E

B G

S

RB

Rj

Cox

Cs=dQs/dVaj

HBT, BJT

MOSFET

)/exp(

and

)/exp()0(

kTqVI

kTqVQ

V

RR

RVV

BEC

BE

BE

jB

jBEaj

oxGSs

GSD

GS

GSaj

oxGSs

oxGSsGSaj

CVC

kTqVI

kTqVQ

VV

CVC

CVCVV

)( if

)/exp(

and

)/exp()0(

)( if

/)(1

1

x=0 x=0

DC

Page 4: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Transistor transfer characteristicsTransistor transfer characteristics

MOSFET:

S/B: 1E20/8E17

BJT:

E/B: 1E19/1E17

Vbi

ON Getting HOT

"OFF"

Sub-threshold

ON

Note: relative "linearities" and current ranges

Page 5: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

SUB-THRESHOLD CONDITION (DEPLETION)

- --

- --

- --y

x

+ + +- --

VSB

VGS

-+

iB

+ + +iG

-++

VDS

t

Qi BB

t

Qi GG

G

BBG V

QC

G

GGG V

QC

• Depletion layer forms

Page 6: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

ON CONDITION (Strong Inversion)

- --

- --

- --

VSB

VGS

- +

iB

iS iD

iG+ + + ++ + + + +

+-

y

t

Qi GG

t

Qi BB

t

Qi nSS

t

Qi nDD

• Inversion layer forms

G

nSSG V

QC

VDS

x

Page 7: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Decomposing the MOSFET Decomposing the MOSFET

Note:• n+ poly gate• work functions• oxide electron affinity and Eg

1. Ignore S and D

2. Take vertical section from G → B

y

x

y

EC

Page 8: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Equilibrating the MOSCAP Equilibrating the MOSCAP

Equilibration process:

- electrons transfer, driven by difference in EF

- electrons recombine in body at the interface- depletion layer forms- charge separation creates field in oxide

= -Vfb

Page 9: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Surface potential and the PSP model Surface potential and the PSP model

qB

Page 10: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Introducing the channel potential Introducing the channel potential

THE GRADUAL CHANNEL APPROXIMATION

Page 11: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Implicit expression for Implicit expression for ss

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Varying Varying degrees degrees of of inversion inversion along the along the channelchannel

Page 13: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

The Drain CurrentThe Drain Current

Charge Sheet Approximation & Depletion Approximation

DDE

IEEE convention

Page 14: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Drain I-V characteristicsDrain I-V characteristics

• Diffusion in sub-threshold

• Drift in strongly ON

• Smooth curves !

Page 15: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

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 !

Saturation and loss of inversionSaturation and loss of inversion

Page 16: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Development of SPICE Level 1 modelDevelopment of SPICE Level 1 model

From PSP:

Make strong-inversion assumptions

Use Binomial Expansion

Threshold voltage

Page 17: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Comparison of PSP and SPICEComparison of PSP and SPICE

VDS (V)

Page 18: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Improving the SPICE modelImproving the SPICE model

• Increase s at strong inversion

Page 19: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

SPICE Level 49: allowing for vSPICE Level 49: allowing for vsat sat

v =E(x)

v=vsat

satvx

xv1

)(

11

)(

Combining the velocities:

Putting this together with :

GCA, CSM, dVCS(x)/dx

Page 20: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Comparison of SPICE Levels 1 and 49Comparison of SPICE Levels 1 and 49

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Subthreshold currentSubthreshold current

From PSP:

Weak inversion:

Expand Qn and substitute in PSP Diffusion Equation.

Convert s to VGS:

Subthreshold current:

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Subthreshold current comparisonSubthreshold current comparison

Page 23: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Si CMOS: why is it dominant for Si CMOS: why is it dominant for digital?digital?

4 reasons:

1. "Low" OFF current.

2. Compact logic: few transistors and no level shifting.

3. Small footprint.

4. Industrial investment.

pFET nFET

VSSVDD

INOUT

Example of small footprint

Page 24: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

CMOS: the Industrial driveCMOS: the Industrial drive

Nodes relate to the DRAM half pitch, i.e., the width, and space in between, metal lines connecting DRAM bit cells

Page 25: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Logic speed is about Q and ILogic 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

Page 26: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

3 major concerns for digital CMOS3 major concerns for digital CMOS

1. Increasing ION via mobility improvement

2. Reducing gate leakage via thicker, high-k dielectrics

3. Controlling VT and Isubt via suppression of the short-channel effect

Page 27: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Improving Improving : direction-dependent : direction-dependent m*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?

Page 28: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Conductivity effective mass mConductivity effective mass mCC**

Electron accelerates in field E and reaches vd on next collision after time

v =0 v =vd

**/

2

**/

2

*

2

*

21

3

1

42

6

t

t

C

C

d

d

mmnq

mm

nq

Em

nqEqnEJ

m

q

E

v

qEmv

maF

For unstrained <100> Si: mC* = 0.26m0

What happens when Si is biaxially tensioned?

Page 29: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Effect of biaxial tensile strain on EEffect of biaxial tensile strain on ECC

• 4 valleys raised in energy

• 2 valleys lowered in energy

*

**/

*

**/

2

2

2

1 to(ideally)

21

3

1

42

6

t

tC

t

m

mmm

mm

nq

Unstrained

Page 30: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Strained Si at the 45nm Strained Si at the 45nm nodenode

Page 31: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

High-k dielectrics

ox

oxox tC

• High COX needed for ID and S

• High tOX needed to reduce gate leakage

• Resolve conflict by increasing

Page 32: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Tunneling through the oxideTunneling through the oxide

y (10 nm)

Ele

ctro

n en

ergy

E

Simplify the U profile →

Solve SWE in each region:

022

2

ykdx

d write as:

Page 33: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Solutions for Solutions for **

What is * ?* ?

Why is it :

-oscillatory in the channel ?

- damped in the oxide ?

- constant in the gate ?

Physically what is the "D-wave" ?

y (m)

Page 34: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Transmission Probability: DefinitionTransmission Probability: Definition

1. For the channel:

2. Do the derivatives and the conjugates:

3. Define the Transmission Probability:

What do these mean ?

What is the interpretation of this ?

Page 35: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Silica, hafnia, and electron affinitySilica, hafnia, and electron affinity

Page 36: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Tunneling currentTunneling current

)(

)4(

silicatunn

silicatunn

kI

kkI

)4( silicakk

100% improvement in Cox

50% improvement in Cox

Page 37: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

The Short-Channel EffectThe 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

Page 38: MOS Field-Effect Transistors for High-Speed Operation

Reduce CReduce CDSDS by shrinking y by shrinking yjj

new yj

It's like reducing the area of a parallel plate capacitor

yj

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SCE on Drain CurrentSCE on Drain Current

L/yj (nm/nm) =

100/150 ----

100/30 ----

50/30 ----

100/"0"

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Reduce CReduce CDSDS by screening E by screening Exx

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Using SOI to beat SCEUsing SOI to beat SCE

Daryl Van Vorst

Alvin Loke