615 research outputs found

    Capteur d’hydrogène mos et méthode d’intégration à une technologie de transistor FDSOI

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    Abstract: hydrogen can be used as an energy carrier (storage) by the renewable energy industry as well as the automotive industry (fuel cell). Other industries already use hydrogen such, food processing and petroleum refineries. Hydrogen is odorless, transparent, and has a lower explosive limit of 4 %. Reliable, fast sensor are essential tools for a hydrogen safe environment. The work of this thesis provides a semiconductor-based hydrogen sensing solution. A MOS capacitor using a CMOS compatible novel Pt/Ti/ALD-Al2O3/p-Si stack. The Pt/Ti/Al2O3 sensing interface materials thicknesses are 100/5/38 nm respectively. The device can detect very low concentrations < 20 ppm. Furthermore, for a concentration of 500 ppm the response time is 56 s. the impact of testing conditions such temperature, and total gas flow have been studied. Results show that at 60℃ the device does not respond to hydrogen. And at 80℃ or higher the sensing response time is significantly reduced with increasing temperature. Furthermore, the total gas flow has an impact on the device response time and shows that a portion of the time response delay can be attributed to the chamber’s volume. Moreover, a heterogeneous integration method has been designed and presented. The latter represents a great tool for a flexible prototyping of sensors using FDSOI transistor technology. The integration has been simulated and results show promising results. The capacitive coupling feature in the FDSOI between the front and back gate is used to amplify the potential variation at the front gate. For instance, a 0.3 V hydrogen induced dipole potential can be amplified by a factor of 14 x.Le travail de cette thèse comprend la conception et la fabrication d’une technologie de capteur d’hydrogène basée sur une structure MOS. La structure est composée d’un empilement de Pt/Ti/Al2O3/p-Si. Les épaisseurs des matériaux utilisés pour la fabrication sont 100/5/38 nm (Pt/Ti/Al2O3) sur un substrat de silicium. Le capteur est capable de détecter de très faibles concentrations < 20 ppm. De plus, pour une concentration de 500 ppm, le temps de réponse est 56 s. L’impact de plusieurs conditions de test, comprenant la température et le débit total dans la chambre a été évalué. Les résultats montrent qu’à 60℃ le dispositive n’est pas capable de détecter la présence d’hydrogène. Cependant, à partir d’une température de 80℃, la réponse est très importante et le temps diminue pour encore des températures plus élevées. Le débit total dans la chambre a aussi démontré un impact sur le temps de réponse du capteur. Ce qui est aussi relié au volume de la chambre. Une intégration hétérogène ensuite a été conçue et présentée. Cette dernière est un outil flexible pour le prototypage avec des technologies de transistor FDSOI. L’intégration des deux dispositifs a été effectuée et montre de résultats prometteurs. Le couplage capacitif entre la grille avant et la grille arrière du transistor FDSOI permet d’amplifier le signal du capteur. Par exemple, une variation de potentiel de 0.3 V peut être amplifier par un facteur de 14 x, donc 4.19 V

    Design, Characterization And Analysis Of Electrostatic Discharge (esd) Protection Solutions In Emerging And Modern Technologies

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    Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) is a significant hazard to electronic components and systems. Based on a specific processing technology, a given circuit application requires a customized ESD consideration that includes the devices’ operating voltage, leakage current, breakdown constraints, and footprint. As new technology nodes mature every 3-5 years, design of effective ESD protection solutions has become more and more challenging due to the narrowed design window, elevated electric field and current density, as well as new failure mechanisms that are not well understood. The endeavor of this research is to develop novel, effective and robust ESD protection solutions for both emerging technologies and modern complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technologies. The Si nanowire field-effect transistors are projected by the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors as promising next-generation CMOS devices due to their superior DC and RF performances, as well as ease of fabrication in existing Silicon processing. Aiming at proposing ESD protection solutions for nanowire based circuits, the dimension parameters, fabrication process, and layout dependency of such devices under Human Body Mode (HBM) ESD stresses are studied experimentally in company with failure analysis revealing the failure mechanism induced by ESD. The findings, including design methodologies, failure mechanism, and technology comparisons should provide practical knowhow of the development of ESD protection schemes for the nanowire based integrated circuits. Organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) are the basic elements for the emerging flexible, printable, large-area, and low-cost organic electronic circuits. Although there are plentiful studies focusing on the DC stress induced reliability degradation, the operation mechanism of OTFTs iv subject to ESD is not yet available in the literature and are urgently needed before the organic technology can be pushed into consumer market. In this work, the ESD operation mechanism of OTFT depending on gate biasing condition and dimension parameters are investigated by extensive characterization and thorough evaluation. The device degradation evolution and failure mechanism under ESD are also investigated by specially designed experiments. In addition to the exploration of ESD protection solutions in emerging technologies, efforts have also been placed in the design and analysis of a major ESD protection device, diodetriggered-silicon-controlled-rectifier (DTSCR), in modern CMOS technology (90nm bulk). On the one hand, a new type DTSCR having bi-directional conduction capability, optimized design window, high HBM robustness and low parasitic capacitance are developed utilizing the combination of a bi-directional silicon-controlled-rectifier and bi-directional diode strings. On the other hand, the HBM and Charged Device Mode (CDM) ESD robustness of DTSCRs using four typical layout topologies are compared and analyzed in terms of trigger voltage, holding voltage, failure current density, turn-on time, and overshoot voltage. The advantages and drawbacks of each layout are summarized and those offering the best overall performance are suggested at the en

    Advances in Solid State Circuit Technologies

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    This book brings together contributions from experts in the fields to describe the current status of important topics in solid-state circuit technologies. It consists of 20 chapters which are grouped under the following categories: general information, circuits and devices, materials, and characterization techniques. These chapters have been written by renowned experts in the respective fields making this book valuable to the integrated circuits and materials science communities. It is intended for a diverse readership including electrical engineers and material scientists in the industry and academic institutions. Readers will be able to familiarize themselves with the latest technologies in the various fields

    Miniaturized Transistors

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    What is the future of CMOS? Sustaining increased transistor densities along the path of Moore's Law has become increasingly challenging with limited power budgets, interconnect bandwidths, and fabrication capabilities. In the last decade alone, transistors have undergone significant design makeovers; from planar transistors of ten years ago, technological advancements have accelerated to today's FinFETs, which hardly resemble their bulky ancestors. FinFETs could potentially take us to the 5-nm node, but what comes after it? From gate-all-around devices to single electron transistors and two-dimensional semiconductors, a torrent of research is being carried out in order to design the next transistor generation, engineer the optimal materials, improve the fabrication technology, and properly model future devices. We invite insight from investigators and scientists in the field to showcase their work in this Special Issue with research papers, short communications, and review articles that focus on trends in micro- and nanotechnology from fundamental research to applications

    Gate oxide failure in MOS devices

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    The thesis presents an experimental and theoretical investigation of gate oxide breakdown in MOS networks, with a particular emphasis on constant voltage overstress failure. It begins with a literature search on gate oxide failure mechanisms, particularly time-dependent dielectric breakdown, in MOS devices. The experimental procedure is then reported for the study of gate oxide breakdown under constant voltage stress. The experiments were carried out on MOSFETs and MOS capacitor structures, recording the characteristics of the devices before and after the stress. The effects of gate oxide breakdown in one of the transistors in an nMOS inverter were investigated and several parameters were found to have changed. A mathematical model for oxide breakdown, based on physical mechanisms, is proposed. Both electron and hole trapping occurred during the constant voltage stress. Breakdown appears to take place when the trapped hole density reach a critical value. PSPICE simulations were performed for the MOSFETs, nMOS inverter and CMOS logic circuits. Two models of MOSFET with gate oxide short were validated. A good agreement between experiments and simulations was achieved

    Transient Safe Operating Area (tsoa) For Esd Applications

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    A methodology to obtain design guidelines for gate oxide input pin protection and high voltage output pin protection in Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) time frame is developed through measurements and Technology Computer Aided Design (TCAD). A set of parameters based on transient measurements are used to define Transient Safe Operating Area (TSOA). The parameters are then used to assess effectiveness of protection devices for output and input pins. The methodology for input pins includes establishing ESD design targets under Charged Device Model (CDM) type stress in low voltage MOS inputs. The methodology for output pins includes defining ESD design targets under Human Metal Model (HMM) type stress in high voltage Laterally Diffused MOS (LDMOS) outputs. First, the assessment of standalone LDMOS robustness is performed, followed by establishment of protection design guidelines. Secondly, standalone clamp HMM robustness is evaluated and a prediction methodology for HMM type stress is developed based on standardized testing. Finally, LDMOS and protection clamp parallel protection conditions are identifie

    Approche industrielle aux boîtes quantiques dans des dispositifs de silicium sur isolant complètement déplété pour applications en information quantique

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    La mise en oeuvre des qubits de spin électronique à base de boîtes quantiques réalisés en utilisant une technologie avancée de métal-oxyde-semiconducteur complémentaire (en anglais: CMOS ou Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor) fonctionnant à des températures cryogéniques permet d’envisager la fabrication industrielle reproductible et à haut rendement de systèmes de qubits de spin à grande échelle. Le développement d’une architecture de boîtes quantiques à base de silicium fabriquées en utilisant exclusivement des techniques de fabrication industrielle CMOS constitue une étape majeure dans cette direction. Dans cette thèse, le potentiel de la technologie UTBB (en anglais: Ultra-Thin Body and Buried oxide) silicium sur isolant complétement déplété (en anglais: FD-SOI ou Fully Depleted Silicon-On-Insulator) 28 nm de STMicroelectronics (Crolles, France) a été étudié pour la mise en oeuvre de boîtes quantiques bien définies, capables de réaliser des systèmes de qubit de spin. Dans ce contexte, des mesures d’effet Hall ont été réalisées sur des microstructures FD-SOI à 4.2 K afin de déterminer la qualité du noeud technologique pour les applications de boîtes quantiques. De plus, un flot du processus d’intégration, optimisé pour la mise en oeuvre de dispositifs quantiques utilisant exclusivement des méthodes de fonderie de silicium pour la production de masse est présenté, en se concentrant sur la réduction des risques de fabrication et des délais d’exécution globaux. Enfin, deux géométries différentes de dispositifs à boîtes quantiques FD-SOI de 28nm ont été conçues et leurs performances ont été étudiées à 1.4 K. Dans le cadre d’une collaboration entre Nanoacademic Technologies, Institut quantique et STMicroelectronics, un modèle QTCAD (en anglais: Quantum Technology Computer-Aided Design) en 3D a été développé pour la modélisation de dispositifs à boîtes quantiques FD-SOI. Ainsi, en complément de la caractérisation expérimentale des structures de test via des mesures de transport et de spectroscopie de blocage de Coulomb, leur performance est modélisée et analysée à l’aide du logiciel QTCAD. Les résultats présentés ici démontrent les avantages de la technologie FD-SOI par rapport à d’autres approches pour les applications de calcul quantique, ainsi que les limites identifiées du noeud 28 nm dans ce contexte. Ce travail ouvre la voie à la mise en oeuvre des nouvelles générations de dispositifs à boîtes quantiques FD-SOI basées sur des noeuds technologiques inférieurs.Abstract: Electron spin qubits based on quantum dots implemented using advanced Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) technology functional at cryogenic temperatures promise to enable reproducible high-yield industrial manufacturing of large-scale spin qubit systems. A milestone in this direction is to develop a silicon-based quantum dot structure fabricated using exclusively CMOS industrial manufacturing techniques. In this thesis, the potential of the industry-standard process 28 nm Ultra-Thin Body and Buried oxide (UTBB) Fully Depleted Silicon-On-Insulator (FD-SOI) technology of STMicroelectronics (Crolles, France) was investigated for the implementation of well-defined quantum dots capable to realize spin qubit systems. In this context, Hall effect measurements were performed on FD-SOI microstructures at 4.2 K to determine the quality of the technology node for quantum dot applications. Moreover, an optimized integration process flow for the implementation of quantum devices, using exclusively mass-production silicon-foundry methods is presented, focusing on reducing manufacturing risks and overall turnaround times. Finally, two different geometries of 28 nm FD-SOI quantum dot devices were conceived, and their performance was studied at 1.4 K. In the framework of a collaboration between Nanoacademic Technologies, Institut quantique, and STMicroelectronics, a 3D Quantum Technology Computer-Aided Design (QTCAD) model was developed for FD-SOI quantum dot device modeling. Therefore, along with the experimental characterization of the test structures via transport and Coulomb blockade spectroscopy measurements, their performance is modeled and analyzed using the QTCAD software. The results reported here demonstrate the advantages of the FD-SOI technology over other approaches for quantum computing applications, as well as the identified limitations of the 28 nm node in this context. This work paves the way for the implementation of the next generations of FD-SOI quantum dot devices based on lower technology nodes

    Low-Leakage ESD Power Supply Clamps in General Purpose 65 nm CMOS Technology

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    Electrostatic discharge (ESD) is a well-known contributor that reduces the reliability and yield of the integrated circuits (ICs). As ICs become more complex, they are increasingly susceptible to such failures due to the scaling of physical dimensions of devices and interconnect on a chip [1]. These failures are caused by excessive electric field and/or excessive current densities and result in the dielectric breakdown, electromigration of metal lines and contacts. ESD can affect the IC in its different life stages, from wafer fabrication process to failure in the field. Furthermore, ESD events can damage the integrated circuit permanently (hard failure), or cause a latent damage (soft failure) [2]. ESD protection circuits consisting of I/O protection and ESD power supply clamps are routinely used in ICs to protect them against ESD damage. The main objective of the ESD protection circuit is to provide a low-resistive discharge path between any two pins of the chip to harmlessly discharge ESD energy without damaging the sensitive circuits. The main target of this thesis is to design ESD power supply clamps that have the lowest possible leakage current without degrading the ESD protection ability in general purpose TSMC 65 nm CMOS technology. ESD clamps should have a very low-leakage current and should be stable and immune to the power supply noise under the normal operating conditions of the circuit core. Also, the ESD clamps must be able to handle high currents under an ESD event. All designs published in the general purpose 65 nm CMOS technology have used the SCR as the clamping element since the SCR has a higher current carrying capability compared to an MOS transistor of the same area [3]. The ESD power supply clamp should provide a low-resistive path in both directions to be able to deal with both PSD and NDS zapping modes. The SCR based design does not provide the best ESD protection for the NDS zapping mode (positive ESD stress at VSS with grounded VDD node) since it has two parasitic resistances (RNwell and RPsub) and one parasitic diode (the collector to base junction diode of the PNP transistor) in the path from the VSS to VDD. Furthermore, SCR-based designs are not suitable for application that exposed to hot switching or ionizing radiation [2]. In GP process, the gate oxide thickness of core transistors is reduced compared with LP process counterpart to achieve higher performance designs for high-frequency applications using 1 V core transistors and 2.5 V I/O option. The thinner gate oxide layer results in higher leakage current due to gate tunneling [4]. Therefore, using large thin oxide MOS transistors as clamping elements will result in a huge leakage. In this thesis, four power supply ESD clamps are proposed in which thick oxide MOS transistors are used as the main clamping element. Therefore, the low-leakage current feature is achieved without significantly degrading the ESD performance. In addition, the parasitic diode of the MOS transistors provides the protection against NSD-mode. In this thesis, two different ESD power supply clamp architectures are proposed: standalone ESD power supply clamps and hybrid ESD power supply clamps. Two standalone clamps are proposed: a transient PMOS based ESD clamp with thyristor delay element (PTC), and a static diode triggered power supply (DTC). The standalone clamps were designed to protect the circuit core against ±125 V CDM stress by limiting the voltage between the two power rails to less than the oxide breakdown voltage of the core transistors, BVOXESD = 5 V. The large area of this architecture was the price for maintaining the low-leakage current and an adequate ESD protection. The hybrid clamp architecture was proposed to provide a higher ESD protection, against ±300 V CDM stress, while reducing the layout area and maintaining the low-leakage feature. In the hybrid clamp structure, two clamps are connected in parallel between the two power supply rails, a static clamp, and a transient clamp. The static clamp triggers first and starts to sink the ESD energy and then an RC network triggers the primary transient clamp to sink most of the ESD stress. Two hybrid designs were proposed: PMOS ESD power supply clamp with thyristor delay element and diodes (PTDC), and NMOS ESD power supply clamp with level shifter delay element and diode (NLDC). Simulation results show that the proposed clamps are capable of protecting the circuit core against ±1.5 kV HBM and at least against ±125 V CDM stresses. The measurement results show that all of the proposed clamps are immune against false triggering, and transient induced latch-up. Furthermore, all four designs have responded favorably to the 4 V ESD-like pulse voltage under both chip powered and not powered conditions and after the stress ends the designs turned off. Finally, TLP measurement results show that all four proposed designs meet the minimum design requirement of the ESD protection circuit in the 65 nm CMOS technology (i.e. HBM protection level of ±1.5 kV )

    Analysis of design strategies for RF ESD problems in CMOS circuits

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    This thesis analyses the design strategies used to protect RF circuits that are implemented in CMOS technologies. It investigates, in detail, the physical mechanisms involved when a ggNMOS structure is exposed to an ESD event and undergoes snapback. The understanding gained is used to understand why the performance of the current RF ESD clamp is poor and suggestions are made as to how the performance of ggNMOS clamps can be improved beyond the current body of knowledge. The ultimate aim is to be able to design effective ESD protection clamps whilst minimising the effect the circuit has on RF I/O signals. A current ggNMOS based RF ESD I/O protection circuit is analysed in detail using a Transmission Line Pulse (TLP) tester. This is shown to be a very effective diagnostic tool by showing many characteristics of the ggNMOS during the triggering and conducting phase of the ESD event and demonstrate deficiencies in the clamp design. The use of a FIB enhances the analysis by allowing the isolation of individual components in the circuit and therefore their analysis using the TLP tester. SPICE simulations are used to provide further commentary on the debate surrounding the specification required of a TLP tester for there to be a good correlation between a TLP test and the industry standard Human Body Model (HBM) ESD test. Finite element simulations are used to probe deeper in to the mechanisms involved when a ggNMOS undergoes snapback especially with regard to the contribution parasitic components within the ggNMOS make to the snapback process. New ggNMOS clamps are proposed which after some modification are shown to work. Some of the finite element experiments are repeated in a 0.18μπ7. process CMOS test chip and a comparison is made between the two sets of results. In the concluding chapter understanding that has been gained from previous chapters is combined with the published body of knowledge to suggest and explain improvements in the design of a ggNMOS for RF and standard applications. These improvements will improve homogeneity of ggNMOS operation thus allowing the device size to be reduced and parasitic loading for a given ESD performance. These techniques can also be used to ensure that the ESD current does not take an unintended path through the chip

    Dispositifs innovants à pente sous le seuil abrupte (du TEFT au Z -FET)

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    Tunnel à effet de champ (TFET) et un nouveau composant MOS à rétroaction que nous avons nommé le Z2-FET.Le Z2-FET est envisagé pour la logique faible consommation et pour les applications mémoire compatibles avecles technologies CMOS avancées. Nous avons étudié de manière systématique des TFETs avec différents oxydesde grille, matériaux et structures de canal, fabriqués sur silicium sur isolant totalement déserté (FDSOI). Lesmesures de bruit à basse fréquence (LFN) sur TFETs montrent la prédominance d'un signal aléatoiretélégraphique (RTS), qui révèle sans ambiguïté le mécanisme d effet tunnel. Un modèle analytique combinantl effet tunnel et le transport dans le canal a été développé, montrant un bon accord entre les résultatsexpérimentaux et les simulations.Nous avons conçu et démontré un nouveau dispositif (Z2-FET, pour pente sous le seuil verticale et zéroionisation par impact), qui présente une commutation extrêmement abrupte (moins de 1 mV par décade decourant), avec un rapport ION / IOFF >109, un large effet de hystérésis et un potentiel de miniaturisation jusqu'à 20nm. La simulation TCAD a été utilisée pour confirmer que la commutation électrique du Z2-FET fonctionne parl'intermédiaire de rétroaction entre les flux des électrons et trous et leurs barrières d'injection respectives. LeZ2-FET est idéalement adapté pour des applications mémoire à un transistor. La mémoire DRAM basée sur leZ2-FET montre des performances très bonnes, avec des tensions d'alimentation jusqu'à 1,1 V, des temps derétention jusqu'à 5,5 s et des vitesses d'accès atteignant 1 ns. Une mémoire SRAM utilisant un seul Z -FET estégalement démontrée sans nécessité de rafraichissement de l information stockée.Notre travail sur le courant GIDL intervenant dans les MOSFETs de type FDSOI a été combiné avec leTFET afin de proposer une nouvelle structure de TFETs optimisés, basée sur l'amplification bipolaire du couranttunnel. Les simulations de nouveau dispostif à injection tunnel amélioré par effet bipolaire (BET-FET) montrentdes résultats prometteurs, avec des ION supérierus à 4mA/ m et des pentes sous le seuil SS inférieures à 60mV/dec sur plus de sept décades de courant, surpassant tous les TFETs silicium rapportés à ce jour.La thèse se conclut par les directions de recherche futures dans le domaine des dispositifs à pente sous leseuil abrupte.This thesis is dedicated to studying sharp switching devices, including the tunneling field-effect-transistor(TFET) and a new feedback device we have named the Z2-FET, for low power logic and memory applicationscompatible with modern silicon technology. We have extensively investigated TFETs with various gate oxides,channel materials and structures, fabricated on fully-depleted silicon-on-insulator (FD-SOI) substrates.Low-frequency noise (LFN) measurements were performed on TFETs, showing the dominance of randomtelegraphy signal (RTS) noise, which reveals the tunneling mechanism. An analytical TFET model combiningtunneling and channel transport has been developed, showing agreement with the experimental and simulationresults.We also conceived and demonstrated a new device named the Z2-FET (for zero subthreshold swing andzero impact ionization), which exhibits extremely sharp switching with subthreshold swing SS 4.10-3 A/ mand SS < 60 mV/dec over 7 decades of current, outperforming all silicon-compatible TFETs reported to date.The thesis concludes with future research directions in the sharp-switching device arena.SAVOIE-SCD - Bib.électronique (730659901) / SudocGRENOBLE1/INP-Bib.électronique (384210012) / SudocGRENOBLE2/3-Bib.électronique (384219901) / SudocSudocFranceF
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