87 research outputs found

    높은 구동 전류와 낮은 문턱전압 이하 스윙을 가지는 L자 형태의 터널링 전계효과 트랜지스터

    Get PDF
    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2014. 2. 박병국.In order to solve power crisis in highly-scaled CMOS technology, a novel tunnel field-effect transistors (TFETs), named L-shaped TFETs, have been proposed and its electrical properties are examined. It features band-to-band tunneling (BTBT) direction parallel to the normal electric field induced by gate electrode. Because carrier injection is occurred perpendicular to the channel direction, cross-sectional area and barrier width of BTBT junction could be defined by structural parameters. Using the commercial TCAD device simulator, its electrical characteristics are examined and optimized. It is expected that the L-shaped TFETs will reveal better performance than conventional ones in terms of subthreshold swing (S), on-current (Ion) and short channel effect. In addition, the performance of L-shaped TFET inverters has been compared with that of conventional TFET ones for its complementary logic application. After the key process techniques are obtained, control and comparison samples are fabricated at Inter-University Semiconductor Research Center (ISRC) of Seoul National University (SNU), Korea. The main process technique is as follow: in-situ doped epitaxial layer growth for constantly doped source region, selective epitaxial layer growth of silicon at low temperature for tunneling region, and guarantee sub-3-nm gate dielectric. From the electrical measurement of transfer and output characteristics, it is verified that 102 mV/dec minimum S in conventional TFET is improve to 7, 34 and 59 mV/dec in L-shaped TFET. In addition, the Ion of L-shaped TFET is more than 10 times larger than that of conventional one. Extracting several parameters such as source/drain resistance, channel resistance, mobility, and tunneling resistance, it is clear that the improved performance comes from the reduction of tunneling resistance. From this study, it is demonstrated that L-shaped TFET will be one of the most promising candidate for a next-generation low-power device.Abstract i Contents iii List of Tables v List of Figures vi Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1.1 NECESSITY OF ALTERNATIVES TO CMOS 1 1.2 TUNNEL FIELD-EFFECT TRANSISTORS (TFETS) 4 1.3 TECHNICAL ISSUES OF TFETS 7 1.4 SCOPE OF THESIS 10 Chapter 2 L-shaped TFET 11 2.1 FEATURES OF L-SHAPED TFET 11 2.2 DESIGN OPTIMIZATION 17 2.3 CORNER EFFECT 27 2.4 FURTHER IMPROVEMENT AND CIRCUIT APPLICATION 36 2.5 SUMMARY OF TARGET DEVICE 40 Chapter 3 Device Fabrication 42 3.1 FABRICATION OF CONTROL TFETS 42 3.2 KEY PROCESS DESIGNS FOR L-SHAPED TFETS 45 3.3 FABRICATION OF L-SHAPED TFET 51 3.4 SIDEWALL SPACER FOR MINIMIZATION OF MIS-ALIGNMENT 56 Chapter 4 Device Characteristics 59 4.1 METAL-OXIDE-SEMICONDUCTOR (MOS) CAPACITOR 59 4.2 CONTROL SAMPLES OF CONVENTIONAL PLANAR TFETS 63 4.3 L-SHAPED TFETS 71 4.4 EXTRACTION OF SEVERAL ELECTRICAL PARAMETERS 76 Chapter 5 80 Conclusions 80 Bibliography 82 Abstract in Korean 89 Curriculum Vitae 91Docto

    Simulation of FinFET Structures

    Get PDF
    The intensive downscaling of MOS transistors has been the major driving force behind the aggressive increases in transistor density and performance, leading to more chip functionality at higher speeds. While on the other side the reduction in MOSFET dimensions leads to the close proximity between source and drain, which in turn reduces the ability of the gate electrode to control the potential distribution and current flow in the channel region and also results in some undesirable effects called the short-channel effects. These limitations associated with downscaling of MOSFET device geometries have lead device designers and researchers to number of innovative techniques which include the use of different device structures, different channel materials, different gate-oxide materials, different processes such as shallow trench isolation, source/drain silicidation, lightly doped extensions etc. to enable controlled device scaling to smaller dimensions. A lot of research and development works have been done in these and related fields and more remains to be carried out in order to exploit these devices for the wider applications

    Local Epitaxial Overgrowth for Stacked Complementary MOS Transistor Pairs

    Get PDF
    A three-dimensional silicon processing technology for CMOS circuits was developed and characterized. The first fully depleted SOI devices with individually biasable gates on both sides of the silicon film were realized. A vertically stacked CMOS Inverter built by lateral overgrowth was reported for the first time. Nucleation-free epitaxial lateral overgrowth of silicon over thin oxides was developed for both a pancake and a barrel-type epitaxy reactor: This process was optimized to limit damage to gate oxides and minimize dopant diffusion within the Substrate. Autodoping from impurities of the MOS transistors built in the substrate was greatly reduced. A planarisation technique was developed to reduce the silicon film thickness from 13μm to below 0.5μm for full depletion. Chemo-mechanical polishing was modified to yield an automatic etch stop with the corresponding control and uniformity of the silicon film. The resulting wafer topography is more planar than in a conventional substrate CMOS process. PMOS transistors which match the current drive of bulk NM0S devices of equal geometry were characterized, despite the three-times lower hole mobility. Devices realized in the substrate, at the bottom and on top of the SOI film were essentially indistinguishable from bulk devices. A novel device with two insulated gates controlling the same channel was characterized. Inverters were realized both as joint-gate configuration and with symmetric performance of n- and p-channel. These circuits were realized in the area of a single NMOS transistor

    Miniaturized Transistors

    Get PDF
    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

    Development and characterization of high-k dielectric/germanium gate stack

    Get PDF
    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Multigate MOSFETs for digital performance and high linearity, and their fabrication techniques

    Get PDF
    The aggressive downscaling of complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technology is facing great challenges to overcome severe short-channel effects. Multigate MOSFETs are one of the most promising candidates for scaling beyond Si CMOS, due to better electrostatic control as compared to conventional planar MOSFETs. Conventional dry etching-induced surface damage is one of the main sources of performance degradation for multigate transistors, especially for III-V high mobility materials. It is also challenging to increase the fin aspect ratio by dry etching because of the non-ideal anisotropic etching profile. Here, we report a novel method, inverse metal-assisted chemical etching (i-MacEtch), in lieu of conventional RIE etching, for 3D fin channel formation. InP junctionless FinFETs with record high-aspect-ratio (~ 50:1) fins are demonstrated by this method for the first time. The i-MacEtch process flow eliminates dry-etching-induced plasma damage, high energy ion implantation damage, and high temperature annealing, allowing for the fabrication of InP fin channels with atomically smooth sidewalls. The sidewall features resulting from this unique and simplified process ensure high interface quality between high-k dielectric layer and InP fin channel. Experimental and theoretical analyses show that high-aspect-ratio FinFETs, which could deliver more current per area under much relaxed horizontal geometry requirements, are promising in pushing the technology node ahead where conventional scaling has met its physical limits. The performance of the FinFET was further investigated through numerical simulation. A new kind of FinFET with asymmetric gate and source/drain contacts has been proposed and simulated. By benchmarking with conventional symmetric FinFET, better short-channel behavior with much higher current density is confirmed. The design guidelines are provided. The overall circuit delay can be minimized by optimizing gate lengths according to different local parasites among circuits in interconnection-delay-dominated SoC applications. Continued transistor scaling requires even stronger gate electrostatic control over the channel. The ultimate scaling structure would be gate-all-around nanowire MOSFETs. We demonstrate III-V junctionless gate-all-around (GAA) nanowire (NW) MOSFETs for the first time. For the first time, source/drain (S/D) resistance and thermal budget are minimized by regrowth using metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) in III-V MOSFETs. The fabricated short-channel (Lg=80 nm) GaAs GAA NWFETs with extremely narrow nanowire width (WNW= 9 nm) show excellent transconductance (gm) linearity at biases (300 mV), characterized by the high third intercept point (2.6 dBm). The high linearity is especially important for low power applications because it is insensitive to bias conditions

    Charge Transport in Hexagonal-Phase Core Silicon Nanowires

    Get PDF
    We built an atomically engineered laboratory inside a silicon nanowire (SiNW) to study fundamental transport mechanics and correlate results with crystal structure. We quantify the effects of ordered stacking faults (OSFs) present in SiNWs on their electrical transport capabilities. We use Raman spectroscopy to characterize the hexagonal-phase core structure of the Si crystal in our novel nanowires caused by the OSFs. Our results indicate that electrical current is prevented from owing within the hexagonal-phase core. Using OSFs to tune crystal structure in SiNWs can be used to control the effective cross-section of the nanowire without the need to change its physical dimensions. We find that the channel conductivity of field-effect transistors formed using these nanowires is decreased substantially compared to the familiar cubic phase counter-part (from roughly 100 to 1 mu*S/cm). This result indicates that modulating crystal phase can be effective in tuning material conductivity, offering an additional degree of freedom in device engineering. We also show that hexagonal-core SiNWs have larger effective Schottky barriers with gold electrode contacts (from 0.48 to 0.67 eV), which increases device contact resistance. Having a cubic-phase portion and a hexagonal-phase portion in series within a single kinked SiNW exploits this barrier asymmetry to create excellent gate-controlled and temperature-dependent rectifiers with rectifying ratios exceeding 100. Our transport model explains how the kink region also acts as a 10-nm scale diode. These results indicate that controlling OSF density could be exploited in new device architectures and help optimize SiNWs for applications in high-impedance Schottky barrier rectifying transistors

    Wide Bandgap Based Devices: Design, Fabrication and Applications, Volume II

    Get PDF
    Wide bandgap (WBG) semiconductors are becoming a key enabling technology for several strategic fields, including power electronics, illumination, and sensors. This reprint collects the 23 papers covering the full spectrum of the above applications and providing contributions from the on-going research at different levels, from materials to devices and from circuits to systems

    Low-frequency noise in downscaled silicon transistors: Trends, theory and practice

    Get PDF
    By the continuing downscaling of sub-micron transistors in the range of few to one deca-nanometers, we focus on the increasing relative level of the low-frequency noise in these devices. Large amount of published data and models are reviewed and summarized, in order to capture the state-of-the-art, and to observe that the 1/area scaling of low-frequency noise holds even for carbon nanotube devices, but the noise becomes too large in order to have fully deterministic devices with area less than 10nm×10nm. The low-frequency noise models are discussed from the point of view that the noise can be both intrinsic and coupled to the charge transport in the devices, which provided a coherent picture, and more interestingly, showed that the models converge each to other, despite the many issues that one can find for the physical origin of each model. Several derivations are made to explain crossovers in noise spectra, variable random telegraph amplitudes, duality between energy and distance of charge traps, behaviors and trends for figures of merit by device downscaling, practical constraints for micropower amplifiers and dependence of phase noise on the harmonics in the oscillation signal, uncertainty and techniques of averaging by noise characterization. We have also shown how the unavoidable statistical variations by fabrication is embedded in the devices as a spatial “frozen noise”, which also follows 1/area scaling law and limits the production yield, from one side, and from other side, the “frozen noise” contributes generically to temporal 1/f noise by randomly probing the embedded variations during device operation, owing to the purely statistical accumulation of variance that follows from cause-consequence principle, and irrespectively of the actual physical process. The accumulation of variance is known as statistics of “innovation variance”, which explains the nearly log-normal distributions in the values for low-frequency noise parameters gathered from different devices, bias and other conditions, thus, the origin of geometric averaging in low-frequency noise characterizations. At present, the many models generally coincide each with other, and what makes the difference, are the values, which, however, scatter prominently in nanodevices. Perhaps, one should make some changes in the approach to the low-frequency noise in electronic devices, to emphasize the “statistics behind the numbers”, because the general physical assumptions in each model always fail at some point by the device downscaling, but irrespectively of that, the statistics works, since the low-frequency noise scales consistently with the 1/area law
    corecore