75 research outputs found

    Strain-Engineered MOSFETs

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    This book brings together new developments in the area of strain-engineered MOSFETs using high-mibility substrates such as SIGe, strained-Si, germanium-on-insulator and III-V semiconductors into a single text which will cover the materials aspects, principles, and design of advanced devices, their fabrication and applications. The book presents a full TCAD methodology for strain-engineering in Si CMOS technology involving data flow from process simulation to systematic process variability simulation and generation of SPICE process compact models for manufacturing for yield optimization

    Investigation of the electrical properties of Si₁-×Ge× channel pMOSFETs with high-κ dielectrics

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    It is now apparent that the continued performance enhancements of silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs) can no longer be met by scaling alone. High-mobility channel materials such as strained Si1-xGex and Ge are now being seriously considered to maintain the performance requirements specified by the semiconductor industry. In addition, alternative gate dielectric, or high-κ dielectrics, will also be required to meet gate leakage requirements. This work investigates the properties of using strained Si1-xGex or Ge as alternative channel materials for pMOSFETs incorporating hafnium oxide (HfO2) high-κ gate dielectric. Whilst the SiGe pMOSFETs (x = 0.25) exhibited an enhancement in hole mobility (300 K) over comparable silicon control pMOSFETs with sputtered HfO2 dielectric, high Coulomb scattering and surface roughness scattering relating to the dielectric deposition process meant that the effective hole mobilities were degraded with respect to the silicon universal curve. Germanium channel pMOSFETs with halo-doping and HfO2 gate dielectric deposited by atomic layer deposition showed high hole mobilities of 230 cm2V-1s-1 and 480 cm2V-1s-1 at room temperature and 77 K, respectively. Analysis of the off-state current for the Ge pMOSFETs over a range of temperatures indicated that band-to-band tunnelling, gate-induced drain leakage and other defect-assisted leakage mechanisms could all be important. Hole carrier velocity and impact ionisation were also studied in two batches of buried channel SiGe pMOSFET with x = 0.15 and x = 0.36, respectively. SiGe channel pMOSFETs were found to exhibit reduced impact ionisation compared to silicon control devices, which has been attributed to a strain-induced reduction of the density of states in the SiGe conduction and valence bands. Analysis of the hole carrier velocity indicated that pseudomorphic SiGe offered no performance enhancements over Si below 100 nm, possibly due to higher ion implantation damage and strain relaxation of the strained SiGe channel. The results indicate that velocity overshoot effects might not provide the performance improvements at short channel lengths that was previously hoped for

    Scaling and intrinsic parameter fluctuations in nanoCMOS devices

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    The core of this thesis is a thorough investigation of the scaling properties of conventional nano-CMOS MOSFETs, their physical and operational limitations and intrinsic parameter fluctuations. To support this investigation a well calibrated 35 nm physical gate length real MOSFET fabricated by Toshiba was used as a reference transistor. Prior to the start of scaling to shorter channel lengths, the simulators were calibrated against the experimentally measured characteristics of the reference device. Comprehensive numerical simulators were then used for designing the next five generations of transistors that correspond to the technology nodes of the latest International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (lTRS). The scaling of field effect transistors is one of the most widely studied concepts in semiconductor technology. The emphases of such studies have varied over the years, being dictated by the dominant issues faced by the microelectronics industry. The research presented in this thesis is focused on the present state of the scaling of conventional MOSFETs and its projections during the next 15 years. The electrical properties of conventional MOSFETs; threshold voltage (VT), subthreshold slope (S) and on-off currents (lon, Ioffi ), which are scaled to channel lengths of 35, 25, 18, 13, and 9 nm have been investigated. In addition, the channel doping profile and the corresponding carrier mobility in each generation of transistors have also been studied and compared. The concern of limited solid solubility of dopants in silicon is also addressed along with the problem of high channel doping concentrations in scaled devices. The other important issue associated with the scaling of conventional MOSFETs are the intrinsic parameter fluctuations (IPF) due to discrete random dopants in the inversion layer and the effects of gate Line Edge Roughness (LER). The variations of the three important MOSFET parameters (loff, VT and Ion), induced by random discrete dopants and LER have been comprehensively studied in the thesis. Finally, one of the promising emerging CMOS transistor architectures, the Ultra Thin Body (UTB) SOl MOSFET, which is expected to replace the conventional MOSFET, has been investigated from the scaling point of view

    Statistical modelling of nano CMOS transistors with surface potential compact model PSP

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    The development of a statistical compact model strategy for nano-scale CMOS transistors is presented in this thesis. Statistical variability which arises from the discreteness of charge and granularity of matter plays an important role in scaling of nano CMOS transistors especially in sub 50nm technology nodes. In order to achieve reasonable performance and yield in contemporary CMOS designs, the statistical variability that affects the circuit/system performance and yield must be accurately represented by the industry standard compact models. As a starting point, predictive 3D simulation of an ensemble of 1000 microscopically different 35nm gate length transistors is carried out to characterize the impact of statistical variability on the device characteristics. PSP, an advanced surface potential compact model that is selected as the next generation industry standard compact model, is targeted in this study. There are two challenges in development of a statistical compact model strategy. The first challenge is related to the selection of a small subset of statistical compact model parameters from the large number of compact model parameters. We propose a strategy to select 7 parameters from PSP to capture the impact of statistical variability on current-voltage characteristics. These 7 parameters are used in statistical parameter extraction with an average RMS error of less than 2.5% crossing the whole operation region of the simulated transistors. Moreover, the accuracy of statistical compact model extraction strategy in reproducing the MOSFET electrical figures of merit is studied in detail. The results of the statistical compact model extraction are used for statistical circuit simulation of a CMOS inverter under different input-output conditions and different number of statistical parameters. The second challenge in the development of statistical compact model strategy is associated with statistical generation of parameters preserving the distribution and correlation of the directly extracted parameters. By using advanced statistical methods such as principal component analysis and nonlinear power method, the accuracy of parameter generation is evaluated and compared to directly extracted parameter sets. Finally, an extension of the PSP statistical compact model strategy to different channel width/length devices is presented. The statistical trends of parameters and figures of merit versus channel width/length are characterized

    ランダム・テレグラフ・ノイズの微細MOSFETへの影響に関する研究

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    筑波大学 (University of Tsukuba)201

    Investigation of the electrical properties of Si₁-xGex channel pMOSFETs with high-κ dielectrics

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    It is now apparent that the continued performance enhancements of silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs) can no longer be met by scaling alone. High-mobility channel materials such as strained Si1-xGex and Ge are now being seriously considered to maintain the performance requirements specified by the semiconductor industry. In addition, alternative gate dielectric, or high-? dielectrics, will also be required to meet gate leakage requirements. This work investigates the properties of using strained Si1-xGex or Ge as alternative channel materials for pMOSFETs incorporating hafnium oxide (HfO2) high-? gate dielectric. Whilst the SiGe pMOSFETs (x = 0.25) exhibited an enhancement in hole mobility (300 K) over comparable silicon control pMOSFETs with sputtered HfO2 dielectric, high Coulomb scattering and surface roughness scattering relating to the dielectric deposition process meant that the effective hole mobilities were degraded with respect to the silicon universal curve. Germanium channel pMOSFETs with halo-doping and HfO2 gate dielectric deposited by atomic layer deposition showed high hole mobilities of 230 cm2V-1s-1 and 480 cm2V-1s-1 at room temperature and 77 K, respectively. Analysis of the off-state current for the Ge pMOSFETs over a range of temperatures indicated that band-to-band tunnelling, gate-induced drain leakage and other defect-assisted leakage mechanisms could all be important. Hole carrier velocity and impact ionisation were also studied in two batches of buried channel SiGe pMOSFET with x = 0.15 and x = 0.36, respectively. SiGe channel pMOSFETs were found to exhibit reduced impact ionisation compared to silicon control devices, which has been attributed to a strain-induced reduction of the density of states in the SiGe conduction and valence bands. Analysis of the hole carrier velocity indicated that pseudomorphic SiGe offered no performance enhancements over Si below 100 nm, possibly due to higher ion implantation damage and strain relaxation of the strained SiGe channel. The results indicate that velocity overshoot effects might not provide the performance improvements at short channel lengths that was previously hoped for.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Journal of Telecommunications and Information Technology, 2007, nr 2

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    kwartalni

    Transport enhancement techniques for nanoscale MOSFETs

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Includes bibliographical references (p. 155-183).Over the past two decades, intrinsic MOSFET delay has been scaled commensurate with the scaling of the dimensions. To extend this historical trend in the future, careful analysis of what determines the transistor performance is required. In this work, a new delay metric is first introduced that better captures the interplay of the main technology parameters, and employed to study the historical trends of the performance scaling and to quantify the requirements for the continuous increase of the performance in the future. It is shown that the carrier velocity in the channel has been the main driver for the improved transistor performance with scaling. A roadmapping exercise is presented and it is shown that new channel materials are needed to lever carrier velocity beyond what is achieved with uniaxially strained silicon, along with dramatic reduction in the device parasitics. Such innovations are needed as early as the 32-nm node to avoid the otherwise counter-scaling of the performance. The prospects and limitations of various approaches that are being pursued to increase the carrier velocity and thereby the transistor performance are then explored. After introducing the basics of the transport in nanoscale MOSFETs, the impact of channel material and strain configuration on electron and hole transport are examined. Uniaixal tensile strain in silicon is shown to be very promising to enhance electron transport as long as higher strain levels can be exerted on the device. Calculations and analysis in this work demonstrate that in uniaxially strained silicon, virtual source velocity depends more strongly on the mobility than previously believed and the modulation of the effective mass under uniaxial strain is responsible for this string dependence.(cont) While III-V semiconductors are seriously limited by their small quantization effective mass, which limits the available inversion charge at a given voltage overdrive, germanium is attractive as it has enhanced transport properties for both electrons and holes. However, to avoid mobility degradation due to carrier confinement as well as L - interband scattering, and to achieve higher ballistic velocity, (111) wafer orientation should be used for Ge NFETs. Further analysis in this work demonstrate that with uniaixally strained Si, hole 3 ballistic velocity enhancement is limited to about 2x, despite the fact that mobility enhancement of about 4x has been demonstrated. Hence, further increase of the strain level does not seem to provide major increase in the device performance. It is also shown that relaxed germanium only marginally improves hole velocity despite the fact that mobility is significantly higher than silicon. Biaxial compressive strain in Ge, although relatively simple to apply, offers only 2x velocity enhancement over relaxed silicon. Only with uniaxial compressive strain, is germanium able to provide significantly higher velocities compared to state-of-the-art silicon MOSFETs. Most recently, germanium has manifested itself as an alternative channel material because of its superior electron and hole mobility compared to silicon. Functional MOS transistors with relatively good electrical characteristics have been demonstrated by several groups on bulk and strained Ge. However, carrier mobility in these devices is still far behind what is theoretically expected from germanium. Very high density of the interface states, especially close to the conduction band is believed to be responsible for poor electrical characteristics of Ge MOSFETs. Nevertheless, a through investigation of the transport in Ge-channel MOSFETs and the correlation between the mobility and trap density has not been undertaken in the past.(cont) Pulsed I -V and Q-V measurement are performed to characterize near intrinsic transport properties in Ge-channel MOSFETs. Pulsed measurements show that the actual carrier mobility is at least twice what is inferred from DC measurements for Ge NFETs. With phosphorus implantation at the Ge-dielectric interface the difference between DC and pulsed measurements is reduced to about 20%, despite the fact that effects of charge trapping are still visible in these devices. To better understand the dependence of carrier transport on charge trapping, a method to directly measure the inversion charge density by integrating the S/D current is proposed. The density of trapped charges is measured as the difference between the inversion charge density at the beginning and end of pulses applied to the gate. Analysis of temporal variation of trapped charge density reveals that two regimes of fast and slow charge trapping are present. Both mechanisms show a logarithmic dependence on the pulse width, as observed in earlier literature charge-pumping studies of Si MOSFETs with high- dielectrics. The correlation between mobility and density of trapped charges is studied and it is shown that the mobility depends only on the density of fast traps. To our knowledge, this is the first investigation in which the impact of the fast and slow traps on the mobility has been separated. Extrapolation of the mobility-trap relationship to lower densities of trapped charges gives an upper limit on the available mobility with the present gate stack if the density of the fast traps is reduced further. However, this analysis demonstrates that the expected mobility is still far below what is obtained in Si MOSFETs. Further investigations are needed to analyze other mechanisms that might be responsible for poor electron mobility in Ge MOSFETs and thereby optimize the gate stack by suppressing these mechanisms.by Ali Khakifirooz.Ph.D

    A statistical study of time dependent reliability degradation of nanoscale MOSFET devices

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    Charge trapping at the channel interface is a fundamental issue that adversely affects the reliability of metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) devices. This effect represents a new source of statistical variability as these devices enter the nano-scale era. Recently, charge trapping has been identified as the dominant phenomenon leading to both random telegraph noise (RTN) and bias temperature instabilities (BTI). Thus, understanding the interplay between reliability and statistical variability in scaled transistors is essential to the implementation of a ‘reliability-aware’ complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) circuit design. In order to investigate statistical reliability issues, a methodology based on a simulation flow has been developed in this thesis that allows a comprehensive and multi-scale study of charge-trapping phenomena and their impact on transistor and circuit performance. The proposed methodology is accomplished by using the Gold Standard Simulations (GSS) technology computer-aided design (TCAD)-based design tool chain co-optimization (DTCO) tool chain. The 70 nm bulk IMEC MOSFET and the 22 nm Intel fin-shape field effect transistor (FinFET) have been selected as targeted devices. The simulation flow starts by calibrating the device TCAD simulation decks against experimental measurements. This initial phase allows the identification of the physical structure and the doping distributions in the vertical and lateral directions based on the modulation in the inversion layer’s depth as well as the modulation of short channel effects. The calibration is further refined by taking into account statistical variability to match the statistical distributions of the transistors’ figures of merit obtained by measurements. The TCAD simulation investigation of RTN and BTI phenomena is then carried out in the presence of several sources of statistical variability. The study extends further to circuit simulation level by extracting compact models from the statistical TCAD simulation results. These compact models are collected in libraries, which are then utilised to investigate the impact of the BTI phenomenon, and its interaction with statistical variability, in a six transistor-static random access memory (6T-SRAM) cell. At the circuit level figures of merit, such as the static noise margin (SNM), and their statistical distributions are evaluated. The focus of this thesis is to highlight the importance of accounting for the interaction between statistical variability and statistical reliability in the simulation of advanced CMOS devices and circuits, in order to maintain predictivity and obtain a quantitative agreement with a measured data. The main findings of this thesis can be summarised by the following points: Based on the analysis of the results, the dispersions of VT and ΔVT indicate that a change in device technology must be considered, from the planar MOSFET platform to a new device architecture such as FinFET or SOI. This result is due to the interplay between a single trap charge and statistical variability, which has a significant impact on device operation and intrinsic parameters as transistor dimensions shrink further. The ageing process of transistors can be captured by using the trapped charge density at the interface and observing the VT shift. Moreover, using statistical analysis one can highlight the extreme transistors and their probable effect on the circuit or system operation. The influence of the passgate (PG) transistor in a 6T-SRAM cell gives a different trend of the mean static noise margin
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