Material
Material
Material Systems
Overview
ATLAS understands a library of materials for reference to material properties and models of various
regions in the semiconductor device. These materials are chosen to represent those most commonly
used by semiconductor physicists today. Users of BLAZE or BLAZE3D will have access to all of these
materials. S-PISCES or DEVICE3D users will have only access to Silicon and Polysilicon.
S-PISCES is designed to maintain backward compatibility with the standalone program SPISCES2
version 5.2. In the SPISCES2 syntax, certain materials could be used in the REGION statement just by
using their name as logical parameters. This syntax is still supported.
Semiconductors
All equations specified by the user’s choice of models are solved in semiconductor regions. All
semiconductor regions must have a band structure defined in terms of bandgap, density of states,
affinity etc. The parameters used for any simulation can be echoed to the run-time output using
MODELS PRINT. For complex cases with mole fraction dependent models these quantities can be seen
in Tonyplot by specifying OUTPUT BAND.PARAM and saving a solution file.
Any semiconductor region that is defined as an electrode is then considered to be a conductor region.
This is typical for polysilicon gate electrodes.
Insulators
In insulator materials only the Poisson and lattice heat equations are solved. Therefore for isothermal
simulations, the only parameter required for an insulator is dielectric permittivity defined using
MATERIAL PERM=<n>.
Materials usually considered as insulators (eg. SiO2) can be treated as semiconductors using BLAZE,
however all semiconductor parameters are then required.
Conductors
All conductor materials must be defined as electrodes. Conversely all electrode regions are defined as
conductor material regions. If a file containing regions of a material known to be a conductor are read
in, these regions will automatically become un-named electrodes. As noted bellow if the file contains
materials that are unknown, these region will become insulators.
During electrical simulation only the electrode boundary nodes are used. Nodes that are entirely
within an electrode region are not solved. Any quantities seen inside a conductor region in TONYPLOT
are spurious. Only optical ray tracing and absorption for LUMINOUS and lattice heating are solved
inside of conductor/electrode regions.
Unknown Materials
If a mesh file is read containing materials not in Table B-1 these will automatically become insulator
regions with a relative permittivity of 3.9. All user-defined materials from ATHENA, irrespective of
the material name chosen by the user, will also become such insulator materials.
ATLAS Materials
ATLAS materials are listed in Table B-1 below.
InAlAsP
Insulators
Ambient
Conductors4
Notes
1. The material models and parameters of Silicon are identical to those of S-PISCES version 5.2. Users should be
aware that although these band parameters may be physically inaccurate compared to bulk silicon measurements,
most other material parameters and models are empirically tuned using these band parameters.
2. Polysilicon is treated differently depending on how it is used. In cases where it is defined as an electrode, it is treated
as a conductor. It can also be used as a semiconductor such as in a polysilicon emitter bipolars.
3. The composition of SiGe is the only binary compound that can be varied to simulate the effects of band gap varia-
tions.
4. Conductor names are only associated with electrodes. They are used for the specification of thermal conductivities
and complex index of refraction and for display in TonyPlot.
•SiGe: The composition fraction x applies to the Ge component. SiGe is then specified as Si(1-x)Ge(x),
an exception to rule #4.
•AlGaAs : This is specified as Al(x)Ga(1-x)As. This is an exception to rule #2.
•InGaAsP: The convention In(1-x)Ga(x)As(y)P(1-y) as set forth by Adachi is used. This is an exception to
rule #4.
Note: Within the Physics section of this manual, a complete description is given of each model. The
parameter defaults listed in Chapter Three are all Silicon material defaults.
Silicon 11.8
Poly 11.8
Table B-4. Lattice Mobility Model Defaults for Silicon and Poly
Table B-5 contains the silicon and polysilicon default values for the field dependent mobility model.
Table B-5. Parallel Field Dependent Mobility Model Parameters for Silicon and Poly
Silicon 2 1
Poly 2 1
Table B-7. SRH Lifetime Parameter Defaults for Silicon and Poly
The default parameters for Auger recombination are given in Table B-8;
Parameter Value
EGRAN 4.0x105
BETAN 1.0
BETAP 1.0
AN1 7.03x105
AN2 7.03x105
BN1 1.231x106
BN2 1.231x106
AP1 6.71x105
AP2 1.582x106
BP1 1.693x106
BP2 2.036x106
Parameter Value
EGRAN 0.0
BETAN 1.82
BETAP 1.75
EGRAN 0.0
AN1 1.889x105
AN2 1.889x105
BN1 5.75x105
BN2 5.75x105
AP1 2.215x105
AP2 2.215x105
BP1 6.57x105
BP2 6.57x105
Parameter Value
TCA 2.27
HCA 1.738
0.0 1.47
0.1 7.05
0.2 11.84
0.3 15.83
0.4 19.02
0.5 21.40
0.6 22.96
0.7 23.71
0.8 23.63
0.9 22.71
1.0 20.95
The default thermal properties of the binary compounds in the InGaAsP system are given in Table B-
16.
Table B-16. Default Thermal Properties of InP InAs GaP and GaAs
The default thermal properties for the terniary compounds in the InGaAsP system: In(1-x)Ga(x)As,
In(1-x)Ga(x)P, InAs(y)P(1-y), and GaAs(y)P(1-y) are given, as a function of composition fraction, by linear
interpolations from these binary compounds.
Parameter Value
EGRAN 0.0
BETAN 1.0
BETAP 1.0
AN1 1.66x106
AN2 1.66x106
BN1 1.273x107
BN2 1.273x107
AP1 5.18x106
AP2 5.18x106
BP1 1.4x107
BP2 1.4x107
Parameter Value
4H-SiC 6H-SiC
HCA 0 0
Miscellaneous Semiconductors
The remainder of the semiconductors available have defined default parameter values to various
degrees of completeness. The following sections describe those parameter defaults as they exist. Since
many of the material parameters are not available at this time, it is recommended that care be taken
in using these materials. It is important to make sure that the proper values are used
Note: The syntax MODEL PRINT can be used to echo the parameters used to the run-time output.
Silicon
Poly-
silicon
HgSe
HgTe
Notes
mc(G) = 0.09
Nc = Nc(X) + Nc(G)
(d). mc(G) = 0.047
mc(L) = 0.36
Nc = Nc(G) + Nc(L)
Ge 16.0
Diamond 5.5
6H-SiC(a) 9.66
4H-SiC(b) 9.72
AlP 9.8
AlAs 12.0
AlSb 11.0
GaSb 15.7
InSb 18.0
ZnS 8.3
ZnSe 8.1
CdS 8.9
CdSe 10.6
CdTe 10.9
HgS
HgSe 25.0
HgTe 20.
PbS 170.0
PbSe 250.0
PbTe 412.0
SnTe
ScN
GaN 9.5
AlN 9.14
InN 19.6
BeTe
Ge 3900.0(a) 1900.0(b)
AlP 80.0
ZnSe 100.0 16
CdSe 800.0
HgS
HgSe 5500.0
SnTe
ScN
AlN 14.0
InN 3000.0
BeTe
Notes
(a) Uses Equation B-4 with TMUN=1.66.
(b) Uses Equation B-4 with TMUP = 2.33.
Insulators
The default material parameters for insulator materials are given in the following sections. As noted
in the “Semiconductors, Insulators and Conductors” section the only parameter required for electrical
simulation in insulator materials is the the dielectric constant .Thermal and optical properties are
required in GIGA and LUMINOUS respectively.
Vacuum 1.0
Air 1.0
Ambient 1.0
Oxide 3.9
Si02 3.9
Nitride 7.5
SiN 7.5
Si3N4 7.55
Sapphire 12.0
Sap-
phire
Optical Properties
The default values for complex index of refraction in LUMINOUS are interpolated from tables from the
“Handbook of Optical Constants,” first and second editions. Rather than print the tables here, the
ranges of optical wavelengths for each material are listed in Table B-24.
Temperature(
Material Composition Fraction Wavelengths (microns)
K)
Note: The parameter INDEX.CHECK can be added to the SOLVE statement to list the values of real
and imaginary index being used in each solution.
# Thermoconductivity
MATERIAL MATERIAL=InGaAsP TC.A=2.49
# Heat capacity
MATERIAL MATERIAL=InGaAsP HC.A=1.9