100% found this document useful (2 votes)
4K views40 pages

Second Order Effects

This document discusses various second order effects in MOSFETs including channel length modulation, threshold voltage variation, and leakage current mechanisms. It describes how channel length decreases with increasing drain voltage due to channel length modulation. Threshold voltage is impacted by work function difference, surface potential, depletion charge, and fixed oxide charges. Threshold voltage can vary due to short channel effects, drain induced barrier lowering, body bias, and narrow/reverse narrow channel effects. The document outlines different leakage current mechanisms such as junction leakage, subthreshold leakage, gate oxide tunneling, hot carrier injection, gate induced drain leakage, and punchthrough. It also discusses techniques to reduce leakage such as well engineering and constant field scaling.

Uploaded by

Dhiraj Kumar
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
4K views40 pages

Second Order Effects

This document discusses various second order effects in MOSFETs including channel length modulation, threshold voltage variation, and leakage current mechanisms. It describes how channel length decreases with increasing drain voltage due to channel length modulation. Threshold voltage is impacted by work function difference, surface potential, depletion charge, and fixed oxide charges. Threshold voltage can vary due to short channel effects, drain induced barrier lowering, body bias, and narrow/reverse narrow channel effects. The document outlines different leakage current mechanisms such as junction leakage, subthreshold leakage, gate oxide tunneling, hot carrier injection, gate induced drain leakage, and punchthrough. It also discusses techniques to reduce leakage such as well engineering and constant field scaling.

Uploaded by

Dhiraj Kumar
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 40

SECOND ORDER EFFECTS

IN
MOSFETS

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 1


Contents
 Channel Length Modulation / Velocity Saturation
 Threshold Voltage
 Vt Variation:
 SCE / RSCE
 NCE / RNCE
 Body bias
 Leakage current mechanisms in MOSFETs
 PN junction reverse bias leakage
 Subthreshold leakage
 Gate oxide tunneling
 Injection of hot carrier
 Drain Induced barrier Lowering(DIBL)
 Gate induced drain leakage(GIDL)
 Punchthrough

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 2


Channel Length Modulation
 Actual Length of channel decreases with increase in V
. DS
 Result in non zero I D /V DS

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 3


Channel Length Modulation
 The resultant expression for I D is

W
I D =K V GS−V T 2 1 V DS [1]
L
 Where, we have
L
=
L
 Thus the modulation parameter has higher value for short channels.

 Effect of channel length modulation can be observed as in the simple current


mirror VDD

ID2 I D2 12 V GS 
ID1 =
I D1 12 V DS2 
M2 VDS2
1
M1 VGS R OUT =
 I D2
Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 4
Velocity Saturation
 At higher V DS velocity of charge carrier saturates.
 The results in linear dependence of the drain current on V GS −V T 
 The value of transconductance(g m) becomes constant
 Thus the Value of VDSAT< VGS- VT

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 5


Threshold Voltage
 Threshold Voltage:

 The value of gate to source voltage required to cause surface inversion for
channel formation is called threshold voltage.

 Components of Threshold Voltage:

 The work function difference b/w gate and channel (ɸMS)


 The component of gate voltage to change the surface potential (2ɸF)
 Gate voltage component to offset the depletion region charge (Q B).
 The voltage component to offset the fixed charges in the gate oxide and in
silicon oxide (Qox)
Q B Q OX
V th= MS 2 F − −
C OX C OX
Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 6
Threshold Voltage

VG=0 Vt>VG>0(Depletion)

VG>Vt(Strong Inversion)
Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 7
Vt variation in an MOS
 There are various trends seen in threshold voltage variation with scaling of MOS
transistors.
 Various secondary effects leading to Vt variation in MOSFETs can be:
 Body Bias
 Short Channel effect(SCE)
 DIBL
 Reverse short channel effect(RSCE)
 Narrow channel effect(NCE)
 Reverse narrow channel effect(RNCE)
VDD

ID2 2
ID1 I D2 V GS −V T1 
=
M2 VDS I D1 V GS −V T2 2
M1 VGS

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 8


Body bias
 Body bias or back gate effect is the name given to the change in threshold
voltage with change in the voltage Vsb.
 For a NMOS we have.

Where,
VTN is the threshold voltage with substrate bias.
VTO is threshold voltage with substrate bias zero.
γ is the body effect parameter.
2φ is the surface potential parameter.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 9


Short channel effect (SCE)
 It is phenomenon in scaled transistors whereby threshold voltage of a device
reduces with decrease in L.
 This dependence of Vt on length of the device is because of the protrusion of
source and drain regions.
 Part of the channel is already depleted because of source and drain junction
depletion.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 10


Drain Induced Barrier Lowering
 DIBL is the phenomena which results in reduced threshold voltage and hence
higher subthreshold current.
 The reduction in threshold is due to the band bending caused by Drain to
source voltage.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 11


Reverse short channel effect
 To reduce short channel effects, depletion region widths need to be reduced.
 For this channels are highly doped near the source and drain terminals (halo
doping).
 In short channels halo doping of source and drain overlaps.
 Threshold voltage is high as channel doping is higher.

Fig:Halo doped channel


Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 12
Narrow channel effect
 Narrow channel effect is phenomenon by virtue of which, Vt increases as
channel width is reduced.
 NCE is more prominent in LOCOS.
 In LOCOS gate MOSFET, existence of fringing field causes the gate induced
depletion region to spread, thus higher Vt.

Fig:Channel spreading in LOCOS process MOSFET

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 13


Reverse Narrow channel effect
 Prominent in Shallow trench isolation(STI) MOSFETS.
 Depletion layer cannot spread under the isolation oxide.
 So, no increase in Vt.
 2-D field induced edge fringing effect at the gate edge makes formation of
inversion layer at the edges becomes easier.
 Vt thus reduces

Fig:STI MOSFET

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 14


Leakage mechanisms
 Leakage Currents result in higher power consumption
 Various Leakage current mechanisms in MOSFETs are:
 PN junction reverse bias leakage
 Subthreshold leakage
 Gate oxide tunneling
 Injection of hot carrier
 Gate induced drain leakage(GIDL)
 Punchthrough

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 15


PN junction reverse bias leakage
 Drain and source diffusion regions form a reversed biased diode with substrate.
 Reverse biased current has two component:
 Minority carrier diffusion near the edge of the depletion region.
 Electron-hole pair generation in the depletion region.
 If both P and N side are heavily doped the BTBT tunneling dominates the pn
junction leakage.

Fig:PN junction reverse bias leakage Fig: BTBT tunneling


Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 16
Subthreshold Leakage
 Subthreshold or weak inversion conduction current is a mechanism of current
leakage in subthreshold gate bias region.
 In weak inversion region minority carrier concentration is not zero.
 Subthreshold leakage current varies exponentially with Vgs.
 The subthreshold current is due to diffusion.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 17


Gate Oxide Tunneling
 With scaling oxide thickness is also reduced.
 The high electric field coupled with low oxide thickness results in tunneling of
electrons from substrate to gate.
 There may be two types of tunneling possible:
 Fowler–Nordheim (FN) tunneling
 Direct tunneling.

Fig: FN tunneling Fig:Direct Tunneling

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 18


Injection of Hot Carriers
 In short channel transistors electric field is very high.
 Electrons or holes can gain sufficient energy from the electric field to cross the
interface potential barrier and enter into the oxide layer
 The injection from Si to SiO is more likely for electrons than holes.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 19


Gate Induced Drain Leakage
 Seen when gate is biased for accumulation in the substrate.
 Due to accumulation, depletion layer at the surface to be much narrower than
elsewhere.
 When the negative gate bias is large, the n+ drain region under the gate can be
depleted or even inverted
 This causes more crowding and hence effects like avalanche multiplication and
BTBT.
 Thinner Gate,Higher VDD, Moderately doped Drain has more GIDL.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 20


Punchthrough
 In Short channel devices the source and drain depletion regions extend into the
channel.
 Increase in reverse bias also pushes the depletion regions closer.
 Punchthrough occurs when both the depletion regions touch each other.
 Even if the channel is heavily doped, punchthrough may occur below it.
 Due to punchthrough subthreshold current increases

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 21


Leakage reduction techniques

Fig:Aspects of well engineering for leakage reduction

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 22


Leakage reduction techniques
 Constant Field Scaling
 Reduce voltages and dimensions by same factor K(>1) .
 Constant field assures higher reliability.
 Retrograde Well
 Channels have nonuniform vertical doping profile.
 Lower surface concentration,for higher surface mobility.
 Highly doped subsurface to avoid punchthrough.
 Halo doping:
 Non Uniform channel doping in lateral direction.
 Substrate is highly doped at source and drain junctions.
 Reduces depletion width in the drain-substrate and source-substrate regions.
 Reduces DIBL,Punchthrough
 Enhances BTBT and GIDL.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 23


Leakage reduction techniques
 Constant Field Scaling
 Drain extended by adding a drift region with similar doping between drain
and the intended channel.
 Traps the majority of the lateral electric field,limiting the hot carrier effect to
this region,instead of the channel.
 This improves the V DS breakdown voltage.
 Increases the channel resistance.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 24


References
[1] Sung-Mo Kang, Yusuf Leblebici, Cmos Digital Integrated
Circuits.Reading,Tata Mcgraw Hills, 2003, ch. 3, pp. 107–109.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 25


Thank You

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 26


BACKUP SLIDES

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 27


EB diagram VG = 0
 Assumptions:
 P-type Substrate.
 ϕM=ϕSi (Work function of metal & Semiconductor are Same)
 No Trapped Charges in Oxide.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 28


EB diagram VG<0

 Accumulation:
 EF “goes up” in the metal .
 An electric field is observed in the oxide
 Concentration of holes increases at the surface.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 29


Eb diagram VG>0

 Depletion:
 EF of the metal “goes down”
 Because of positive voltage at gate, equivalent negative charge is observed at
oxide-semiconductor interface.
 Negative charge is due to the depletion of holes.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 30


EB diagram VG>>0

 Inversion,Strong Inversion:
 EF of the metal “goes further down”
 Number of electrons at surface exceeds the number of holes at
surface(Inversion)
 Concentration of electrons at surface equals concentration of holes in
substrate(Strong inversion)
 Condition for strong inversion ϕS=2ϕF.Semiconductor is n-type at the surface

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 31


Beyond strong inversion

 When we further increase voltage at the gate:


 Electrons at surface move into conduction band.
 Results in the formation of a conducting channel

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 32


Threshold Voltage expression

QB
V th=2  F −
C OX
Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 33
EB for ϕMS≠0 and QOX≠0

 When we further increase voltage at the gate:


 Surface may get inverted with VG=0
 To achieve Flat band condition equivalent voltage is to be applied at gate
 This is known as the Flat band voltage

Q B Q OX
V th= MS 2 F − −
C OX C OX

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 34


DRAIN eXTENDED MOS
(DEMOS)

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 35


ESD APPLICATION PROBLEMS

At lower technologies say in 180nm (gate oxide


thickness ~ 7nm) the voltage requirement is still the
same as in higher technologies.
Clamping is not allowed to power supply so as to
prevent the fail-safe problem.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 36


(DENMOS)

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 37


THE SOLUTION (DEMOS)

A drain is created within a well of same type dopant


but the density is far less.
The increase in the drain-substrate junction area and
the reduced number of dopants of drain allow
increment in the junction breakdown voltage.
This permits high voltage operations on the mos and
prevents the drain from voltage excursions in absence
of a clamp.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 38


THE SOLUTION Contd.

A great advantage with DEMOS is that they allow


fabrication of very thin gate oxide.
As there is a less doped well surrounding the actual
drain hence the actual seen voltage at the drain
decreases and so does the electric field.
This reduces the creation of “hot carriers” which
affects the gate oxide thickness.
Hence mos with lesser Vth can be easily fabricated.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 39


PROBLEMS with the SOLUTION

DEMOS is inherently susceptible to ESD protection.


Practically for an L of 640nm and W of 50u the
avalanche breakdown of drain substrate happens at
Vds ~13 V .
But the actual breakdown happens over 17 V.

Sankalp Semiconductor Confidential 40

You might also like