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Lecture 17

The document summarizes key concepts about MOS capacitor C-V characteristics. It discusses how the capacitance varies with the gate voltage in different regions: accumulation, depletion, and inversion. In accumulation, the capacitance is equal to the oxide capacitance Cox. In depletion, the capacitance decreases with increasing reverse gate bias. In inversion, there are two cases depending on whether the inversion charge can respond quickly or slowly to the changing gate voltage. The document also compares quasi-static and high-frequency C-V measurements.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
370 views18 pages

Lecture 17

The document summarizes key concepts about MOS capacitor C-V characteristics. It discusses how the capacitance varies with the gate voltage in different regions: accumulation, depletion, and inversion. In accumulation, the capacitance is equal to the oxide capacitance Cox. In depletion, the capacitance decreases with increasing reverse gate bias. In inversion, there are two cases depending on whether the inversion charge can respond quickly or slowly to the changing gate voltage. The document also compares quasi-static and high-frequency C-V measurements.

Uploaded by

Uma
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lecture 17

OUTLINE
• The MOS Capacitor (cont’d)
– Small-signal capacitance
(C-V characteristics)

Reading: Pierret 16.4; Hu 5.6


MOS Capacitance Measurement
• VG is scanned slowly
C-V Meter MOS Capacitor • Capacitive current due
to vac is measured
dvac
iac
GATE iac  C
dt
vac
Semiconductor dQGATE dQs
C 
dVG dVG

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 2


MOS C-V Characteristics
(p-type Si)
accumulation depletion inversion

dQs
VFB VT
VG
C
dVG
Qinv
C
slope = -Cox Cox

Ideal C-V curve:


VG
VFB VT
accumulation depletion inversion

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 3


Capacitance in Accumulation
(p-type Si)
• As the gate voltage is varied, incremental charge is added (or
subtracted) to (or from) the gate and substrate.
 The incremental charges are separated by the gate oxide.
M O S
DQ

Q
dQacc
C  Cox
-Q dVG
DQ

Cox

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 4


Flat-Band Capacitance
(p-type Si)
• At the flat-band condition, variations in VG give rise to the
addition/subtraction of incremental charge in the substrate,
at a depth LD
– LD is the “extrinsic Debye Length,” a characteristic screening distance,
or the distance where the electric field emanating from a perturbing
charge falls off by a factor of 1/e

 Si kT
LD 
q2 N A
1 1 LD
 
Cox CDebye
CFB Cox  Si

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 5


Capacitance in Depletion
(p-type Si)
• As the gate voltage is varied, the depletion width varies.
 Incremental charge is effectively added/subtracted at a
depth W in the substrate.

M O S
DQ dQdep 1 2(VG  VFB )
C  
Q W dVG Cox
2
qN A Si
DQ
-Q
1 1 1 1 W
   
C Cox Cdep Cox  Si
Cox Cdep

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 6


Capacitance in Inversion
(p-type Si)
CASE 1: Inversion-layer charge can be supplied/removed
quickly enough to respond to changes in gate voltage.
 Incremental charge is effectively added/subtracted at the
surface of the substrate.
DQ
M O S Time required to build inversion-layer
WT charge = 2NAto/ni , where
to = minority-carrier lifetime at surface

DQ dQinv
C  Cox
dVG
Cox

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 7


Capacitance in Inversion
(p-type Si)
CASE 2: Inversion-layer charge cannot be supplied/removed
quickly enough to respond to changes in gate voltage.
 Incremental charge is effectively added/subtracted at a
depth WT in the substrate.
DQ 1 1 1
 
M O S C Cox Cdep
WT
1 WT
DQ  
Cox  Si
1 2(2F ) 1
  
Cox Cdep Cox qN A Si C min

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 8


Supply of Substrate Charge
(p-type Si)
Accumulation: Depletion:

Inversion: Case 1 Case 2

C. C. Hu, Modern Semiconductor Devices for ICs, Figure 5-17


EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 9
MOS Capacitor vs. MOS Transistor C-V
(p-type Si)
C MOS transistor at any f,
MOS capacitor at low f, or
quasi-static C-V
Cmax=Cox
CFB

MOS capacitor at high f


Cmin
VG
accumulation depletion inversion
VFB VT

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 10


Quasi-Static C-V Measurement
(p-type Si)
C

Cmax=Cox
CFB

Cmin
VG
accumulation depletion inversion
VFB VT
The quasi-static C-V characteristic is obtained by slowly ramping the
gate voltage (< 0.1V/s), while measuring the gate current IG with a
very sensitive DC ammeter. C is calculated from IG = C·(dVG/dt)
EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 11
Deep Depletion
(p-type Si)
• If VG is scanned quickly, Qinv cannot respond to the change in
VG. Then the increase in substrate charge density Qs must
come from an increase in depletion charge density Qdep
 depletion depth W increases as VG increases
 C decreases as VG increases

C
Cox

Cmin
VG
VFB VT

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 12


MOS C-V Characteristic for n-type Si

MOS transistor at any f, C


MOS capacitor at low f, or
quasi-static C-V
Cmax=Cox
CFB

MOS capacitor at high f


Cmin
VG
accumulation depletion inversion
VT VFB

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 13


Examples: C-V Characteristics
C
QS
Cox

HF-Capacitor
VG
VFB VT

Does the QS or the HF-capacitor C-V characteristic apply?


(1) MOS capacitor, f=10kHz
(2) MOS transistor, f=1MHz
(3) MOS capacitor, slow VG ramp
(4) MOS transistor, slow VG ramp

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 14


Example: Effect of Doping
• How would the normalized C-V characteristic below change if
the substrate doping NA were increased?
– VFB
– VT
– Cmin

C/Cox
1

VFB VT

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 15


Example: Effect of Oxide Thickness
• How would the normalized C-V characteristic below change if
the oxide thickness xo were decreased?
– VFB
– VT
– Cmin

C/Cox
1

VFB VT

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 16


Derivation of Time to Build Inversion-Layer Charge
(for an NMOS device, i.e. p-type Si)
D D i  pn
2
n p n
The net rate of carrier generation is:  
(ref. Lecture 5, Slide 24) t t t p (n  n1 )  t n ( p  p1 )
( ET  Ei ) / kT ( Ei  ET ) / kT
n
where 1  ni e  ni and p1  ni e  ni
since trap states that contribute most significantly to G-R have an associated
energy level near the middle of the band gap.
Dn Dp ni
Within the depletion region, n and p are negligible, so  
where tn  tp  to t t 2t o

Therefore, the rate at which the inversion-layer charge density Qinv (units: C/cm2)
increases due to thermal generation within the depletion region (of width W) is
dQinv ni
 q W
dt 2t o

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 17


For a fixed value of gate voltage, the total charge in the semiconductor is fixed:

QS  Qinv  Qdep  constant

dQinv dQdep d  qN AW 
Therefore  
dt dt dt
qni dW
  W  qN A
2t o dt
dW ni
  W 0
dt 2 N At o

The solution to this differential equation is W  e  ni / 2 N At o t  e  t /t

2 N At o
where t
ni

EE130/230A Fall 2013 Lecture 17, Slide 18

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