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Christoph JUNGEMANN Stefan KEITH Martin BARTELS Bernd MEINERZHAGEN
The full-band Monte Carlo technique is currently the most accurate device simulation method, but its usefulness is limited because it is very CPU intensive. This work describes efficient algorithms in detail, which raise the efficiency of the full-band Monte Carlo method to a level where it becomes applicable in the device design process beyond exemplary simulations. The k-space is discretized with a nonuniform tetrahedral grid, which minimizes the discretization error of the linear energy interpolation and memory requirements. A consistent discretization of the inverse mass tensor is utilized to formulate efficient transport parameter estimators. Particle scattering is modeled in such a way that a very fast rejection technique can be used for the generation of the final state eliminating the main cause of the inefficiency of full-band Monte Carlo simulations. The developed full-band Monte Carlo simulator is highly efficient. For example, in conjunction with the nonself-consistent simulation technique CPU times of a few CPU minutes per bias point are achieved for substrate current calculations. Self-consistent calculations of the drain current of a 60nm-NMOSFET take about a few CPU hours demonstrating the feasibility of full-band Monte Carlo simulations.
Morikazu TSUNO Shin YOKOYAMA Kentaro SHIBAHARA
MOSFETs with sub-0.1 µm gate length were fabricated, and their low temperature operation was investigated. The drain current for drain voltage of 2 V increased monotonously as temperature was lowered to 15 K without an influence of the freeze-out effect. Moreover, the increase in the drain current was enhanced by the gate length reduction. The hot-carrier effect at low temperature was also investigated. Impact-ionization decreased as temperature was lowered under the condition of drain voltage 2 V. The decreasing ratio was enhanced as gate length became shorter. We consider this phenomenon is attributed to the non-steady-stationary effect. As a result, device degradation by DC stressing was reduced at 77 K in comparison with room temperature. In the case of 0.1 µm MOSFET, drain current was not degraded in condition of DC stress with gate- and drain-voltage was 1.5 V.
Matthias STECHER Bernd MEINERZHAGEN Ingo BORK Joachim M. J. KRÜCKEN Peter MAAS Walter L. ENGL
The consequences of energy transport related effects like velocity overshoot on the performance of bipolar transistors have already been studied previously. So far however most of the applied models were only 1D and it remained unclear whether such effects would have a significant influence on important quantities like ECL gate delay accessible only on the circuit level. To the authors' best knowledge in this paper for the first time the consequences of energy transport related effects on the circuit level are investigated in a rigorous manner by mixed level device/circuit simulation incorporating full 2D numerical hydrodynamic models on the device level.
Yoshiroh TSUBOI Claudio FIFGNA Enrico SANGIORGI Bruno RICCÒ Tetsunori WADA Yasuhiro KATSUMATA Hiroshi IWAI
We investigated the impact of velocity overshoot effect on collector signal delay of bipolar devices by using Monte Carlo simulation method. We found that insertion of an i-layer (lightly doped, intrinsic layer) between base and collector can increase the delay, but the strength of this effect is a function of the i-layer thickness. When the i-layer becomes thinner, the problem of increasing delay seems to disappear. This recovery of delay is realised with a mechanism which is completely different from that in drift-diffusion model.
Kazuya MATSUZAWA Minoru TAKAHASHI Makoto YOSHIMI Naoyuki SHIGYO
The velocity overshoot and hot carrier effects in thin-film SOI-nMOSFETs have been studied using a two-dimensional device simulator based on the energy transport model. It has been found that the velocity overshoot effect in a nearly-intrinsic device becomes pronounced in the short channel region because of their high carrier mobility. The distribution of the electron velocity in a 0.2 µm channel length SOI device shows that the velocity overshoot takes place over the whole channel region, which enhances the drive capability significantly. The behaviors of hot carriers injected into the gate oxide and the back oxide have been simulated for the first time by using the energy distribution functions of electrons and holes at the SOI-SiO2 interface and solving the current continuity equation in the oxide layer. It has been found that hot carriers are injected not only into the gate oxide but also into the back oxide, which can degrade hot-carrier reliability in small-featured thin-film SOI-MOSFETs.