TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of gate oxide and junction nonuniformity on the DC and low-frequency noise performance of four-gate transistors
AU - Jiménez Tejada, Juan A.
AU - Luque Rodríguez, Abraham
AU - Godoy, Andŕs
AU - Rodríguez-Bolívar, Salvador
AU - López Villanueva, Juan A.
AU - Marinov, Ognian
AU - Deen, M. Jamal
PY - 2012/2/1
Y1 - 2012/2/1
N2 - The effects of imperfections on the electrical performance of four-gate field-effect transistors (G4-FETs) have been studied. Variations in the oxide trap distribution and in the metallurgical boundary of the junction gates impact the low-frequency noise and the static (dc) performance of the G4-FET. By modeling, iterative characterization of published experimental data, and extensive simulations, it is shown that these effects originate from trap distributions in the gate oxides and in the depleted regions of the semiconductor channel. The proposed models are based on established models, such as the unified flicker noise model, with modifications and improvements that extend to trap distributions with gradients, variable frequency slope \alpha of 1/f \alpha noise spectra, and are applicable for gate stacks with high-k dielectrics, such as HfO 2 and HfSiON. The characterization procedures allowed for identifying optimum profiles of the metallurgical boundary of junction gates, which simultaneously improve the dc and noise performances of the G4-FET, such as subthreshold swing and low noise. The results indicate the importance of the precise control of depletion and conduction in the channels of multiple-gate FETs.
AB - The effects of imperfections on the electrical performance of four-gate field-effect transistors (G4-FETs) have been studied. Variations in the oxide trap distribution and in the metallurgical boundary of the junction gates impact the low-frequency noise and the static (dc) performance of the G4-FET. By modeling, iterative characterization of published experimental data, and extensive simulations, it is shown that these effects originate from trap distributions in the gate oxides and in the depleted regions of the semiconductor channel. The proposed models are based on established models, such as the unified flicker noise model, with modifications and improvements that extend to trap distributions with gradients, variable frequency slope \alpha of 1/f \alpha noise spectra, and are applicable for gate stacks with high-k dielectrics, such as HfO 2 and HfSiON. The characterization procedures allowed for identifying optimum profiles of the metallurgical boundary of junction gates, which simultaneously improve the dc and noise performances of the G4-FET, such as subthreshold swing and low noise. The results indicate the importance of the precise control of depletion and conduction in the channels of multiple-gate FETs.
KW - Low-frequency noise (LFN)
KW - multigate transistors
KW - simulation of electronic devices
KW - subthreshold swing
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84856285645
U2 - 10.1109/TED.2011.2176494
DO - 10.1109/TED.2011.2176494
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84856285645
SN - 0018-9383
VL - 59
SP - 459
EP - 467
JO - IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices
JF - IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices
IS - 2
M1 - 6112795
ER -