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EE5311-Digital IC Design: Module 1 - The Transistor

The document discusses the transistor and its characteristics. It covers topics like short channel effects, threshold voltage, ON current, capacitance, and resistance of a CMOS transistor. The learning objectives are to understand short channel effects, derive the equation for ON current, estimate capacitance and resistance values. The outline discusses silicon doping, PN junction, CMOS transistor operation including threshold voltage, ON current, channel length modulation, and various leakage mechanisms.

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Anmol Sinha
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
189 views

EE5311-Digital IC Design: Module 1 - The Transistor

The document discusses the transistor and its characteristics. It covers topics like short channel effects, threshold voltage, ON current, capacitance, and resistance of a CMOS transistor. The learning objectives are to understand short channel effects, derive the equation for ON current, estimate capacitance and resistance values. The outline discusses silicon doping, PN junction, CMOS transistor operation including threshold voltage, ON current, channel length modulation, and various leakage mechanisms.

Uploaded by

Anmol Sinha
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 43

EE5311- Digital IC Design

Module 1 - The Transistor

Janakiraman V
Assistant Professor
Department of Electrical Engineering
Indian Institute of Technology Madras
Chennai

August 20, 2018

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 1/43


Learning Objectives

◮ Explain short channel effects(SCE) like Drain Induced


Barrier Lowering, Gate Induced Drain Leakage,
Sub-threshold leakage, Channel length modulation
◮ Derive the equation for ON current of a CMOS transistor
with first order SC
◮ Estimate various capacitance values for a transistor
◮ Estimate the equivalent ON resistance of a transistor

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 2/43


Outline
◮ Silicon and Doping
◮ P-N Junction
◮ CMOS Transistor
◮ Threshold Voltage
◮ ON Current (ION )
◮ Channel length modulation
◮ Velocity saturation
◮ Sub-threshold leakage
◮ Drain Induced Barrier Leakage
◮ Gate Induced Drain leakage
◮ (Reverse) Short Channel Effect
◮ Other leakage mechanisms
◮ Capacitance
◮ Resistance

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 3/43


Silicon and Doping
Si

Si Si Si

Si

Si Si
Unbound Electron Missing Electron

Si P Si Si B Si

Si Si

N−Type − Donor P−Type − Acceptor

◮ ni - Intrinsic electron/ hole concentration


Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 4/43
Device Physics Abstraction
1. Law of Mass Action - Product of concentrations remains
constant

np = ni2
Where
◮ n/p = Electron/ hole concentration after doping
◮ ni = Intrinsic electron/ hole concentration
2. Maxwell Boltzmann Equation -
n1 Ψ12
= e kT /q
n2
Where
◮ kT /q - Thermal voltage = 26mV @ 300K
◮ n1 , n2 - Charge concentration across a potential ψ12
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 5/43
PN Junction

N+ P
Wn Wp

Figure: PN Junction Diode

W n ND = W p NA

◮ Conservation of charge
◮ Note: ND ≫ NA =⇒ Wp ≫ Wn
◮ Current is due to diffusion of minority carriers
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 6/43
NMOS Transistor
VG
VS VD
Le
Tox
W

N+ N+
P

VB

Figure: NMOS transistor

◮ VGS < 0 - Accumulation (Surface becomes more P type


than bulk)
◮ 0 ≤ VGS < VTH - Depletion (Surface is less P type than
bulk)
◮ VGS ≥ VTH - Inversion (Surface is more N than the bulk
is P)
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 7/43
Threshold Voltage
B S G D

ΨS
N+ N+

nSurf
e
ace
= NA
n2i
nBulk
e = NA

Figure: Inversion

@VG = VTH - Channel is as N-type as the body is P-type


kT NA
ΨS = 2 ln( )
q ni

VGB = ψOX + ψS
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 8/43
Threshold Voltage
WD = Depletion width and QD = Depletion charge per unit
area
s
2ǫsi |ψs |
WD =
qNA
p
QD = −qNA WD = − 2qNA |ψs |
−(QD + QI )
ψOX =
Cox
ǫox
Cox =
tox
QD
VTH = ψS −
Cox

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 9/43


Threshold Voltage

◮ VB 6= 0
◮ Body effect alters depletion region charge

p
QD = 2qNA ǫSi |ΨS + VSB |

p p
VTH = VTH0 + γ( |ΨS + VSB | − |(ΨS )|)
Technolopgy parameters
◮ VTH0 - Threshold voltage without body effect

◮ γ - Body effect coefficient

◮ ΨS - Positive (Negative) for NMOS (PMOS) transistors

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 10/43


NMOS Transistor
B S VGS VDS
ID

Vx
N+ N+

x
L

Figure: NMOS Transistor

◮ VGS ≤ 0 - OFF
◮ VGS > VTH and VDS < VGS − VTH - Linear
◮ VGS > VTH and VDS > VGS − VTH - Saturation

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 11/43


NMOS - ON Current - Linear Region
B S VGS VDS
ID

Vx
N+ N+

x
L

Figure: NMOS Transistor

Qi (x) = −COX [VGS − Vx − VTH ]


ǫOX
COX =
tOX
ID = −vn Qi (x)W
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 12/43
NMOS - ON Current - Linear Region

vn = −µn E (x)
dVx
v n = µn
dx
Substituting we get
dVx
ID = COX [VGS − Vx − VTH ]W µn
dx
Z L Z VDS
ID dx = COX [VGS − Vx − VTH ]W µn dVx
0 0
′ W V2
I D = kn [(VGS − VTH )VDS − DS ]
L 2

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 13/43


NMOS - ON Current - Saturation
B S VGS VDS
ID

VP
N+ N+

x
L

Figure: NMOS Transistor under pinch off voltage (VP ) condition


kn W
ID = [(VGS − VTH )2 ]
2 L

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 14/43


Short Channel Effects
∆L
B S VGS VDS
ID

N+ L N+

VDS = VDD VDS = 0


VDS << VDD
P

Figure: NMOS Transistor with Short Channel Effects

◮ Drain is very close to the source (L is very small)


◮ The depletion regions in the drain and source are
comparable to the channel length
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 15/43
Channel Length Modulation
∆L
B S VGS VDS
ID

N + L N +

VDS = VDD VDS = 0


VDS << VDD
P

Figure: NMOS Transistor with Short Channel Effects


kn W
ID = [(VGS − VTH )2 ]
2 L − ∆L

kn W ∆L
ID = [(VGS − VTH )2 ](1 + )
2 L L

kn W
ID = [(VGS − VTH )2 ](1 + λVDS )
2 L
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 16/43
Velocity Saturation

vn = µn ELat

◮ Not entirely correct - Velocity does not linearly increase


with lateral field for ever
◮ It saturates beyond a critical field ECrit
◮ Electrons encounter more collisions and hence don’t pick
up speed
◮ Maximum velocity of electrons/ holes = 105 m/s

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 17/43


Velocity Saturation

0.8
v (m/s)(×105 )

0.6

0.4

0.2

0
0 1 2 3 4 5
E (V /µm)


µE

1+ EE
if E ≤ EC
v= C
vsat if E > EC

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 18/43


Velocity Saturation- Simplified
Velocity: (
µE if E ≤ EC
v=
vsat = µEC if E > EC
VDS Saturation :
LvSAT
VDS−SAT = L ∗ EC =
µ
Velocity Saturated Drain Current:

IDS−SAT = IDS (VDS = VDS−SAT )


 2 
W VDS−SAT
IDS−SAT = µn COX (VGS − VTH )VDS−SAT −
L 2

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 19/43


Unified Current Model
◮ Useful to combine all effects into one equation
◮ Voltage values determine the governing equations

(
0  |VGS | < |VTH |
IDS =  2
Vmin
k ′ WL (VGS − VTH )Vmin − 2
)(1 + λVDS |VGS | > |VTH |

Where

Vmin = min(VDS , (VGS − VTH ), VDS−SAT ) . . . NMOS


Vmin = max(VDS , (VGS − VTH ), VDS−SAT ) . . . PMOS
p p
VTH = VTH0 + γ( |VSB + ΨS | − ΨS )

(VTH0 , k ′ , VDSAT , γ, λ) - Technology parameters


Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 20/43
Sub-threshold Leakage
B S VGS = 0 VDS
IOF F

+ +
N N

Thin Base

Emitter Collector

Figure: NMOS Transistor Sub-Threshold Leakage

◮ In a short channel transistor, the thin channel acts like a


thin base of a BJT.
◮ Diffusion current flows even when VGS = 0.
◮ Exponential dependence on VGS
VGS −VTH  VDS 
IOFF = IS e nkT /q 1 − e − kT /q (1 + λVDS )

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 21/43


Sub-threshold Slope
IDS
mA

Log

nA IOF F
GIDL

VGS
Linear

1
S= d(log10 (IOFF ))
dVGS
kT
S =n ln(10)
q

◮ Ideal transistor n = 1, Smin = 60mV /decade


◮ Actual transistors n ≈ 1.5 and hence S = 90mV /decade
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 22/43
Gate Induced Drain Leakage (GIDL)
B S VGS << 0 VDS = VDD

N+ P+ N+

IGIDL

Figure: NMOS Transistor with Halo Implant

◮ Negative VGS exponentially reduces sub-threshold leakage


◮ But beyond a point GIDL kicks in
◮ Surface is in deep accumulation causing a deeper
depletion in the diffusion
◮ Tunneling current from drain to substrate
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 23/43
Drain Induced Barrier Lowering (DIBL)
B S VGS VDS
ID

N + L N +

VDS = VDD VDS = 0


VDS << VDD
P

Figure: NMOS Transistor DIBL

◮ Drain controls amount of depletion in the channel


◮ Easier for the gate to invert with higher VDS
◮ Gate effectively has lesser control

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 24/43


Drain Induced Barrier Lowering (DIBL)
B S VGS VDS
ID

N+ L N+
P+ P+

Figure: NMOS Transistor with Halo Implant

◮ P + halo added near diffusion


◮ Depletion layer now goes deeper into the diffusion rather
than channel
◮ Gate has better control now
V (V =V H )−V (VDS =VDD
L )
◮ DIBL = TH DS VDDH −VTH L
DD DD

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 25/43


Reverse Short Channel Effect

RSCE

SCE
VT H

L
Halo implant makes it harder to invert the channel

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 26/43


Substrate Leakage
B S VGS VDS

N+ N+

ISU B−LEAK

Reverse biased P − N + junction leakage

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 27/43


Gate Leakage
tOX = 4nm

B S VGS VDS

N+ N+

P
Scaling

tOX = 1nm
B S

N+ N+

IGAT E
P

◮ Quantum mechanical tunneling across the gate oxide


◮ Use of HfO2 - HiK dielectric since 45nm technology

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 28/43


Capacitance

D
Cgd Cdb

G B
Cgb
Cgs Csb
S
Figure: Capacitance Model

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 29/43


Gate Capacitance
G
C
C0

Depletion
Accumulation Inversion

VGB

Figure: Capacitance Model

ǫWL
C0 =
tox
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 30/43
Gate Capacitance

Parameter Cutoff Linear Saturation


Cgb C0 0 0
Cgs 0 C0 /2 (2/3)C0
Cgd 0 C0 /2 0
Cg = Cgb + Cgs + Cgd C0 C0 (2/3)C0

ǫox WL
C0 =
tox
For all practical purposes Cg ≈ C0

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 31/43


Overlap Capacitance
Cross Section

N+ L N+

W
xd
Ld
Top View

Figure: Overlap Capacitance

ǫox Wxd
Coverlap = = Cov W
tox
CG = COX WL + 2Cov W
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 32/43
Diffusion Capacitance

xj ND+ ND+

LS NA

Figure: Diffusion Capacitance

◮ Bottom plate capacitance


◮ Sidewall capacitance

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 33/43


Diffusion Capacitance

Side Wall

W all Bottom
W ND
de
Si Source

Channel
xj Side Wall
Substrate NA
LS

Figure: Diffusion Capacitance

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 34/43


Bottom Plate Diffusion Capacitance
W

xj ND+ ND+

LS NA

CBottom = Cj WLS
Cj0
Cj =
(1 + VSB /φ0 )m
r
ǫsi q NA ND
Cj0 = ( )φ−1
2 NA + ND 0
kT NA ND
φ0 = ln( 2 )
q ni
m ≈ 0.5
Cj is charge per unit area. Similar expressions hold for the
drain side (VSB → VDB ) as well.
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 35/43
Side wall Diffusion Capacitance

xj ND+ ND+

LS NA

Figure: Diffusion Capacitance


CSide−wall = Cjsw xj (W + 2LS )

Cjsw = Cjsw xj
Cdiff = Cbottom + Csw = Cj LS W + Cjsw (W + 2LS )

Cjsw is capacitance per unit length.

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 36/43


Capacitance Summary
D
Cgd Cdb

G B
Cgb
Cgs Csb
S

Figure: NMOS Capacitance

CG = CGS + CGD + CGB + 2Coverlap = COX WL + 2Cov W


CDB = Cj LS W + Cjsw (W + 2LS )
CSB = Cj LS W + Cjsw (W + 2LS )

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 37/43


Resistance
VDS (VDD − VDD /2)

VDD
ID

Figure: NMOS Equivalent Resistance

Z VDD /2
1
Req = R(V )dV
VDD /2 − VDD VDD
Z VDD /2
1 V
Req = dV
−VDD /2 VDD IDSAT (1 + λV )
 
3VDD 7
Req ≈ 1 − λVDD
4IDSAT 9
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 38/43
Resistance



3VDD 7
Req ≈ 1 − λVDD
4IDSAT 9
W V2
IDSAT = k ′ ((VDD − VTH )VDSAT − DSAT )
L 2

1
◮ Resistance Req ∝ W /L
- Doubling W =⇒ Req halves
◮ If VDD >> VTH + VDSAT /2, Req is independent of VDD .
Minor dependence due to CLM (λ)
◮ As VDD → VTH , resistance goes up significantly

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 39/43


BSIM SPICE Level 1 Model
VTH0 γ(V 0.5 ) VDSAT (V ) k ′ (µA/V 2 ) λ(V −1 )
NMOS 0.43 0.4 0.63 115 0.06
PMOS -0.4 -0.4 -1 -30 -0.1
Table: Parameters of a 0.25µm CMOS process for a minimum
length device

◮ Calculate the drain current of a PMOS transistor in


0.25µm technology whose W /L = 0.5µ/0.25µ when
biased at VGS = −0.6V , VDS = −0.3V and VSB = 0V
◮ Repeat the above calculation this time with
VDS = −1.1V and VGS = −2V
◮ Calculate the threshold voltage of a NMOS device when
the body is biased at VSB = 0.11V . Assume that
ψS = 0.25V
Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 40/43
Capacitance Model

COX Cov Cj mj φb Cjsw mjsw φbsw


(fF /µm2 ) (fF /µm) (fF /µm2 ) (V fF /µm) (V )
NMOS 6 0.31 2 0.5 0.9 0.28 0.44 0.9
PMOS 6 0.27 1.9 0.48 0.9 0.22 0.32 0.9

Table: Capacitance parameters of a 0.25µm CMOS process

◮ Calculate variaous capacitances of an NMOS transistor


with W /L = 0.36µm/0.24µm in a 0.25µm technology
where LD = LS = 0.625µm under zero-bias condition
◮ Calculate the equivalent resistance of an NMOS transistor
with a W /L = 1 when connected to a VDD = 1.5V

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 41/43


Summary
◮ A transistor operates in 4 regions - cut-off, linear, velocity
saturation and saturation.
◮ Identify the region using the unified current model
◮ Level-1 SPICE model parameters - (k ′ , λ, VDSAT , VTH0 , γ)
◮ All positive for NMOS and all negative for PMOS
VGS −VTH
◮ Sub-threshold leakage is proportional to e n(kT /q)
◮ Beware of forward biasing any junction
◮ All capacitance components change linearly with W
◮ Diffusion and overlap capacitances of a transistor don’t
depend on L
◮ Equivalent resistance of a transistor is proportional to W1

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 42/43


References

The material presented here is based on the following books/


lecture notes
1. Digital Integrated Circuits Jan M. Rabaey, Anantha
Chandrakasan and Borivoje Nikolic 2nd Edition, Prentice
Hall India

Janakiraman, IITM EE5311- Digital IC Design, Module 1 - The Transistor 43/43

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