1. Field of the Disclosure
The disclosure generally relates to low power transistors and more specifically to transistors having doped region geometry and material characteristics for providing extremely low sub-threshold slope.
2. Description of the Related Art
Achieving switching at very small voltages is one of the foremost obstacles to the semiconductor industry. Only a few transistor technologies have demonstrated sub-threshold voltage slopes beyond the physical thermoionic emission limit of 60 mV/decade at room temperature. Such transistors include carbon nono-tubes (CNT), quantum tunneling devices such as vertical tunnel field effect transistor (FET), and impact ionization MOSFETs (I-MOS). Of these, I-MOS may be the most attainable with potential for large scale integration and recently demonstrated sub-threshold slopes as abrupt as 10 mV/decade.
Off-state leakage tends to increase in advanced CMOS technology nodes. Scaling of transistor gate lengths by about 7% every three years lowers the power consumption by reducing drive voltage as well as capacitance. However, transistors exhibit a finite sub-threshold slope due to the statistical energy distribution of carriers. This slope defines the minimum range of voltage necessary to swing a transistor from an on state to an off state. Hence, alternative devices, such as I-MOS have been developed.
Unlike thermionically-limited devices, I-MOS depends on avalanche multiplication of carriers to switch between off-state and on-state with demonstrated sub threshold slopes of 5 mV/decade. The I-MOS devices have not developed into a useful commercial product due to two major liabilities: (1) Hot carrier injection of carriers into the gate oxide which shift the threshold voltage substantially and uncontrollably; and (2) Large drain-source voltage is necessary to generate the high electric fields necessary for minimum-size devices to avalanche. Silicon I-MOS operation has recently been reported at Vds of 8-15V. These fundamental deficiencies are insurmountable for the I-MOS devices.
The extremely small geometries used to achieve low voltages in I-MOS are also problematic. In fact, conventional simulations have focused on Ge instead of Si due to the lower critical E-field of Ge. Even then, geometries beyond current state of the art (25 nm and below) are necessary.
Accordingly, there is a need for low voltage transistors with low sub-threshold slope.
In one embodiment, the disclosure relates to a MOSFET comprising a substrate having a source region, a drain region and a gate region, wherein the source region includes at least one nano-dots having one or more abrupt junctions. In an embodiment of the disclosure, the abrupt junction a defines a device geometry configured for optimal impact ionization.
In another embodiment, the disclosure relates to a low-power semiconductor switching device, comprising: a substrate supporting thereon a semiconductor body; a source electrode coupled to the semiconductor body at a source interface region; a drain electrode coupled to the semiconductor body at a drain interface region; a gate oxide film formed over a region of the semiconductor body, the gate oxide film interfacing between a gate electrode and the semiconductor body; wherein at least one of the source interface region or the drain interface region defines a sharp junction into the semiconductor body.
In another embodiment, the disclosure relates to a method for providing a low-switching power transistor, the method comprising: providing a substrate having thereon a semiconductor body; forming a source electrode on the substrate, the source electrode having a source interface with the semiconductor body; forming a drain electrode on the substrate, the drain electrode having a drain interface with the semiconductor body; forming a gate electrode over a portion of the semiconductor body; defining at least one of the source interface or the drain interface to provide a sharp junction with the semiconductor body.
In still another embodiment, the disclosure relates to a rapid-switching low-voltage transistor, comprising: a source electrode; a drain electrode; a gate electrode; a semiconductor body region in electronic communication with each of the source electrode, the drain electrode and the gate electrode, the semiconductor body region having a plurality of mid-gap defect centers; the mid-gap defect centers formed as micro-plasma within a region of the semiconductor body to control a location of electronic avalanche breakdown in a region distal from the gate electrode.
In still another embodiment, the disclosure relates to a method for providing rapid-switching in a MOSFET, the method comprising: providing a semiconductor body; forming a source electrode in electronic communication with the semiconductor body, the source electrode having a source interface with the semiconductor body; forming a drain electrode in electronic communication with the semiconductor body, the drain electrode having a drain interface with the semiconductor body; forming a gate electrode over a portion of the semiconductor body; forming a plurality of mid-gap defect centers in the semiconductor body; wherein the mid-gap defect centers are formed as micro-plasma within a region of the semiconductor body for controlling a location of electronic avalanche breakdown.
In yet another embodiment, the disclosure relates to a rapid-switching low-voltage transistor device, comprising: a substrate supporting a semiconductor body; a source electrode coupled to the semiconductor body at a source interface region; a drain electrode coupled to the semiconductor body at a drain interface region; a gate oxide film formed over a region of the semiconductor body, the gate oxide film interfacing between a gate electrode and the semiconductor body; wherein at least one of the source electrode or the drain electrode includes a first nano-dot, and wherein the first nano-dot is formed from a first material having a band-gap energy lower than a band-gap energy of the semiconductor body.
In another embodiment, the disclosure relates to a method for providing rapid switching in a field-effect transistor (“FET”), comprising: providing a substrate having a semiconductor body thereon; forming a source electrode on the substrate, the source electrode having a source interface with the semiconductor body; forming a drain electrode on the substrate, the drain electrode having a drain interface with the semiconductor body; forming a gate electrode over a portion of the semiconductor body; and forming a first nano-dot within at least one of the source electrode or the drain electrode; wherein the first nano-dot is formed from a first material having a lower band-gap energy than the band-gap energy of the semiconductor body.
The embodiments disclosed herein exploit the non-thermoionic behavior of avalanche breakdown. The disclosed devices circumvent the significant problems plaguing conventional I-MOS by incorporating novel and inventive advances in epitaxy to create, among others, nanometer-scale germanium dots. The disclosed embodiments avoid the hot carrier gate oxide injection and substantially reduce the minimum operational voltage to less than Vds=1V.
In the embodiment of
In contrast, source electrode 224 is formed to have abrupt junctions 240 and 242 with semiconductor body 210. Source electrode 224 does not extend the entire length of semiconductor body 210. Depending on the application, gate oxide layer 212 may extend over the top surface of source electrode 224 or it may not (as shown). It is noted that while
Introducing sharp junction 225, at the interface between the semiconductor body and one or more of the electrodes addresses the prior art deficiencies. The junction between the electrode (e.g., P+ region) and the I-region of the semiconductor body in the conventional I-MOS transistor is essentially a planar junction. As such, the electric field at breakdown is distributed throughout the interface surface. Sharp and abrupt junction 225, (as shown in the exemplary embodiment of
Mid-gap defect centers can comprise material having lower band-gap energy than the semiconductor body. In one embodiment of the disclosure, the mid-gap defect centers include Co, Zn, Cu, Au, Fe, Ni.
The embodiment of device 300 includes sharp junctions 325 as well as the mid-gap defects 360. However, each of the concepts (i.e., sharp junction or mid-gap defect) can be used separately to reach the desired results. That is, an I-MOS can be configured to have mid-gap defect centers alone or it can be configured to have the mid-gap defect centers in addition to an electrode having one or more sharp interfaces with the semiconductor body.
Using the sharp junction and mid gap defect centers together relaxes device geometries by an order of magnitude. Electrically, operation under Vds=IV is possible, with extremely abrupt sub-threshold slope of 10 mV/decade. Because avalanche multiplication is separated from the gate oxide, hot carrier injection into the gate oxide is suppressed.
The embodiments of the disclosure address some of the fundamental limits of semiconductor technology: sub-threshold slope below 60 mV/decade, voltage scaling below Vds=1 V and avoiding dimensional scaling below 25 nm geometries. As such, it is particularly suited to all advanced logic integrated circuits.
Nano-dots 430, 440 and 450 are positioned throughout source electrode 405 such that a Nano-dot Assisted Cool Impact Ionization MOS is formed. Each of nano-dots 430, 440 and 450 can comprise one or more material selected from the group including Ge, InAs, InAS2, InSb, HgCdTe.
Other suitable material can also be selected such that the nano-dot has a lower breakdown voltage than the semiconductor body. Alternatively, any material or combination of material that lowers the band-gap energy of an electrode, as compared with silicon, can be used.
In one embodiment, the nano-dot is configured to have a sharp junction protruding into the semiconductor body 410. The sharp junctions provide a lower breakdown voltage as compare to a flat junction. In one embodiment, the sharp junction can include one or more avalanche carriers 432 Since the breakdown voltage is the voltage in which the device switches to an on state, the lower breakdown voltage allows the transistor to go on quicker and at a lower voltage. By providing a lower voltage, the disclosure provides a reduced voltage at which the transistor switched on.
In
Thus, by specifically controlling the location of nano-dots 430, 440 and 450, the point of avalanche carrier generation can be designed away from gate oxide 412, thereby avoiding the massive threshold shifts and instabilities which are associated with hot carrier junction.
TABLE 1 shows a comparison of the NACIMOS to The International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) goals. As can be seen, an NACIMOS device according to the principles disclosed herein exceeds the ITRS goals set for the year 2020.
The device shown in
Second, the finite radius of curvature of the germanium nano-dots lowers the breakdown by providing a sharp point which intensely focuses the electric field. This effect is expected to reduce the breakdown voltage by 5-6× from the case of a planar junction. Therefore, the total reduction in breakdown, and hence operating voltage, is expected drop by approximately one order of magnitude. Because IMOS devices have been operated at 8V, the operational voltage of the NACIMOS will reduce Vds to well under 1V, exceeding the expectations of low standby power devices in the ITRS beyond 2020. Alternately, the fundamental gains achieved in on-off current ratio can be parlayed into goal-breaking high performance logic or low operating power devices.
At the point of avalanche carrier generation, the carrier temperature is at its highest level. As carriers scatter in the semiconductor lattice, the energy is reduced. At the same time a certain amount of energy is necessary to excite carriers into the gate oxide of a MOSFET. By specifically locating the focused electric field away from the gate oxide, hot carrier effects can be substantially removed. As a point of reference, it has been determined that in silicon, the relaxation length is about 650 Angstroms. This can serve as a key parameter in the geometry of the basic device.
Furthermore, in the NACIMOS device, the actual point of impact ionization is inside the germanium resulting somewhat lower initial energy and perhaps smaller distance between the avalanche center and the gate oxide. Therefore, by specifically controlling the location of the germanium (or other suitable material) nano-dots, the point of avalanche carrier generation can be designed away from the gate oxide, avoiding the massive threshold shifts and instabilities associated with hot from the gate oxide, avoiding the massive threshold shifts and instabilities associated with hot carrier injection altogether.
While the principles of the disclosure have been illustrated in relation to the exemplary embodiments shown herein, the principles of the disclosure are not limited thereto and include any modification, variation or permutation thereof.
The application claims the filing-date benefit of Provisional Application No. 60/983,663 filed Oct. 30, 2007, the entirety of which is incorporated herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60983663 | Oct 2007 | US |