Title :
Simulation of Schottky barrier MOSFETs with a coupled quantum injection/Monte Carlo technique
Author :
Winstead, Brian ; Ravaioli, Umberto
Author_Institution :
Beckman Inst. for Adv. Sci. & Technol., Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL, USA
fDate :
6/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A full-band Monte Carlo device simulator has been used to analyze the performance of sub-0.1 μm Schottky barrier MOSFETs. In these devices, the source and drain contacts are realized with metal silicide, and the injection of carriers is controlled by gate voltage modulation of tunneling through the source barrier. A simple model treating the silicide regions as metals, coupled with an Airy function approach for tunneling through the barrier, provides injecting boundary conditions for the Monte Carlo procedure. Simulations were carried out considering a p-channel device with 270 Å gate length for which measurements are available. Our results show that in these structures there is not a strong interaction with the oxide interface as in conventional MOS devices and carriers are injected at fairly wide angles from the source into the bulk of the device. The Monte Carlo simulations not only give good agreement with current-voltage (I-V) curves, but also easily reproduce the subthreshold behavior since all the computational power is devoted to simulation of channel particles. The simulations also clarify why these structures exhibit a large amount of leakage in subthreshold regime, due to both thermionic and tunneling emission. Computational experiments suggest ways to modify the doping profile to reduce to some extent the leakage
Keywords :
MOSFET; Monte Carlo methods; Schottky barriers; doping profiles; leakage currents; nanotechnology; semiconductor device models; simulation; tunnelling; 0.1 micron; 270 A; Airy function approach; I-V curves; Schottky barrier MOSFET; channel particles; coupled quantum injection/Monte Carlo technique; current-voltage curves; device simulation; doping profile modification; gate voltage modulation; injecting boundary conditions; leakage reduction; metal silicide contacts; oxide interface; p-channel device; source barrier tunneling; subthreshold behavior; thermionic emission; tunneling emission; Analytical models; Boundary conditions; Computational modeling; MOSFETs; Monte Carlo methods; Performance analysis; Schottky barriers; Silicides; Tunneling; Voltage control;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on