Title :
Efficient Monte Carlo device modeling
Author :
Bufler, F.M. ; Schenk, A. ; Fichtner, Wolfgang
Author_Institution :
Inst. fur Integrierte Syst., Eidgenossische Tech. Hochschule, Zurich, Switzerland
fDate :
10/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A single-particle approach to full-band Monte Carlo device simulation is presented which allows an efficient computation of drain, substrate and gate currents in deep submicron MOSFETs. In this approach, phase-space elements are visited according to the distribution of real electrons. This scheme is well adapted to a test-function evaluation of the drain current, which emphasizes regions with large drift velocities (i.e., in the inversion channel), a substrate current evaluation via the impact ionization generation rate (i.e., in the LDD region with relatively high electron temperature and density) and a computation of the gate current in the dominant direct-tunneling regime caused by relatively cold electrons (i.e., directly under the gate at the source well of the inversion channel). Other important features are an efficient treatment of impurity scattering, a phase-space steplike propagation of the electron allowing to minimize self-scattering, just-before-scattering gathering of statistics, and the use of a frozen electric field obtained from a drift-diffusion simulation. As an example an 0.1-μm n-MOSFET is simulated where typically 30 minutes of CPU time are necessary per bias point for practically sufficient accuracy
Keywords :
Boltzmann equation; MOSFET; Monte Carlo methods; electronic engineering computing; hot carriers; impact ionisation; impurity scattering; semiconductor device models; tunnelling; 0.1 micron; LDD region; Monte Carlo device modeling; deep submicron MOSFETs; dominant direct-tunneling regime; drain currents; drift-diffusion simulation; frozen electric field; full-band Monte Carlo device simulation; gate current; impact ionization generation rate; impurity scattering; phase-space elements; phase-space steplike electron propagation; single-particle approach; substrate current evaluation; test-function evaluation; Computational modeling; DC generators; Electron mobility; Impact ionization; Impurities; MOSFETs; Monte Carlo methods; Scattering; Temperature; Testing;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on