Title :
The effect of GE mole fraction on the electrical characteristics of nanoscale Si/SiGe heterostructure pMOSFET
Author :
Fathipour, Morteza ; Abbaszadeh, Behrooz ; Kohani, Fatemeh ; Farbiz, Farzan
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Tehran, Tehran
Abstract :
In this paper we investigate the impact of Ge mole fraction on the electrical characteristics of SiGe pMOSFET. Simulations are carried out using Dessis 7, from ISE TCAD. The gate length of the simulated device is 150 nm. The dependence of the threshold voltages on the germanium content (x) in the Si/Si1-xGex layer. It is observed that the absolute value of the threshold voltage VTH decreases as Ge mole fraction is increased. This is due to the increase in the valence band discontinuity at the Si/SiGe heterointerface. Consequently the channel forms at a lower gate voltage. Increasing Ge mole fraction also yields larger |VTS|. It is preferable to prevent the parallel conduction at SiO2/Si interface. There are other parameters affecting threshold voltage which are not considered in this paper. Controlling the magnitude of these two threshold voltages is very important in low power applications. As Ge mole fraction is increased, the hole effective mass is decreased. Therefore carrier mobility is increased. This results in an increase in drain current. It is interesting to note that by increasing mole fraction above 0.6 the rate of increase in drain current is reduced.
Keywords :
MOSFET; carrier mobility; Dessis 7; Ge mole fraction; ISE TCAD; Si-Si1-xGex; Si-Si1-xGex layer; SiO2-Si; SiO2-Si interface; carrier mobility; nanoscale Si-SiGe heterostructure pMOSFET; size 150 nm; Capacitance; Educational institutions; Effective mass; Electric variables; Germanium silicon alloys; Integrated circuit modeling; MOSFET circuits; Nanoscale devices; Silicon germanium; Threshold voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Semiconductor Device Research Symposium, 2007 International
Conference_Location :
College Park, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1892-3
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1892-3
DOI :
10.1109/ISDRS.2007.4422401