Title : 
Carrier Transport in High-Mobility III–V Quantum-Well Transistors and Performance Impact for High-Speed Low-Power Logic Applications
         
        
            Author : 
Dewey, Gilbert ; Hudait, Mantu K. ; Lee, Kangho ; Pillarisetty, Ravi ; Rachmady, Willy ; Radosavljevic, Marko ; Rakshit, Titash ; Chau, Robert
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
Technol. & Manuf. Group, Intel Corp., Hillsboro, OR
         
        
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
DC and high-frequency device characteristics of In0.7Ga0.3As and InSb quantum-well field-effect transistors (QWFETs) are measured and benchmarked against state-of- the-art strained silicon (Si) nMOSFET devices, all measured on the same test bench. Saturation current (Ion) gam of 20% is observed in the In0.7Ga0.3As QWFET over the strained Si nMOSFET at (Vg - Vt) = 0.3 V, Vds = 0.5 V, and matched Ioff, despite higher external resistance and large gate-to-channel thickness. To understand the gain in Ion, the effective carrier velocities (veff) near the source-end are extracted and it is observed that at constant (Vg - Vt) = 0.3 V and Vds = 0.5 V, the veff of In0.7Ga0.3As and InSb QWFETs are 4-5times higher than that of strained silicon (Si) nMOSFETs due to the lower effective carrier mass in the QWFETs. The product of veff and charge density (ns), which is a measure of "intrinsic" device characteristics, for the QWFETs is 50%-70% higher than strained Si at low-voltage operation despite lower ns in QWFETs. Calibrated simulations of In0.7Ga0.3As QWFETs with reduced gate-to-channel thickness and external resistance matched to the strained Si nMOSFET suggest that the higher veff will result in more than 80% Ion increase over strained Si nMOSFETs at Vds = 0.5 V, (Vg - Vt) = 0.3 V, and matched Ioff, thus showing promise for future high-speed and low-power logic applications.
         
        
            Keywords : 
III-V semiconductors; MOSFET; gallium arsenide; indium compounds; semiconductor quantum wells; In0.7Ga0.3As; InSb; carrier transport; effective carrier mass; effective carrier velocities; external resistance; high-mobility III-V quantum-well transistors; Effective carrier velocity; III–V materials; III–V materials; InGaAs; InSb; quantum-well devices; silicon;
         
        
        
            Journal_Title : 
Electron Device Letters, IEEE
         
        
        
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/LED.2008.2002945