Lecture 01 29 Aug 13 - College of Engineering

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Transcript Lecture 01 29 Aug 13 - College of Engineering

ECE 802-604:
Nanoelectronics
Prof. Virginia Ayres
Electrical & Computer Engineering
Michigan State University
[email protected]
Lecture 01, 29 Aug 13
Course:
Time:
Place:
Instructor:
Email:
Website:
Telephone:
Office:
Office Hours:
ECE802-604: Nanoelectronics
Tuesday and Thursday, 8:30-9:50 am
Room 2245 Engineering Building
Prof. Virginia Ayres, Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering
[email protected], [email protected]
http://www.egr.msu.edu/ebnl
517-355-5236
C-104 Engineering Research Complex; Lab, C-22
Evenings 2 days before homework is due, in Engineering
Library 6:00-9:00 pm
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Grading:
Midterm (take-home)
Final (take home)
Homework:
Total:
150 pts.
150 pts
50 pts
350 pts
Final dates (anticipated):
Office Hours: Official Tuesday 10 Dec 13: 7:45-9:45 in Room 2245 EB
Final Exam due: Thursday 12 Dec13, to ECE Office, by 4:30 pm
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Textbooks (amazon.com):
1. Electronic Transport in Mesoscopic Systems, Supriyo Datta,
Cambridge University Press 1997 $45-55
2. Physical and Electronic Properties of Carbon Nanotubes, R. Saito, G.
Dresselhaus, M.S. Dresselhaus, Imperial College Press 1998 $24
Prerequisite:
ECE874: Physical Electronics or equivalent
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Why Study Nanoelectronics
Paraphrasing from Wikipedia: Nanoelectronics refers to the use of
nanotechnology in electronic components. The term covers a diverse set of
devices and materials, with the common characteristic that one or more
elements are so small that quantum mechanical properties need to be
considered extensively. Some of these candidates include: single electron
transistors, two-dimensional quantum wells, one dimensional
nanotube/nanowire FETs, hybrid molecular/semiconductor electronics, and
advanced molecular electronics. Even state-of-the-art silicon CMOS
technology generations, such as the 22nm node, are within this regime.
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Nanoelectronics is considered as a disruptive technology because
present candidates are significantly different from traditional transistors. If
your career choice involves electronics, it is important to acquire both
fundamental understanding and a practical set of the right working tools
prior to a disruptive technology insertion. When a disruptive technology
insertion happens (transistors themselves were one), a downside is that
jobs are lost BUT the upside is that an amazing career experience belongs
to those who can run with it.
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
ECE 802: Nanoelectronics is a rigorous development of the right
techniques for working with electronics that include elements such as
quantum wells, semiconductor nanowires, carbon nanotubes, graphene,
organic nanofibers or organic single molecules. Let’s look at the outline of
course topics.
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Outline of Course Topics:
Transport in 2-Deg and 1-Deg Semiconductor Nanoelectronics
• Scaling relations in reduced dimensionalities
• Density of States in reduced dimensionalities
• Quantum Transport in reduced dimensionalities
• Quantum Transport in a single electron transistor
Datta Chps. 01-03
Examples of Transport in 2-Deg
 Quantum Hall Effect
 Localization
 Double Barrier Tunnelling
Datta Chps. 04, 05, 06
Transport in Carbon Nanoelectronics
• Bond hybridization derivation: sp1, sp2, sp3
• Graphene Density of States
• Transport in Graphene
• Carbon nanotube (CNT) structure
• CNT Density of States
• Transport in CNTs
• Phonons in CNTs
Dresselhaus Chps. 02, 03, 08
Transport in Organic 1-Deg
• Organic molecular electronics systems
• Solitons and transport in molecular electronics
• Transport in electrospun nanofibers (electronic textiles)
Ayres Notes and References
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Scales and Metrics
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Fig. 01 in Datta: Scales
22 nm node
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Fig. 01 in Datta: Scales
textbooks
22 nm node
Unit cell
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Fig. 01 in Datta: Scales
Chp. 01 in Datta
22 nm node
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WikiAnswers:
45 nm technology refers to size of the transistors in a chip.
A technology node is defined as the ground rules of a process governed by the smallest feature
printed in a repetitive array. The half-pitch of first-level interconnect dense lines is most
representative of the DRAM technology level required for the smallest economical chip size .
This is currently chosen as the dimension that defines a technology node.
It is, however, anticipated that in the future, the half-pitch dimensions of either metal or
polysilicon interconnections of microprocessors (MPUs) and ASIC devices may rival or even
become smaller than the corresponding half-pitch of DRAM.
The half-pitch dimension however, may not represent the smaller feature of the chip.
For instance, for logic devices, such as MPUs, physical bottom gate length represents the
smallest feature. Nevertheless, the technology node definition remains tight to the half-pitch
indicator as defined above.
see this ref. for more
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/101/21453/00994854.pdf?arnumber=994854
DRAM: Dynamic random-access memory
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
22 Nanometer
The 22 nanometer (22 nm) is the CMOS process step following the 32 nm process in CMOS
semiconductor device fabrication. The typical half-pitch (i.e., half the distance between identical
features in an array) for a memory cell using the process is around 22 nm. It was first
introduced by semiconductor companies in 2008 for use in memory products, while first
consumer-level CPU deliveries started in April 2012.
The ITRS 2006 Front End Process Update indicates that equivalent physical oxide thickness will
not scale below 0.5 nm (about twice the diameter of a silicon atom), which is the expected value
at the 22 nm node. This is an indication that CMOS scaling in this area has reached a wall at this
point, possibly disturbing Moore's law.
On the ITRS roadmap, the successor to 22 nm technology will be 14 nm technology.
On August 18, 2008, AMD, Freescale, IBM, STMicroelectronics, Toshiba, and the College of
Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE) announced that they jointly developed and
manufactured a 22 nm SRAM cell, built on a traditional six-transistor design on a 300 mm wafer,
which had a memory cell size of just 0.1 μm2.[1] The cell was printed using immersion
lithography.[2]
SRAM: Static random-access memory
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
22 Nanometer
SCALES:
On August 18, 2008, AMD, Freescale, IBM, STMicroelectronics, Toshiba, and the College of Nanoscale
Science and Engineering (CNSE) announced that they jointly developed and manufactured a 22 nm
SRAM cell, built on a traditional six-transistor design on a 300 mm wafer, which had a memory cell size
of just 0.1 μm2.[1] The cell was printed using immersion lithography.[2]
New 22 nm SRAM cell
size (22 nm
processor) is 0.1 μm2.
Intel’s 45 nm SRAM
cell size (the test chip
that was used for
today’s 45 nm
processors) is 0.346
μm2.
A typical SRAM cell is made up of six MOSFETs. Each bit in an SRAM is stored on four transistors (M1,
M2, M3, M4) that form two cross-coupled inverters. This storage cell has two stable states which are
used to denote 0 and 1. Two additional access transistors serve to control the access to a storage cell
during read and write operations.
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
22 Nanometer
SCALING means something different:
The ITRS 2006 Front End Process Update indicates that equivalent physical oxide thickness will not
scale below 0.5 nm (about twice the diameter of a silicon atom), which is the expected value at the 22
nm node. This is an indication that CMOS scaling in this area has reached a wall at this point, possibly
disturbing Moore's law.
ECE 474: Electric field is proportional to distance: closer to charge source =
stronger field. Charges creates E (y) in channel. Stronger field E (y) => vsat(y)
negatively impacts device performance.
Average e- velocity
ECE 875: Goal: scale device = reduce all dimensions but keep E field constant
E = 105 N/C in Si
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
ECE875: For Constant E field = “constant field”
Adjust device parameters to keep E field constant:
Shrink physical parameters by 1/k
Shrink all batteries by 1/k
Increase substrate doping by k to adjust surface potential
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Constant E field = “constant field”
Adjust device parameters to keep E field constant:
Shrink physical parameters by 1/k
Shrink all batteries by 1/k
Increase substrate doping by k to adjust surface potential
Moore’s law problem: tunnelling across the oxide layer d
VM Ayres, ECE802, F13
Fig. 01 in Datta: Metrics that describe Scales
Nano nature:
Wave particle-duality
of carriers (electrons)
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Fig. 01 in Datta: Metrics that describe Scales
Nano nature:
Wave particle-duality
of carriers (electrons)
Particle-like
Wave-like
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