Lecture 11 - University of California, Berkeley

Download Report

Transcript Lecture 11 - University of California, Berkeley

EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Lecture 11:
MOS Transistor
Prof. Niknejad
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Lecture Outline


Review: MOS Capacitors Regions
MOS Capacitors (3.8 − 3.9)
–
–

MOS Transistors (4.1 − 4.3):
–
–
–
Department of EECS
CV Curve
Threshold Voltage
Overview
Cross-section and layout
I-V Curve
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
MOS Capacitor
Oxide (SiO2)
 ox  3.9 0
Gate (n+ poly)
0
Very Thin!
tox ~ 1nm
Body (p-type substrate)
x
 s  11.7 0




MOS = Metal Oxide Silicon
Sandwich of conductors separated by an insulator
“Metal” is more commonly a heavily doped polysilicon
layer n+ or p+ layer
NMOS  p-type substrate, PMOS  n-type substrate
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Accumulation: VGB < VFB
QG  Cox (VGB  VFB )
VGB  VFB
−
+
QB  QG
−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−
++++++++++++++++++
Body (p-type substrate)


 ( x)
 ( x)
Essentially a parallel plate capacitor
Capacitance is determined by oxide thickness:
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Depletion: VFB<VGB < VT
QG (VGB )  QB
VGB  VFB +−
 ( x)
tox
++ + + + + + + ++
− − − − − − − − −
− − − − − − − −
Body (p-type substrate)
 ( x)
QB  qN a X d (VGB )



Positive charge on gate terminates on negative charges in
depletion region
Potential drop across the oxide and depletion region
Charge has a square-root dependence on applied bias
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Inversion
s
 ( x)
tox
VGB  VT
+
−
++ + + + + + + ++
− − − − − − − − −
− − − − − − − −
Body (p-type substrate)
ns  ni e


xdep
qs
kT
 ( x)
 Na
The surface potential increases to a point where the electron
density at the surface equals the background ion density
At this point, the depletion region stops growing and the
extra charge is provided by the inversion charge at surface
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Threshold Voltage



The threshold voltage is defined as the gate-body voltage
that causes the surface to change from p-type to n-type
For this condition, the surface potential has to equal the
negative of the p-type potential
Apply KCL around loop:
Gate (n poly)
+
VGS  VFB  Vox  VBS
VGB  VT
−
+

VBS
−−−−−−

s  VBS  2 p
s
Vox  Eoxtox 
tox Es
 ox
qN a xdep qN a 2 s
2qN a (2 p )
Es 

s 
s
 s qN a
s
1
VTn  VFB  2 p 
2q s N a (2 p )
Cox
Department of EECS

Vox

University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Inversion Stops Depletion



A simple approximation is to assume that once
inversion happens, the depletion region stops
growing
This is a good assumption since the inversion
charge is an exponential function of the surface
potential
Under this condition:
QG (VTn )  QB ,max
QG (VGB )  Cox (VGB  VTn )  QB ,max
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Q-V Curve for MOS Capacitor
QG
QN (VGB )
QB ,max
VFB



VTn
VGB (V )
In accumulation, the charge is simply proportional
to the applies gate-body bias
In inversion, the same is true
In depletion, the charge grows slower since the
voltage is applied over a depletion region
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Numerical Example

MOS Capacitor with p-type substrate:
tox  20nm

N a  5 1016 cm 3
Calculate flat-band:
VFB  (n   p )  (550  (402))  0.95V

Calculate threshold voltage:
 ox
3.45 1013 F/cm
Cox 

tox
2 10-6cm
1
VTn  VFB  2 p 
2q s N a (2 p )
Cox
2 1.6 1019 1.04 1012  5 1016  2  0.4
VTn  .95  2(0.4) 
 0.52V
Cox
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Num Example: Electric Field in Oxide

Apply a gate-to-body voltage:
VGB  2.5  VFB


Device is in accumulation
The entire voltage drop is across the oxide:
Vox VGB  n   p 2.5  0.55  (0.4)
5 V
Eox 




8

10
tox
tox
2 106
cm

The charge in the substrate (body) consist of holes:
QB  Cox (VGB  VFB )  2.67 107 C/cm 2
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Numerical Example: Depletion Region

In inversion, what’s the depletion region width and
charge?
VB ,max  s   p   p   p  2 p  0.8V
VB ,max
X d ,max 
1  qNa
 
2  s
 2
 X d ,max

2 sVB ,max
qN a
 144nm
QB,max  qNa X d ,max  1.15 107 C/cm2
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
MOS CV Curve
C
QG
Cox
Cox
QN (VGB )
QB ,max
VFB




VTn
VGB (V )
VFB
VTn
VGB
Small-signal capacitance is slope of Q-V curve
Capacitance is linear in accumulation and inversion
Capacitance is depletion region is smallest
Capacitance is non-linear in depletion
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
C-V Curve Equivalent Circuits
Cox
Cox
Cox
Cdep


Cdep Cox
Cox
Cox
Ctot 


Cdep
 s tox
xdep
Cdep  Cox
1

1
 ox xdep
Cox
In accumulation mode the capacitance is just due to the
voltage drop across tox
In inversion the incremental charge comes from the
inversion layer (depletion region stops growing).
In depletion region, the voltage drop is across the oxide and
the depletion region
Cdep 

s
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
MOSFET Cross Section
gate
body
source
drain
diffusion regions
p+
n+
L
n+
p-type substrate





Add two junctions around MOS capacitor
The regions forms PN junctions with substrate
MOSFET is a four terminal device
The body is usually grounded (or at a DC potential)
For ICs, the body contact is at surface
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
MOSFET Layout
poly gate
contact
G
B
S
p+
n+
B
S
G
D
D
L
n+
xj
W
p-type substrate
L



Planar process: complete structure can be specified
by a 2D layout
Design engineer can control the transistor width W
and L
Process engineer controls tox, Na, xj, etc.
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
PMOS & NMOS
G
B
S
p+
n+
G
D
L
n+
xj
B
S
n+
p+
p-type substrate
NMOS

L
p+
xj
n-type substrate
PMOS
A MOSFET by any other name is still a MOSFET:
–
–
–
–

D
NMOS, PMOS, nMOS, pMOS
NFET, PFET
IGFET
Other flavors: JFET, MESFET
CMOS technology: The ability to fabricated
NMOS and PMOS devices simultaneously
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
CMOS
G
G
B
S
D
p+
n+
n+
L
xj
B
S
D
n+
p+
p+
L
xj
n-type well
PMOS
NMOS
p-type substrate



Complementary MOS: Both P and N type devices
Create a n-type body in a p-type substrate through
compensation. This new region is called a “well”.
To isolate the PMOS from the NMOS, the well must be
reverse biased (pn junction)
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Circuit Symbols



The symbols with the arrows are typically used in
analog applications
The body contact is often not shown
The source/drain can switch depending on how the
device is biased (the device has inherent symmetry)
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Observed Behavior: ID-VGS
I DS
I DS
VDS
VGS
VT



VGS
Current zero for negative gate voltage
Current in transistor is very low until the gate
voltage crosses the threshold voltage of device
(same threshold voltage as MOS capacitor)
Current increases rapidly at first and then it finally
reaches a point where it simply increases linearly
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
Observed Behavior: ID-VDS
VGS  4V
I DS / k
non-linear resistor region
resistor region
I DS
“constant” current
VDS
VGS  3V
VGS
VGS  2V
VDS



For low values of drain voltage, the device is like a resistor
As the voltage is increases, the resistance behaves non-linearly
and the rate of increase of current slows
Eventually the current stops growing and remains essentially
constant (current source)
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
“Linear” Region Current
VGS  VTn
S
p+
G
D
n+



y
n+
p-type
NMOS
VDS  100mV
x
Inversion layer
“channel”
If the gate is biased above threshold, the surface is
inverted
This inverted region forms a channel that connects
the drain and gate
If a drain voltage is applied positive, electrons will
flow from source to drain
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
MOSFET “Linear” Region

The current in this channel is given by
I DS  Wv y QN

The charge proportional to the voltage applied
across the oxide over threshold
QN  Cox (VGS  VTn )
I DS  Wv y Cox (VGS  VTn )

If the channel is uniform density, only drift current
flows
V
v y   n E y
I DS
Department of EECS
W
 nCox (VGS  VTn )VDS
L
Ey  
DS
L
VGS  VTn VDS  100mV
University of California, Berkeley
EECS 105 Fall 2003, Lecture 11
Prof. A. Niknejad
MOSFET: Variable Resistor

Notice that in the linear region, the current is
proportional to the voltage
I DS

W
 nCox (VGS  VTn )VDS
L
Can define a voltage-dependent resistor
VDS
1
L
Req 


I DS nCox (VGS  VTn )  W

L

  R (VGS )
W

This is a nice variable resistor, electronically
tunable!
Department of EECS
University of California, Berkeley