EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

Book Modeling and Simulation of Hot carrier Effects in MOS Devices and Circuits

Download or read book Modeling and Simulation of Hot carrier Effects in MOS Devices and Circuits written by Peter Maurice Lee and published by . This book was released on 1990 with total page 432 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Hot Carrier Effects in MOS Devices

Download or read book Hot Carrier Effects in MOS Devices written by Eiji Takeda and published by Elsevier. This book was released on 1995-11-28 with total page 329 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The exploding number of uses for ultrafast, ultrasmall integrated circuits has increased the importance of hot-carrier effects in manufacturing as well as for other technological applications. They are rapidly movingout of the research lab and into the real world. This book is derived from Dr. Takedas book in Japanese, Hot-Carrier Effects, (published in 1987 by Nikkei Business Publishers). However, the new book is much more than a translation. Takedas original work was a starting point for developing this much more complete and fundamental text on this increasingly important topic. The new work encompasses not only all the latest research and discoveries made in the fast-paced area of hot carriers, but also includes the basics of MOS devices, and the practical considerations related to hot carriers. Chapter one itself is a comprehensive review of MOS device physics which allows a reader with little background in MOS devices to pick up a sufficient amount of information to be able to follow the rest of the book The book is written to allow the reader to learn about MOS Device Reliability in a relatively short amount of time, making the texts detailed treatment of hot-carrier effects especially useful and instructive to both researchers and others with varyingamounts of experience in the field The logical organization of the book begins by discussing known principles, then progresses to empirical information and, finally, to practical solutions Provides the most complete review of device degradation mechanisms as well as drain engineering methods Contains the most extensive reference list on the subject

Book Hot Carrier Design Considerations for MOS Devices and Circuits

Download or read book Hot Carrier Design Considerations for MOS Devices and Circuits written by Cheng Wang and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2012-12-06 with total page 345 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: As device dimensions decrease, hot-carrier effects, which are due mainly to the presence of a high electric field inside the device, are becoming a major design concern. On the one hand, the detrimental effects-such as transconductance degradation and threshold shift-need to be minimized or, if possible, avoided altogether. On the other hand, performance such as the programming efficiency of nonvolatile memories or the carrier velocity inside the devices-need to be maintained or improved through the use of submicron technologies, even in the presence of a reduced power supply. As a result, one of the major challenges facing MOS design engineers today is to harness the hot-carrier effects so that, without sacrificing product performance, degradation can be kept to a minimum and a reli able design obtained. To accomplish this, the physical mechanisms re sponsible for the degradations should first be experimentally identified and characterized. With adequate models thus obtained, steps can be taken to optimize the design, so that an adequate level of quality assur ance in device or circuit performance can be achieved. This book ad dresses these hot-carrier design issues for MOS devices and circuits, and is used primarily as a professional guide for process development engi neers, device engineers, and circuit designers who are interested in the latest developments in hot-carrier degradation modeling and hot-carrier reliability design techniques. It may also be considered as a reference book for graduate students who have some research interests in this excit ing, yet sometime controversial, field.

Book Hot Carrier Reliability of MOS VLSI Circuits

Download or read book Hot Carrier Reliability of MOS VLSI Circuits written by Yusuf Leblebici and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2012-12-06 with total page 223 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: As the complexity and the density of VLSI chips increase with shrinking design rules, the evaluation of long-term reliability of MOS VLSI circuits is becoming an important problem. The assessment and improvement of reliability on the circuit level should be based on both the failure mode analysis and the basic understanding of the physical failure mechanisms observed in integrated circuits. Hot-carrier induced degrada tion of MOS transistor characteristics is one of the primary mechanisms affecting the long-term reliability of MOS VLSI circuits. It is likely to become even more important in future generation chips, since the down ward scaling of transistor dimensions without proportional scaling of the operating voltage aggravates this problem. A thorough understanding of the physical mechanisms leading to hot-carrier related degradation of MOS transistors is a prerequisite for accurate circuit reliability evaluation. It is also being recognized that important reliability concerns other than the post-manufacture reliability qualification need to be addressed rigorously early in the design phase. The development and use of accurate reliability simulation tools are therefore crucial for early assessment and improvement of circuit reliability : Once the long-term reliability of the circuit is estimated through simulation, the results can be compared with predetermined reliability specifications or limits. If the predicted reliability does not satisfy the requirements, appropriate design modifications may be carried out to improve the resistance of the devices to degradation.

Book Hot Carrier Effects in MOS Devices

Download or read book Hot Carrier Effects in MOS Devices written by Eiji Takeda and published by Academic Press. This book was released on 1995 with total page 329 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The exploding number of uses for ultrafast, ultrasmall integrated circuits has increased the importance of hot-carrier effects in manufacturing as well as for other technological applications. They are rapidly movingout of the research lab and into the real world. This book is derived from Dr. Takedas book in Japanese, Hot-Carrier Effects, (published in 1987 by Nikkei Business Publishers). However, the new book is much more than a translation. Takedas original work was a starting point for developing this much more complete and fundamental text on this increasingly important topic. The new work encompasses not only all the latest research and discoveries made in the fast-paced area of hot carriers, but also includes the basics of MOS devices, and the practical considerations related to hot carriers. Chapter one itself is a comprehensive review of MOS device physics which allows a reader with little background in MOS devices to pick up a sufficient amount of information to be able to follow the rest of the book The book is written to allow the reader to learn about MOS Device Reliability in a relatively short amount of time, making the texts detailed treatment of hot-carrier effects especially useful and instructive to both researchers and others with varyingamounts of experience in the field The logical organization of the book begins by discussing known principles, then progresses to empirical information and, finally, to practical solutions Provides the most complete review of device degradation mechanisms as well as drain engineering methods Contains the most extensive reference list on the subject

Book Analysis and Design of MOSFETs

Download or read book Analysis and Design of MOSFETs written by Juin Jei Liou and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 1998-09-30 with total page 372 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Analysis and Design of MOSFETs: Modeling, Simulation, and Parameter Extraction is the first book devoted entirely to a broad spectrum of analysis and design issues related to the semiconductor device called metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET). These issues include MOSFET device physics, modeling, numerical simulation, and parameter extraction. The discussion of the application of device simulation to the extraction of MOSFET parameters, such as the threshold voltage, effective channel lengths, and series resistances, is of particular interest to all readers and provides a valuable learning and reference tool for students, researchers and engineers. Analysis and Design of MOSFETs: Modeling, Simulation, and Parameter Extraction, extensively referenced, and containing more than 180 illustrations, is an innovative and integral new book on MOSFETs design technology.

Book Mosfet Modeling For Vlsi Simulation  Theory And Practice

Download or read book Mosfet Modeling For Vlsi Simulation Theory And Practice written by Narain Arora and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2007-02-14 with total page 633 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A reprint of the classic text, this book popularized compact modeling of electronic and semiconductor devices and components for college and graduate-school classrooms, and manufacturing engineering, over a decade ago. The first comprehensive book on MOS transistor compact modeling, it was the most cited among similar books in the area and remains the most frequently cited today. The coverage is device-physics based and continues to be relevant to the latest advances in MOS transistor modeling. This is also the only book that discusses in detail how to measure device model parameters required for circuit simulations.The book deals with the MOS Field Effect Transistor (MOSFET) models that are derived from basic semiconductor theory. Various models are developed, ranging from simple to more sophisticated models that take into account new physical effects observed in submicron transistors used in today's (1993) MOS VLSI technology. The assumptions used to arrive at the models are emphasized so that the accuracy of the models in describing the device characteristics are clearly understood. Due to the importance of designing reliable circuits, device reliability models are also covered. Understanding these models is essential when designing circuits for state-of-the-art MOS ICs.

Book MOSFET Models for VLSI Circuit Simulation

Download or read book MOSFET Models for VLSI Circuit Simulation written by Narain D. Arora and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2012-12-06 with total page 628 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Metal Oxide Semiconductor (MOS) transistors are the basic building block ofMOS integrated circuits (I C). Very Large Scale Integrated (VLSI) circuits using MOS technology have emerged as the dominant technology in the semiconductor industry. Over the past decade, the complexity of MOS IC's has increased at an astonishing rate. This is realized mainly through the reduction of MOS transistor dimensions in addition to the improvements in processing. Today VLSI circuits with over 3 million transistors on a chip, with effective or electrical channel lengths of 0. 5 microns, are in volume production. Designing such complex chips is virtually impossible without simulation tools which help to predict circuit behavior before actual circuits are fabricated. However, the utility of simulators as a tool for the design and analysis of circuits depends on the adequacy of the device models used in the simulator. This problem is further aggravated by the technology trend towards smaller and smaller device dimensions which increases the complexity of the models. There is extensive literature available on modeling these short channel devices. However, there is a lot of confusion too. Often it is not clear what model to use and which model parameter values are important and how to determine them. After working over 15 years in the field of semiconductor device modeling, I have felt the need for a book which can fill the gap between the theory and the practice of MOS transistor modeling. This book is an attempt in that direction.

Book Development of Mosfet Models Suitable for Simulation of Analog CMOS Circuits After Hot carrier Stress

Download or read book Development of Mosfet Models Suitable for Simulation of Analog CMOS Circuits After Hot carrier Stress written by Gürsel Düzenli and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The down-scaling of device dimensions in CMOS technology will improve performance and packing density for VLSI (Very Large Scale Integration) circuits, but it will negatively effect the quaIity of the circuits. Integrated circuits (ICs) are basically classified according to the electrical function they perform. Integrated circuits performing nominally the same function, however, do not necessarily perform it equally well. The concept of quality is used to express how well the required function is performed. An operational amplifier is of higher quality İf it has a higher gain, wider frequency bandwidth, etc. These characteristics can be regarded as conformance figures. The conformance is, however, only one side of the quality. On the other side is the issue of how Iong the device or circuit will exhibit the initial performance figures. The concept of reliabillty is used to express this time dimension of the quality . Measurement and presentation of the conformance figures are straightforward; any conformance parameter can be measured directly and its value expressed. The situation is, however, different from determination and presentation of the reliability. The reliabilİty depends, in principle, on application conditions, which means it is not possible to establish an exact and unique reliability figure for a given device or IC. In addition, the reliability, determination itself, regardless of the application conditions used, cannot be made by direct measurements. This is mainly because of practical constraints. Theoretically, it is possible to determine the mean time to failure directly if a corresponding number of device or ICs are exposed to working conditions and times to failure of each of them are recorded. This is, however, practically meaningless; such a test would last for tens of years, and by the time the data are collected nobody would be interested in them. That is why accelerated tests have to be applied to obtain the results in a reasonable time of 1 or 2 months. The failures in ICs can be classified in at least three different ways: according to failure modes, according to failure mechanisms, and according to failure causes. The failure mode is the observed result of a failure, such as an open circuit, short circuit, or parameter degradation. The failure mechanism is the phyical, chemical, or other process that results in a failure. Finally , the failure cause is a circumstance during design, production, testing, or operation that initates or contributes to a failure mechanism. The focus of this study is the modeling of parameter degradation reliability of p- MOS and n-MOS transistors due to the hot-carriers under analog operation. Hot- carrier failure cause can initiate the electron/holetrapping/generation and/or interface trap creation mechanism leading to changes of oxide charge and trap densities during device operation. A lot of efforts have been devoted to study the mechanisms due to the hot-carrier and modeling the device degradation due to these effects. However , these modelings are often performed on digital applications. Analog applications differ from digital ones by a number of points. Analog circuit reliability prediction has to take analog circuit design variables such as channel length, biasing conditions, and circuit topography into consideration. In order to achieve highest possible speed, smallest area and smallest power consumption usually L=Lmin are chosen for digital applications. However, for nearly all-analog applications this choice is inadequate. In order to improve matching and noise behavior, channel lengths usually need to be chosen several times Lmin. For those greater lengths also the small-signal parameters especially the drain conductance, are largely improved. However, because analog circuits usually use long-channel devices, the influence of hot-carrier effects on analog circuit performance has been believed to be minimal and, as a result, has been mostly overlooked. Therefore, the most important device parameters in these two application fields do not coincide. For example, power supply scaling for analog circuİts will not likely be as aggressive as for digital circuits, because submicron devices are necessary for high speed applications. However , the operation of analog circuits is sensitive to device parameter variations. Furthermore, device parameter variations depend on the specific application of a given analog circuit. The proposed models combines the advantages of the parameter fitting method and so-called AId model. The essence of the model is the translation of the physical W,mechanisms leading to degradation into the MOSFET model equations correct place via an empirical description. Because of the correct place of the empirical description in the MOSFET model equations the parameter extraction will be as simple as that of the so-called LlIo model. The empirical description was found from different degradations and fresh devices, so the accuracy is as high as that of the parameter fitting method. Furthermore, the general structure of the empirical description is independent of the process technology. Therefore, it does not impose a much higher requirement on device engineer . Another important feature of the proposed models is the prediction of the device lifetime at real life. This is an important feature because most of the developed degradation models are not able to predict the device lifetime. Therefore, several extrapolation laws to calculate the Iifetime have been developed. But, most of the developed lifetime prediction models are developed for digital applications. However, when the same lifetime prediction models are applied to analog applications, gross lifetime prediction error results. This is because the stress conditions are totally different in analog applications compared to digital applications. The proposed model includes a hot-carrier degradation model and a lifetime prediction model as a single model suitable for analog applications. The accuracy of the presented models has been verified with experimental data.

Book Hot Carrier Degradation in Semiconductor Devices

Download or read book Hot Carrier Degradation in Semiconductor Devices written by Tibor Grasser and published by Springer. This book was released on 2014-10-29 with total page 518 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book provides readers with a variety of tools to address the challenges posed by hot carrier degradation, one of today’s most complicated reliability issues in semiconductor devices. Coverage includes an explanation of carrier transport within devices and book-keeping of how they acquire energy (“become hot”), interaction of an ensemble of colder and hotter carriers with defect precursors, which eventually leads to the creation of a defect, and a description of how these defects interact with the device, degrading its performance.

Book Modeling and Simulation OfpMOSFET Hot carrier Degradation in Very Large CMOS Circuits

Download or read book Modeling and Simulation OfpMOSFET Hot carrier Degradation in Very Large CMOS Circuits written by Weishi Sun and published by . This book was released on 1995 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The goals of the research work presented in this thesis are to model submicron pMOS transistor hot-carrier degradation and to develop a fast reliability simulation tool for hot-carrier reliability analysis of CMOS VLSI circuits. This simulator should be able to handle very large submicrometer circuits accurately and efficiently. As device sizes shrink into the submicron region, pMOS transistor hot-carrier degradation becomes increasingly more important. There has not, however, been a widely accepted model for pMOS transistor hot-carrier degradation unlike that for nMOS transistors. Existing reliability simulations tools are primarily based on transistor level simulation and, therefore, can not handle large circuits efficiently. Using the fast-timing-based reliability simulator, ILLIADS-R, and the empirical model developed based on our experimental results, hot-carrier reliability can be well predicted. ILLIADS-R also serves as an integral part of the hierarchical design-for-reliability system. A new hot-carrier degradation model is developed for submicron pMOS transistors. Using this model, the pMOS transistor hot-carrier degradation can be predicted based on the total injected charge into the gate oxide region and the initial gate current under normal operating condition. This model is integrated into the fast-timing-based reliability simulation tool, ILLIADS-R. The simulation results demonstrate that ILLIADS-R outperforms the existing reliability simulator BERT in terms of simulation speed with a comparable accuracy. Also studied are the pMOS transistor subthreshold leakage characteristics as a function of hot-carrier stress conditions. It is shown that subthreshold leakage current is a future limit to the pMOS device lifetime.

Book Physics And Modeling Of Mosfets  The  Surface potential Model Hisim

Download or read book Physics And Modeling Of Mosfets The Surface potential Model Hisim written by Tatsuya Ezaki and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2008-06-03 with total page 381 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This volume provides a timely description of the latest compact MOS transistor models for circuit simulation. The first generation BSIM3 and BSIM4 models that have dominated circuit simulation in the last decade are no longer capable of characterizing all the important features of modern sub-100nm MOS transistors. This book discusses the second generation MOS transistor models that are now in urgent demand and being brought into the initial phase of manufacturing applications. It considers how the models are to include the complete drift-diffusion theory using the surface potential variable in the MOS transistor channel in order to give one characterization equation.

Book MOSFET Modeling for Circuit Analysis and Design

Download or read book MOSFET Modeling for Circuit Analysis and Design written by Carlos Galup-Montoro and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2007 with total page 445 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This is the first book dedicated to the next generation of MOSFET models. Addressed to circuit designers with an in-depth treatment that appeals to device specialists, the book presents a fresh view of compact modeling, having completely abandoned the regional modeling approach.Both an overview of the basic physics theory required to build compact MOSFET models and a unified treatment of inversion-charge and surface-potential models are provided. The needs of digital, analog and RF designers as regards the availability of simple equations for circuit designs are taken into account. Compact expressions for hand analysis or for automatic synthesis, valid in all operating regions, are presented throughout the book. All the main expressions for computer simulation used in the new generation compact models are derived.Since designers in advanced technologies are increasingly concerned with fluctuations, the modeling of fluctuations is strongly emphasized. A unified approach for both space (matching) and time (noise) fluctuations is introduced.

Book Hot Carrier Effect on LDMOS Transistors

Download or read book Hot Carrier Effect on LDMOS Transistors written by Liangjun Jiang and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 112 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: One of the main problems encountered when scaling down is the hot carrier induced degradation of MOSFETs. This problem has been studied intensively during the past decade, under both static and dynamic stress conditions. In this period it has evolved from a more or less academic research topic to one of the most stringent constraints guaranteeing the lifetime of sub-micron devices. New drain engineering technique leads to the extensive usage of lateral doped drain structures. In these devices the peak of the lateral field is lowered by reducing the doping concentration near the drain and by providing a smooth junction transition instead of an abrupt one. Therefore, the amount of hot carrier generation for a given supply voltage and the influence of a certain physical damage on the electrical characteristics is decreased dramatically. A complete understanding of the hot carrier degradation problem in sub-micron 0.25um LD MOSFETs is presented in this work. First we discuss the degradation mechanisms observed under, for circuit operation, somewhat artificial but well-controlled uniform-substrate hot electron and substrate hot-hole injection conditions. Then the more realistic case of static channel hot carrier degradation is treated, and some important process-related effects are illustrated, followed by the behavior under the most relevant case for real operation, namely dynamic degradation. An Accurate and practical parameter extraction is used to obtain the LD MOSFETs model parameters, with the experiment verification. Good agreement between the model simulation and experiment is achieved. The gate charge transfer performance is examined to demonstrate the hot carrier effect. Furthermore, In order to understand the dynamic stress on the LD MOSFET and its effect on RF circuit, the hot-carrier injection experiment in which dynamic stress with different duty cycle applied to a LD MOS transistor is presented. A Class-C power amplifier is used to as an example to demonstrate the effect of dynamic stress on RF circuit performance. Finally, the strategy for improving hot carrier reliability and a forecast of the hot carrier reliability problem for nano-technologies are discussed. The main contribution of this work is, it systemically research the hot carrier reliability issue on the sub-micron lateral doped drain MOSFETs, which is induced by static and dynamic voltage stress; The stress condition mimics the typical application scenarios of LD MOSFET. Model parameters extraction technique is introduced with the aid of the current device modeling tools, the performance degradation model can be easily implement into the existing computer-aided tools. Therefore, circuit performance degradation can be accurately estimated in the design stage. CMOS technologies are constantly scaled down. The production on 65 nm is on the market. With the reduction in geometries, the devices become more vulnerable to hot carrier injection (HCI). HCI reliability is a must for designs implemented with new processes. Reliability simulation needs to be implemented in PDK libraries located on the modeling stage. The use of professional tools is a prerequisite to develop accurate device models, from DC to GHz, including noise modeling and nonlinear HF effects, within a reasonable time. Designers need to learn to design for reliability and they should be educated on additional reliability analyses. The value is the reduction of failure and redesign costs.

Book The Physics and Modeling of Mosfets

Download or read book The Physics and Modeling of Mosfets written by Mitiko Miura-Mattausch and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2008 with total page 381 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This volume provides a timely description of the latest compact MOS transistor models for circuit simulation. The first generation BSIM3 and BSIM4 models that have dominated circuit simulation in the last decade are no longer capable of characterizing all the important features of modern sub-100nm MOS transistors. This book discusses the second generation MOS transistor models that are now in urgent demand and being brought into the initial phase of manufacturing applications. It considers how the models are to include the complete drift-diffusion theory using the surface potential variable in the MOS transistor channel in order to give one characterization equation.

Book Two Dimensional Modeling of Hot Carrier Effects in MOS Devices

Download or read book Two Dimensional Modeling of Hot Carrier Effects in MOS Devices written by Rajat Rakkhit and published by . This book was released on 1988 with total page 390 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book VLSI Design for Reliability Hot Carrier Effects

Download or read book VLSI Design for Reliability Hot Carrier Effects written by and published by . This book was released on 1993 with total page 76 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This report describes the accomplishments during the contract period (June 28, to June 27, 1992) on the computer aided analysis of CMOS device and circuit degradation due to hot-carrier effects. The task involved four subtasks: (1) simulation of gate oxide degradation during long-term circuit operation; (2) determination of overall circuit performance after hot-electron stress; (3) probabilistic timing approach to hot-carrier-effect estimation; (4) parametric macromodeling of hot-carrier-induced degradation in MOS VLSI circuits. The first two parts are continued subtasks while the latter two are new subtasks. In order to simulate the reliability of MOS circuits, both the detailed model and the macromodel are used; the detailed model is used for accurate analysis of small circuits and the macromodel is used for very large circuits for computational efficiency. Since the hot-carrier-induced aging of MOS circuits is input-pattern dependent, an important task is to develop a computationally efficient probabilistic timing approach to hot-carrier-effect estimation without resorting to the Monte Carlo simulation. We have developed a new probabilistic approach that accounts for cumulative effects of all input waveform combinations in a single run. VLSI reliability, Hot-carrier effects, Computer aided design.