DOCUMENTATION
3D SIMULATIONS OF A FinFET DEVICE |
In this application, we have applied tiberCAD to 3D calculations of electrical characteristics of a Si-based 3-gate FinFET device. For the last years, three-dimensional Multi-gate FET devices (double, triple or quadruple-gate) have been evolving from the silicon-on-insulator (SOI) classical, planar single gate MOSFET, in order to satisfy increasing need for higher current drive and better short channel behaviour. The first fully depleted SOI MOSFET (early 1980's) showed superior transconductance, current drive and subthreshold swing. Its development led to the double-gate SOI MOSFET, which provided good short-channel characteristics due to the better gate control on the channel. A natural evolution of the latter was the vertical-channel double-gate FinFET. Triple-gate and gate-all-around implementations of the FinFET structure followed shortly. The phenomenon of volume inversion, leading to large transconductance, has encouraged the development of a series of these structures, ranging from quantum-wire MOSFET to circular section surrounding-gate devices with a pillar-like silicon island and vertical channel. We consider here a three-gate FinFET structure with a 20 nm thick and 40 nm high Silicon fin. The channel length is 50 nm and the gate oxide thickness is 2 nm; we will see in the following the effects of the scaling of the device. Here is the geometrical description of the Finfet device (left) and how it is meshed by GMSH (right). In the middle, particular of the fin surrounded by the gate oxide.
DEVICE STRUCTUREThe model of the Finfet structure in tiberCAD is composed by these regions:
A drift-diffusion simulation has been performed on the Finfet model.
Electron Charge density in the fin for Vd = 1 and
Electron density in the fin for Vg = 0.5 and Vd = 1.
IV CHARACTERISTICS
IV drain output characteristics for a 50 nm channel length. Threshold voltage is around Vg = -0.3V
The subthreshold S parameter, given by , in this case is 75 mV/dec.
SCALING OF THE CHANNEL LENGTHDrain characteristics for channel length ranging from 5 to 100 nm
It can be noted that, for this set of geometrical parameters, scaling channel lengths below 20 nm results in bad gate control on the channel current.
Id/Vg Transfer characteristics for channel length ranging from 5 to 100 nm
Again, It is clear that, for channel lengths below 20 nm, scaling leads to a bad subthreshold behaviour, due to short channel effects.
Silicon Fin length/thickness ratio dependence of subthreshold parameter S Only for channel length 3-4 times larger than the fin thickness (20 nm in this example), scaling rules are correctly fulfilled and S parameter has a reasonably low value (60-80).
SCALING OF THE OXIDE THICKNESSBy reducing oxide thickness from 2 nm to 1 nm, it is possible to improve short channel performances significantly. Effect on subthreshold transfer characterisctics, for channel lengths from 5 to 20 nm
Scaling oxide from 2 to 1 nm improves S parameter from 170 to 100 mV/dec for 20 nm channel. Moreover, gate oxide thickness values lower than 2 nm lead to serious tunneling leakage levels, which poses a strict limitation on further scaling, if SiO2 is to be used as gate oxide. The solution to this issue presently mostly investigated in Si MOSFET technology is the substitution of SiO2 with alternative high-k oxide, such as HfO2, which can yield an equivalent oxide thickness lower than 1 nm, still keeping tunneling leakage low with a larger physical thickness.
References
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