MOS Transistor Theory: Slides Adapted From: N. Weste, D. Harris, CMOS VLSI Design,, 3/e, 2004
MOS Transistor Theory: Slides Adapted From: N. Weste, D. Harris, CMOS VLSI Design,, 3/e, 2004
MOS Transistor Theory: Slides Adapted From: N. Weste, D. Harris, CMOS VLSI Design,, 3/e, 2004
Theory
1
Outline
3
MOS Transistor Symbol
4
MOS Structure
5
nMOS Transistor Terminal Voltages
Mode of operation depends on Vg, Vd, Vs
Vgs = Vg – Vs
Vgd = Vg – Vd
Vds = Vd – Vs = Vgs - Vgd
Source and drain are symmetric diffusion terminals
By convention, source is terminal at lower voltage
Hence Vds 0
nMOS body is grounded. First assume source is 0 too.
Three regions of operation
Cutoff
Linear
6
Saturation
nMOS in cutoff operation mode
No channel
Ids = 0
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nMOS in linear operation mode
Channel forms
Current flows from D to S
e- from S to D
Ids increases with Vds
Similar to linear
resistor
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nMOS in Saturation operation mode
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pMOS Transistor
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I-V Characteristics (nMOS)
In Linear region, Ids depends on
How much charge is in the channel?
How fast is the charge moving?
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Channel Charge
MOS structure looks like parallel
plate capacitor while operating in
inversion:
Gate – oxide – channel
Qchannel = CV
C = Cg = oxWL/tox = coxWL
V = Vgc – Vt = (Vgs – Vds/2) – Vt
12
Carrier velocity
Charge is carried by e-
Carrier velocity v proportional to lateral
E-field between source and drain
v = μE μ called mobility
E = Vds/L
Time for carrier to cross channel:
t = L / v
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nMOS Linear I-V
Now we know
How much charge Qchannel is in the channel
How much time t each carrier takes to cross
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nMOS Saturation I-V
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nMOS I-V Summary
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I-V characteristics of nMOS Transistor
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Example
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pMOS I-V Characteritics
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pMOS I-V Summary
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I-V characteristics of pMOS Transistor
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Capacitances of a MOS Transistor
Any two conductors separated by an insulator
have capacitance
Gate to channel capacitor is very important
Creates channel charge necessary for
operation (intrinsic capacitance)
Source and drain have capacitance to body
(parasitic capacitance)
Across reverse-biased diodes
Called diffusion capacitance because it is
associated with source/drain diffusion 22
Gate Capacitance
27
Non-ideal I-V effects
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Junction Leakage
The p-n junctions between diffusion and the substrate or
well for diodes.
The well-to-substrate is another diode
Substrate and well are tied to GND and VDD to ensure
these diodes remain reverse biased
But, reverse biased diodes still conduct a small amount of
current that depends on:
Doping levels
Area and perimeter of the diffusion region
The diode voltage
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Tunneling
35
Geometry Dependence
36
Impact of non-ideal I-V effects
Threshold is a significant fraction of the supply voltage
Leakage is increased causing gates to
consume power when idle
limits the amount of time that data is retained
Leakage increases with temperature
Velocity saturation and mobility degradation
result in less current than expected at high voltage
No point in trying to use high VDD to achieve fast
transistors
Transistors in series partition the voltage across each
transistor thus experience less velocity saturation
Tend to be a little faster than a single transistor
Two nMOS in series deliver more than half the
current of a single nMOS transistor of the same
width 37
Matching: same dimension and orientation
Pass Transistors
38
Pass transistor Circuits
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Transmission gate ON resistance
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Tri-state Inverter
41
Effective resistance of a transistor
42
RC Values
Capacitance
C = Cg = Cs = Cd = 2 fF/μm of gate width
Values similar across many processes
Resistance
R 6 K*μm in 0.6um process
Improves with shorter channel lengths
Unit transistors
May refer to minimum contacted device (4/2 )
or maybe 1 μm wide device
Doesn’t matter as long as you are consistent
43
RC Delay Models
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Switch level RC models
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Inverter Delay Estimate
Estimate the delay of a fanout-of-1 inverter
46
delay = 6RC
Resistance of a unit transmission gate
The effective resistance of a transmission gate is the
parallel of the resistance of the two transistor
Approximately R in both directions
Transmission gates are commonly built using equal-sized
transistors
Boosting the size of the pMOS only slightly improve the
effective resistance while significantly increasing the
capacitance
47
Summary
Models are only approximations to reality, not reality itself
Models cannot be perfectly accurate
Little value in using excessively complicated models, particularly
for hand calculations
To first order current is proportional to W/L
But, in modern transistors Leff is shorter than Ldrawn
Doubling the Ldrawn reduces current more than a factor of two
Two series transistors in a modern process deliver more than half
the current of a single transistor
Use Transmission gates in place of pass transistors
Transistor speed depends on the ratio of current to capacitance
Sources of capacitance (voltage dependents)
Gate capacitance
Diffusion capacitance
48