ch6 MOS
ch6 MOS
ch6 MOS
SEMICONDUCTOR
(MOS CAPACITOR)
Reference:
u Streetman Ch. 6.1 ~ 6.4
u Chenming Hu Ch. 5
Reference:
u Streetman Ch. 6.1 ~ 6.4
u Chenming Hu Ch. 5
Reference:
u Streetman Ch. 6.1 ~ 6.4
u Chenming Hu Ch. 5
M
HO
- &Padd : - -
Si changeable
>
-
P-Si
&
electrons
n N-type MOS capacitor negative elections
only surface
contain
,
fixe
4
./
③
Hide
x
3i
· &
&
3. 15
-
#
(Ec-Ef) ↓
e 45
(Ef-Ev) Y psy
④
- >
Depletion region
↓
holes I
holes # constr =-
Ø M-O: 4.1 – 0.95 = 3.05 eV; O-S = 4.05 – 0.95 = 3.1 eV fixed
n Ec – Ef can be calculated by doping level and vacuum level continuous
n Vacuum level must be continuous (otherwise, ' = −*+ → ∞, not allowed)
190 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
m ED
* /It *E2 E T ED
7
=
E
& = 0 (in oxide >
Equilibrium vs. Flatband
&
.
H
·
· Om + Ps
* Es
(Ulinear)Equilibrium Flat-band
n Flat-band (FB) voltage (!!" )
"# = $
· need to balance "# = "$% Ø Defined as the external voltage to
#E 7
eliminate the potential drop in
* semiconductor (or you can say to
Vox
eliminate the
MK VFB
q: 3 9
.
= Us + Vox depletion/accumulation)
Vs
Ø +$- = work function difference
E
ma
↓ => Vth
n Potential drop (+%&%'( ) in oxide (+&) ) and Si (+*+ ) at equilibrium (i.e. +, = 0, but not
necessary flat band unless +$- = 0):
Ø +*+ :
By expressing W (depletion width) as a function of +*+ E -DV =
VVth
VVth
↓t
Deplete Eff
htt
Ov ↓
& vt hity :
e hole
n At Vg > 0 (< 0) for p-Si (n-Si), the holes
surface
(electrons) are depleted up at Si (interface) n As Vg increases further, Efs cross Ei
since the Efs at surface is closer to Ev (Ec) such that the opposite charges exist
compared to bulk at the surface called weak inversion
n There exist fixed ionized acceptors (donors) n As the inverted charge density is
for p-Si (n-Si). equal to the bulk doping density,
192 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li strong inversion occurs e surface ↑ bulk
=
.
NMO ↳ DMOS
Accumulation, Depletion, Inversion
Si Si
Vg = 0
& &
Vgco REMG
Vg >O
Of by
e deplete .
Vg7O VgcO
I
* M
e /44
A
* K
#IA KEND
c +
↑
-
:+,
=
9)** 9)**
−
- 8
:+, &'
=−
0
;+,
= Cox
I
I
P& P bulk
Vg >O
surface
n Important parameters:
Ø B(=) is defined as the potential
change in Si, which is a function of
x
Ø %B! = 7* − 7! in deep bulk Si
Ef Ei -
I
6 ? = 6+ ? − 6+ ? → ∞ 6- ? = 68 ? − 6+ ? → ∞
qPB
9[;'<;" ) ] 9[;(<; ) ] 9;( <9; )
@ ? = A+ ! >? = A+ ! >? = A+ ! >? ! >? O
<9; ) <9; )
= @@! >? = 0' ! >? Bulk
9[;" ) <;'] 9[; ) <;(] <9;( 9; )
A ? = A+ ! >? = A+ ! >? = A+ ! >? ! >?
9; ) A+A 9; ) A+A 9; )
= A@! >? = ! >? = ! >?
@@ 0'
no
·
Ø Multiply on both sides and integrate from
5)
5;
the bulk (ψ = 0 and
5)
= 0) to the surface, I PB
we have
01
02 "# "# ' 1 671 ,4: 71
! " = − ! )5 * 89 − 1 − * 89 − 1 "#
/ "$ "$ (34 / )5
B6 A
2DE0' <9; <6 A+A 9; <6
v
- |'|A = = ! >? + − 1 + A ! >? − −1
B? 2*+ DE 0' DE
Ø At x = 0 (surface), ψ= ψs and ' = Es. The total charge density (in 2D) is
(
<9; <6 A+A 9; <6
/ ? = 0 = /%&%'( = 2*+ '" = − 22*+ DE0' ! >? + − 1 + A ! >? − −1
DE 0' DE
ü 2 exponential terms: accumulation (negative biased for p-Si case) and
inversion (positive biased for p-Si case)
9; VCO = RES/hole
ü Depletion term: V > 0 = b23)e-
>? accumulation
ü Equilibrium dopant term: 1
199 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
PB Depletion
inversion n Accumulation (ψs < 0): D
Ø 1st and 5th terms
Ø Since Na >> ni, 4th ~ 6th can be ignored
D Ø 1st term >> 2nd and 3rd terms
* n Depletion (ψs > 0 and Ef still below Ei):
Ø 2nd and 4th terms &
Ø Since ψs > 0, 1st term becomes small.
Veh Ø At very small ψs, 5th term < 2nd term
② (due to Na >> ni), only 2nd term
dominate called weak inversion
⑳ n Inversion (ψs > 0 and Ef above Ei)
Ø As ψs increases, 2nd and 4th term
increases.
Ø With Ef slightly above Ei, the surface is
&
inverted, but Qtotal (inverted electron
concentration) << Na (p-type bulk
FB doping), i.e. weak inversion, still 2nd
term dominates. &
/01 +, /.4 01 +,
|")*)+, | = 2%-. &'(+ ) 23 + − 1 + 4 ) 23 − −1 Ø With ψs increases to make Qtotal =
&' (+ &' Na, strong inversion occurs and 4th
1 2 3 4 5 6 term dominates.
>? B5
Ø 6" ≡ 26- = 2 GA *
N
p surface 6 C"
200
= bulkn
Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li PBE * PB
>
Strong Inversion
X = 0 = 4 4s=
Depletion
X = W= 4 =
0 no
bending
56
n Surface potential B.C.: 2(" > ( > ?
A
B6 2DE0' <9; <6 A+A 9; <6
= ! >? + − 1 + A ! >? − −1
B? 2*+ DE 0' DE
I
mobile) and negative charges at
Semiconductor (ionized acceptors, immobile)
- (4>.D < 0)
4+BC 4>.D %.7 2 2?)* >.7 !)*
!&' = − =− = =
F&' F&' F&' F&'
We EVsi
eNa ⟹ !)* =
%.7 2 =
=> Vsix Vox
2?)*
Wasi
!( − !!" = !&' + !)* W2 Usi
(X)
⟹ !( = !!" + !&' +
-
!)*T
%.7 2 %.7 2 = solve W
= !!" + +
F&' 2?)*
202 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Inversion
P < Na P = Na
n> P
n Inversion ≡ at Si/SiO2 interface, 7! ≥ 7* or
to be precisely:
E ('23)-E; E -E< ('→G)
- * 56 - ; 56
; ≥ , ⟹ .8 % ≥ .A %
(+ ≡ 2(" = 2 J;
% ;*
.
2?)* (+ 4?)* (" 4?)* HIJ; ;7
*
2H7' = = =
>.7 >.7 > = .7
Na >
-
4B + ↓s >
-
Wmax
203 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Inversion
n Inverted electrons:
Ø Reside in the channel with a distance
to the surface within 5 nm. With a
higher surface potential (by increasing
W Vg), the electrons are even closer to
the surface.
Ø It is actually a 2D electrons and by
considering quantum mechanics, the
&
inversion
peak of electron density is 1 ~ 2 nm
↑ away from the surface.
E
Depletion
- B6 2DE0' <9; <6 A+A 9; <6
=− ! >? + − 1 + A ! >? − −1
Depletion B? 2*+ DE 0' DE
charge inversion
2DE0' <6 A+A 9;
=− + ! >?
2*+ DE 0'A
dominant Numerically solving ((=)
From oxide To Si A+A 9; )H@ A+A 9;6
A ?=0 = ! >? = ! >?
0' 0'
: Decay A+A 9;6
/+CG = − 22*+ DE ! >? = − IJDE NOP(Q)
204 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li 0'
Inversion Cox
Vgxo n Electrons close to Si/SiO2 interface, where
Cox
t Ø C for electrons = .&)
COXT -inv Vg
=
a = $$- + 2!- −
/>?@ J/"AB
I#$
= $% −
Vg-Vt
/"AB
I#$
/>?@
⟹ $% = $$- + 2!- −
-
I#$
(/567 < 0) Define
205 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li Usi Vox -
Inversion ③
#I
*
strong in version I = R
7 = −M!
2 =R
-
2x(-e)
(F /))
7 = −%!
Pover
Cox = Esi
.
67 L
EF =
6= ?+
· GA
N
E 39
=
.
-
#
·
E =
QA
13 F
206 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Vg-VFB =
Usi +Vox
D Edepletion TE F deplete ,
# inversion * *T EH
As = Di + &d I total
Ef Ei =
&
surface P bending
②
.
&
-
ex
inversion
Us = PB = Na -
CTT 24B
20B =
strong inversion -mD A
&
207 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Threshold Voltage
Vg > O
Vg VFB O O = =
=
-
TVW
↓ Vox
Usi
Pm Os-
-Si
C
interface
charge
·
*
-)
E
I
&
deplete e
&
e(Vc-VB)
n Vox: Usi
4>.D 2?)* >.7 (2(" + !8 − !" )
!&' = =
F&' F&'
n Vth:
↑ ExtL
!( − !" ;:U ≠ 0 − !!" = !)* + !&'
u
Q = CV Capacitance is
&
Ramp Voltage calculated from
dQ dV I I
= I =C V = At C = = the measured
dV A
dt dt dt current and ramp
Quasi-static ↑ rate of applied
ramp voltage.
exp
-
Ec Capacitance is
AC Voltage impedence jwG calculated from the
measured impedance
1 -j æ 1 ö 1
C= = = - Imç ÷=- and frequency of
j wZ wZ è wZ ø w Im(Z ) applied AC signal.
=
low
&
Is 0 283 Ps
↓
=
=
Cox ↑ = deplete
+ inversion-
: already
C
inversion
Wmax
if Vg < 0
, O
this
hole"45p 44 ,
Esit . Csit =
frequency
si
! ! ! ()23 (depletion)
= + %&' "23 =
"-.-/0 ".1 "23 (*4
Ci :
Cox Wmax
Cox P Csi
Cdmin = Csi P
213 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Charges vs. Voltages
< O Q colomb
/
:
-Q = C .
OV area
Fl
Cox
& 7
& &
strong inversion
de Vgs
③ ↓ -
Oxide
e -
Cox
DQ = C -
OV
↓ + (+ 3
214 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li c -) (-)
D Accumulation C-V
-?@(
W4)* W 2?)* HI.7 % 56
F)* = =
W(+ W(+
Osi
-?@ −>
= 2?)* HI.7 % 56 | |
2HI
Vox
> >
= 4)* = F&' (!( − !!" − (+ )
2HI 2HI
& Why ? L *B, we sion
in .
Osi =
Cox Vox
·
1 1 1
= +
FX&X7[ F&' &F)*
1 1
= +
F&' F&' (!( − !!" − (+ ) >
&
·
2HI
1 2HI
= 1+
F&' >(!( − !!" − (+ )
e"dB ~ Cox ,
as
VgO
215 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Flat-Band Capacitance
Ci
n From slide #288, the charge can be approximated at flat-band
56
( K ≪ 1):
78 <9;6 <6" A+A 9;6 <6"
|/*+,%&%'( | = 22*+ DE0' ! >? +
DE
− 1 + A ! >? −
0' DE
−1 ↓ P-ts
A
too small
<6"
≈ 22*+ DE0'
///1−
<6"
DE
+ DE
2
+
<6"
DE
−1 = 6"
2*+ 0' < A
DE
= 6" ;"+
Ps & VFB
↑
Taylor Expansion ,
O
n -9 increases from 0 to 2-; as
.< increases from .:;
V n As -9 reaches 2-; , surface is
Wamax & 4s
2920B= strongly “inverted” to electron
qNa populated from majority holes
4s 201
=
n .< at that point is threshold volt.
Was .=
n -9 does not increase much
further beyond 2-;
n 0 ∝ -9 in depletion
n 0 → 0>?@ at .< ≥ .= (just like
as -9 → 2-; )
217 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Depletion C-V
n From slide #291:
Vox
4>.D
!( − !!" = + !)*
F&'
2?)* >.7 (+
= + (+
F&'
and
-F)* =
W4>.D
W(+
=
2?)* >.7
(+
-
e
Ø High-Frequency (HF)
Ø Deep-Depletion (DD)
·
VT
20B
n Low-Frequency: HF
Ø Inverted charges are Majority
minority carriers, so it (EN))
takes time for them to be DD
collected X
P sub + NMOs
D Ø If the measurement is under LF, the carriers can grasp the speed
and be populated, leading to increased capacitance.
Ø However, as the channel is inverted, there are still some charged
depleted at the same time, the effective capacitance is still low.
Ø Until the strong inversion occurs, most carriers are populated at the
surface to make the effective Si capacitance as infinity (thickness is
so thin ~ 1 nm), thus the effective C is Cox.
219 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li Cmin-
> Wamax-
>
&
Inversion C-V: HF
hole frequency E F = IthE
DC AL (V)
.
n High-Frequency:
Ø Even with a DC bias which
creates the inverted
MF charges at the surface, if
AC signal is too fast, the
DC(V) AC(X) inversion layer cantcatch
.
2In
T
FX&X7[ =
asi4s
.7
4HIJ; Wmax
8&' ;*
-
+ q Na
?&' ?)* > = .7
220 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
③
Inversion C-V: Deep Depletion (DD)
n Deep Depletion:
Ø If DC bias changed too fast, the
inversion layer cannot be
formed anyway.
Ø Thus, with Vg still applied
(increased), more negative
charges must be induced by
depleting the p-Si substrate
further, which is called deep
depletion.
. I hole
↑ sub (majority) >
-
e(minority deplete .
T
7
1 1 1 5A@ 0E 1
= + = + → 4=A=?B =
4=A=?B 4A@ 4CD 6A@ 6CD 5A@ 0E
~ +
6A@ 6CD
221 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li WY - Csit = Ototal ↑
Inversion C-V strong E = -hole
pairs
e
LE
-
X
ht
:.
Tat7 * 7
HE
Tr
=> .
C
DD
n What is (b)?
As AC frequency is between HF and LF, the inversion charges could catch
up the signals, leading to partial inversion layer formed, leading to Ctotal
between CLF and CHF
n Why (d) goes to (c)? WY => EX = avalaunch break down
Similar to pn junction, as Vg keep increasing, creating larger depletion E-field
and leading to impact ionization, beyond the scope of this course.
222 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Q
Effects of Cox
CV
=
(x) A F
Oxide b
-
Depletion Inversion
If
, CoxA- ,
KV .
~ Uth
224
E coxtCoxtesi
Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
<to a e
Defects in Oxide
n 4 Major types of defect charges: *
Interface trapped charges (fixed) D
S
Fixed oxide charges
Oxide trapped charges
(fixed)
(fixed)
&
D
Mobile ionic charges (mobile)
n The effects of interface trapped and fixed oxide
charges (1 and 2)
Interacting with charges near Si surface (either
inverted charges or depleted charges), leading
to the distribution of charge and surface
potential
Additional C (capacitance) induced due to the
resulting changes of trapped charge density with
the change of surface potential
Serve as recombination-generation centers or
V assisted band-to-band tunneling process,
leading to leakage current through oxide
n The effect of mobile ionic charges :
Unstable operation due to the shift of Vt
Om
225 Solid State Electronics (2023 Fall) by Prof. Jiun-Yun Li
Interface Charges
n Since Si lattice stops at the surface or
interface of SiO2/Si, there exists
localized states within bandgap, which
traps electrons or holes in these states.
n As the surface potential changes with
Vg, the distance of Fermi level relative
to the surface state changes so the
carrier occupancy varies, leading to an
extra capacitance component.
&