App - L3 MOS Capacitors1

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 49

EE-612

Lecture 4/5
MOS Capacitors
Joerg Appenzeller
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN USA
Fall 2024

Slides were developed by Prof. Mark Lundstrom

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 1


outline

1) Short review
2) Gate voltage / surface potential relation
3) The flatband voltage
4) MOS capacitance vs. voltage
5) Gate voltage and inversion layer charge

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 2


1) short review (bulk semiconductor)

log10 QS  S 
C/cm 2
QS  Qi ~ eq S / 2 kBT

QS  Qacc ~ e  q S / 2 kBT

accumulation depletion inversion

QS  QD ~  S   kBT q 

dQ
C S
dV

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 3


1) short review

qS EC
 x   0
EF
 qVG  0
EFM EV

 S VG ?

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 4


outline

1) Short review
2) Gate voltage / surface potential relation
3) The flatband voltage
4) MOS capacitance vs. voltage
5) Gate voltage and inversion layer charge

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 5


2) flat-band conditions
“flat band” Evac
• when the gate electrode Fermi level
lines up with the semiconductor
Fermi level, the bands are flat in the
semiconductor M S
EC

• this occurs at V’G = 0 when the gate VG EF


electrode workfunction equals the
EV
semiconductor workfunction
 M  S eV
 M  S V
S  0
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 6
gate voltage and S

VOX  0 S  0     0
VG   S  VOX
EC
DOX VG   S  EOX tOX
EF

EV QS
qVG  0 VG   S  tOX
 OX
QS
VG   S 
DOX  OX EOX  QS COX
 OX
COX  F/cm 2
tOX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 7
gate voltage and S

 S  VG
QS  S 
S VG   S  VOX   S 
COX
2 B
QS   2nB Si k BT eq S /2 kB T

QS   2q Si N A S

VT VG

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 8


threshold voltage, VT

 S  2 B onset of inversion

QS (2 B )
VG  VT  2 B 
COX

QS (2 B )  QD (2 B )   2q Si N A (2 B )

VT  2 B  2q Si N A (2 B ) COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 9


outline

1) Short review
2) Gate voltage / surface potential relation
3) The flatband voltage
4) MOS capacitance vs. voltage
5) Gate voltage and inversion layer charge

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 10


flatband voltage

In an ideal MOS-C, S = 0 when VG’ = VFB = 0.

In a real MOS-C, charges at the oxide-silicon


interface, in the oxide, and gate-
semiconductor workfunction differences all
shift the flatband voltage.

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 11


interface charge

VOX  0 S  0     0
EC
DOX
EF
qVG  0 EV

VG   S  EOX tOX


DOX  QS  QF  QIT  S 
VG   S  QS COX  QF COX  QIT ( S ) COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 12


charge in the oxide

DL  DR  QM

QM EC DR  QS
DL DR ER  QS OX
EF
EL  ER  QM OX
EV
VOX  xM EL  (tOX  xM )ER
QS  x M  QM
0 x M t ox x VOX  
COX  tOX  COX
QS  xM  QM
VG   S  
COX  tOX  COX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 13
distributed charge in the oxide

tOX
EC
QM   Q(x)dx
0
EF
tOX
EV
 xQ(x)dx
xM  0
tOX

0 t ox x  Q(x)dx
0
QS  xM  QM
VG   S  
COX  tOX  COX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 14
additional information
For more information on the oxide-silicon interface and the origin of
the various charges, see:
1) R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, pp. 650-671
Addison-Wesley, 1996

2) J.A. Del Alamo, EE 6720J/ 3.43J Integrated Microelectronic


Devices,Fall 2002
Lecture 22: “The Si Surface and MOS Structure”

Available from MIT OpenCourseWare:

http://ocw.mit.edu
‘Electrical Engineering and Computer Science’
‘Graduate’
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 15
gate oxides 2008
• Typically SiON with k ~ 4.6 for 15% N2 (not SiO2 with k = 3.9).

• Use of thicker oxides with higher k gives less gate leakage.

• SiON is more resistant to boron penetration.

• But, SiON degrades mobility and reliability (NBTI). Engineering the N2


profile may help.

• Typically grown in dry 02, followed by plasma nitridation and rapid


thermal anneal. Results in 10-15% N2.

• NIT ~ 5 x 1010 cm-2 (corresponds to 500 traps/mm2)


• Oxide scaling has stopped at ~1.1 nm due to gate leakage.
Introduction of high-k beginning at 45-32 nm node.
(Source: M.A. Alam, Purdue Univ, 8/06)
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 16
re-cap

QS
VG   S  VOX S 
COX
fast charge
QS  xM  QM
VG   S   QF COX  QIT ( S ) COX  
COX  tOX  COX
fixed charge charge in oxide

Under flatband conditions:  S  QS  0

 x M  QM
   QF COX  QIT ( S  0) COX
VFB 
 t  C
OX OX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 17


gate-semicond. workfunction differences
EVAC
flat band
S
 M  qm S   M
EC EC

EF VG  0 EF

EV EV

S  0
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 18
M < S
EVAC q S  0

 M  qm S
EC
S
EC
EF
EF
EV
EV

Vbi  ms  0
 
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 19
flatband voltage
VG  0 VFB  ms  Vbi  0

EC
VG  0 EC
EF VG  VFB  0
EF
EV
EV

Vbi  ms  0 S  0
 
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 20
flatband voltage

QS
recall: VG   S 
COX

VG  VG  VFB

QS
VG  VFB   S 
COX

QF QIT  S   xM  QM
VFB   ms   
COX COX  tOX  COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 21


outline

1) Short review
2) Gate voltage / surface potential relation
3) The flatband voltage
4) MOS capacitance vs. voltage
5) Gate voltage and inversion layer charge

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 22


capacitance

dQG d QS 
VG  vS sin  t CG  
dVG dVG
QS
+ VG  VFB   S 
COX
- p-Si dVG d S 1
 
d QS  d QS  COX

1 1 1
 
CG CS COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 23


capacitance

VG 1 1 1
 
CG CS COX
COX
S d QS 
CS 
CS d S

QS  S 

already
understood!
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 24
a closer look

QS
VG  VFB   S 
COX

QF QIT  S   xM  QM QIT  S 
VFB   ms      VFB 
COX COX  tOX  COX COX

1 1 1
 
CG CS  C IT  COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 25


surface state capacitance

VG
1 1 1
 
CG CS  C IT  COX
COX
S
d QS 
CS 
CSi C IT d S

d QIT
C IT 
d S

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 26


capacitance vs. voltage
CG

Cacc COX Cinv

CFB low frequency

VG

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 27


(i) accumulation capacitance

d Qacc  Qacc
CS  VG   S 
d S COX

Qacc ~ eq S /2kBT Qacc  COX VG   S 

CS 
Qacc COX VG   S 
CS 
(2k BT / q) (2kBT / q)

CS  VG   S 
  1
COX (2kBT / q)
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 28
another way to look at it

 OX
COX 
tOX
CS  Si tOX
  1
 Si COX  OX t acc
CS 
t acc

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 29


accumulation capacitance

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB
low frequency

VG

1 1 1
  Cacc  COX
Cacc CS COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 30


flat band capacitance

flat band
QS  0

dQS  Si
CS (FB)   EC
d S LD
VG  0 EF

 Si kBT EV
LD 
q2 N A

S  0
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 31
flat band capacitance

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB
low frequency

VG
VFB

1 LD 1
  CFB  COX
CFB  Si COX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 32
depletion capacitance
q S  0
QS  QD   2q Si N A S

EC
dQS  Si
CS  C D  
d S WD EF

EV
2 Si S
WD 
qN A

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 33


depletion capacitance

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB
low frequency

VG

1 WD 1
  Cdepl  COX
Cdepl  Si COX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 34
inversion capacitance

d Qinv   S  2 B
CS 
d S
EC
Qinv ~ eq S /2kBT
Qinv EF
CS 
(2k BT / q) EV

COX VG  VT 
CS 
(2kBT / q)

CS

VG  VT 
 1
COX (2kBT / q)
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 35
inversion capacitance

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB
low frequency

VG

1 1 1
  Cinv  COX
Cinv CS COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 36


EOT(electrical) in inversion

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB
low frequency

VG

 OX
Cinv  EOTelectrical  tOX
EOTelectrical

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 37


role of frequency

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB
low frequency

VG

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 38


inversion capacitance (high frequency)

QS  QD ( S )  Qi  S   S  2 B

dQS dQD ( S ) dQI  S 


CS  
d S

d S

d S
X EC

EF
dQD  Si
CS    EV
d S  S  2 B
Wdm

2 Si 2 B 
Wdm 2 B  
qN A
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 39
inversion capacitance (high frequency)

CG
Cacc COX Cinv

CFB

high frequency

VG

1 Wdm 1
  Cinv  COX
Cinv  Si COX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 40
low vs. high frequency

VG
QS  QD  Qinv
COX
CS  CS dep   CS inv 
?
X
CS dep  CS (inv)

may (or may not) be able


to follow the ac signal

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 41


low or high frequency?

n+-Si n+-Si

ni
G
2
p-Si
p-Si

typically observe hi- typically observe low-


frequency CV frequency CV

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 42


MOS CV recap

CG
Cacc COX Cinv
 Si
 Si CS inv  
CS acc   CFB tinv
t acc
low frequency
 Si
CS depl  
WD high frequency
VG

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 43


outline

1) Short review
2) Gate voltage / surface potential relation
3) The flatband voltage
4) MOS capacitance vs. voltage
5) Gate voltage and inversion layer charge

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 44


inversion charge - gate voltage relation

QS  S 
VG  VFB   S 
COX

At threshold:
QD (2 B )
VT  VFB  2 B 
COX

Beyond threshold:

VG  VT   S  2 B 
 QI ( S )  QD ( S )  QD (2 B )

COX COX
Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 45
surface potential beyond threshold

V  VG  VT 

COX
COX
 S  S  V
CS (inv) CS (inv)  COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 46


inversion charge - gate voltage relation (ii)

Beyond threshold:
QI ( S )  QD ( S ) QD (2 B )
VG  VT   S  2 B  
COX COX

COX
 S  V 0
Cinv  COX

Qi
VG  VT   QI  COX VG  VT 
COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 47


inversion charge - gate voltage relation (iii)

Beyond threshold:
QI ( S )  QD ( S ) QD (2 B )
VG  VT   S  2 B  
COX COX
QI
VG  VT   S  (neglect depletion charge variation)
COX
COX
 S  V
CS (inv)  COX QI  CG VG  VT 

COX CS (inv)
CG 
CS (inv)  COX

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 48


summary

1) Short review
2) Gate voltage / surface potential relation
3) The flatband voltage
4) MOS capacitance vs. voltage
5) Gate voltage and inversion layer charge

Appenzeller EE-612 F’24 49

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy