Showing posts with label gate leakage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gate leakage. Show all posts

Apr 3, 2024

[paper] CMOS Technology for Analog Applications in High Energy Physics

Gianluca Traversi, Luigi Gaioni, Lodovico Ratti, Valerio Re and Elisa Riceputi
Characterization of a 28 nm CMOS Technology
for Analog Applications in High Energy Physics 
in IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science
DOI: 10.1109/TNS.2024.3382348

1 INFN Pavia and Dipartimento di Ingegneria e Scienze Applicate, Uni. Bergamo, Italy
2 INFN Pavia and Dipartimento di Ingegneria Industriale e dell’Informazione, Uni. Pavia, Italy

Abstract: In the last few years, the 28 nm CMOS technology has raised interest in the High Energy Physics community for the design and implementation of readout integrated circuits for high granularity position sensitive detectors. This work is focused on the characterization of the 28 nm CMOS node with a particular focus on the analog performance. Small signal characteristics and the behavior of the white and 1/f noise components are studied as a function of the device polarity, dimensions, and bias conditions to provide guidelines for minimum noise design of front-end electronics. Comparison with data extracted from previous CMOS generations are also presented to assess the performance of the technology node under evaluation. 

Fig: Transconductance efficiency gm/ID as a function of the normalized
drain current IDL/W for NMOS (a) and PMOS (b) devices (|VDS| = 0.9 V)


Acknowledgment: The activity leading to the results presented in this paper was carried out in the framework of the Falaphel project, funded by the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics (INFN). The authors wish to thank Prof. Massimo Manghisoni (University of Bergamo) for the valuable advice which contributed to improve this work and Dr. Stefano Bonaldo (University of Padova) for fruitful discussions on the measurement results. The authors wish to thank also Barbara Pini (INFN Torino) for the wire bonding of the chips, Emilio Meroni and Nicola Cattaneo (University of Bergamo) for the characterization activity.



Oct 6, 2021

[paper] Gate Tunneling Current in MFIS NCFETs

Kshitiz Tyagi, Amit Verma, and Aloke K. Dutta
Modeling of the Gate Tunneling Current in MFIS NCFETs
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, pp. 1–8, Sept.18, 2021.
DOI: 10.1109/TED.2021.3114386
  
Department of Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur 208016, India
  
Abstract: In this article, we present a model for the gate tunneling current (GTC) in metal-ferroelectric-insulator-semiconductor (MFIS) negative capacitance FETs (NCFETs), which, to the best of our knowledge, is the first such report. The model is numerical in nature, and is developed using the Tsu–Esaki formulation, employing the Wentzel–Kramer–Brillouin (WKB) approximation, in order to estimate the transmission coefficients of the carriers through the barriers. The ferroelectric (FE) material considered is HfO2, and is modeled using the Landau phase transition theory. Simulation results reveal a remarkable nonmonotonic dependence of the GTC on the FE layer thickness, an effect that we explain through the Landau model. Furthermore, it is shown how this GTC can be reduced by orders of magnitude without changing the overall dielectric capacitance-a feature that may prove to be beneficial in low-power circuit designs. Additionally, it is seen that the GTC is a weak function of the remanent polarization and coercive field of the FE. All the model predictions are validated through a comparison with the results obtained from 2-D TCAD simulations. The novel results presented in this work should serve as a guide for detailed experimental studies on the gate current characteristics of MFIS NCFETs.
Fig: Direct (DT) and Fowler–Nordheim (FN) tunneling modes of electrons having various energies, from the Si conduction band to the gate region

Acknowledgment: The authors would like to acknowledge the help of Mr. Amol Gaidhane at Nanolab, IIT Kanpur, in setting up the TCAD simulation workbench