Device 3D. 3D Device Simulator. Nano Scale Devices. Fin FET

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Device 3D 3D Device Simulator Device 3D is a physics based 3D device simulator for any device type and includes material properties for the commonly used semiconductor materials in use today. The physical phenomenon that can be simulated self consistently with the semiconductor equations include photon absorption, photon emission, bulk and interface traps, magnetic fields, self heating, ionizing radiation strikes, hot carrier and tunneling effects. This allows simulation of devices such as solar cells, CMOS sensors, LEDs, TFTs, EPROMs, aggressive technology CMOS and power devices. Device 3D uses a simple, intuitive and flexible syntax and runtime environment together with excellent 2D and 3D visualization tools compliment this powerful product. Nano Scale Devices Fin FETs, nano wire FETs and standard FETs at aggressive technology nodes all can be simulated using Device 3D. Fin FET Fin FET example created directly using Device 3D syntax, showing doping electron distribution and IV characteristics using both driftdiffusion and Bohm Quantum Potential 3D models. Id/Vg characteristics comparing drift-diffusion and Bohm Quantum Potential (BQP) solutions. Phosphorus concentration for a FinFET device. Electron concentration showing depletion region under the gate.

Nano Wire FET A recent addition to the Quantum modelling capability has enabled simulation of the strong quantum confinement effect in quantum wire devices. To model the effects of quantum confinement, Quantum 3D allows a selfconsistent solution of the 1D or arbitrary shape 2D Schrodinger and 3D Poisson equations. Contours of electron wavefunctions on the surface of 3D structures, found by 1D (left) and 2D (above) Schrodinger equation solved self-consistently with 3D Poisson equation. Device schematic (left), isosurface of total current density (right) and isosurface of electron density (middle) of a 3D silicon nanowire FET with flared-up source and drain regions, computed with coupled mode space NEGF approach. Schematics (left) and I-V characteristics (right) of a Si nanowire transistor with uniform channel cross-section, computed with uncoupled mode space NEGF approach.

Aggressive Geometry 50nm MOSFET In this example, the 50nm MOSFET structure was created using Victory Process. Victory Process is a process simulator that allows creation of Device 3D compatible structures following arbitrary shape mask layout driven 3D process simulation. The mask set, process simulated shape, converted Device 3D structure and electrical characteristics are shown below. Mask layout. Process simulated structure. Converted Atlas structure with and without gate spacer. Cross section of net doping. IV characteristics for different channel doping.

Quantum Well Analysis Analysis of bound states and wave functions are possible in 3D quantum devices. Here, analysis for a single quantum well and a triple quantum well design are shown as examples. SQW Analysis 3QW Analysis GaN/InGaN/GaN single Quantum Well (QW) and delta sandwiched QW quantization. Memory Devices Hot carrier injection and tunnelling models allow the injection of charge on to floating gates, necessary for the simulation of memory devices. An EPROM example is shown below. EPROM potential distribution shown as an isosurface plot. EPROM electron concentration. IV characteristics before and after programing. Floating gate integrated charge as a function of time.

Opto-Electronics Ray tracing, optical absorption and optically generated carriers are solved self consistently with all other semiconductor equations allowing simulation of light absorbing devices such as photo-diodes and CMOS sensors. Photon generation equations also allow simulation of optically emitting devices such as light emitting diodes (LEDs). Photodiode Simulation InP/InGaAsP/InGaAs/InP photo diode. Dark and illuminated anode current versus anode voltage at 1.55µm. CMOS Simulation Advanced 3D ray tracing capability of Luminous3D can be used to evaluate spatial resolution and crosstalk issues in imaging arrays. CMOS sensor potential distribution.

GaN LED Simulation Radiative Recombination Rate distributions. Thin Film Transistors The electrical characteristics of thin film transistors (TFTs) are dominated by the existence of bulk and surface traps. In Device 3D these defects can be described as a continuum of defects throughout the bandgap, or can be specified individually. The insulating substrates that these devices are fabricate on (usually glass), are often poor conductors of heat. The additional modelling of self heating effects can often have a considerable effect on device electrical characteristics. Transfer characteristics for a poly-si TFT. Octagonal array of TFT elements. The contacts and the SiO 2 layers have been made transparent so that the amorphous Si element can be seen more clearly. Id/Vd characteristics with and without lattice temperature modeling.

Power Devices Understanding the operation of power devices is an excellent application for 3D TCAD device modelling. Power devices, such as thyristors and triacs etc, often have electrical characteristics dominated by semiconductor phenomenon that occurs deep in the bulk silicon of the device which is difficult to probe directly with measurements. 3D TCAD simulation allows analysis of exactly what is going on throughout the whole device and any time instant during switching transients etc. Below is an example of a UMOS HexFET simulation. Potential distribution for a UMOS HexFET. Id/Vg characteristics for a UMOS HexFET. Adding External Circuit Elements Power devices are often tested and characterized with other connected passive load elements. Here a bipolar transistor is tested with lumped elements attached to it s terminals. Maximum device temperature and base current as a function of time. Mixed device and circuit element simulation.

Self Heating A number of power devices heat up considerably during normal operation. Simulation of self heating effects can detect possible hot spots in your design. Here a simple resistor is used to demonstrate heating effects. Self heating effects can be modeled for any arbitrary device. Temperature plot at the surface of the passivation oxide due to thermal heating of a buried interconnect aluminum line External Heat Flow Once the thermal output of the power devices has been analyzed at a device level, individual or numerous power devices sharing a common heat sink or package can be analyzed as simple heat sources using the Thermal3D simulator in order to gauge how hot the package will get after final installation. GaN HEMT device fabricated onto a Silicon Carbide substrate mounted onto a copper heat sink. CALIFORNIA sales@silvaco.com JAPAN jpsales@silvaco.com HEADQUARTERS 4701 Patrick Henry Drive, Bldg. 2 Santa Clara, CA 95054 USA Phone: 408-654-4309 Fax: 408-496-6080 MASSACHUSETTS TEXAS 408-567-1000 masales@silvaco.com 978-323-7901 txsales@silvaco.com 512-418-2929 EUROPE eusales@silvaco.com KOREA krsales@silvaco.com TAIWAN twsales@silvaco.com SINGAPORE sgsales@silvaco.com WWW.SILVACO.COM Rev 120213_07