Physics an performance of III-V nanowire heterojunction TFETs including phonon and impurity band tails:

Similar documents
The Critical Role of Quantum Capacitance in Compact Modeling of Nano-Scaled and Nanoelectronic Devices

High Mobility Materials and Novel Device Structures for High Performance Nanoscale MOSFETs

Comparison of Ultra-Thin InAs and InGaAs Quantum Wells and Ultra-Thin-Body Surface-Channel MOSFETs

OMEN an atomistic and full-band quantum transport simulator for post-cmos nanodevices

Ultra-Scaled InAs HEMTs

Microsystems Technology Laboratories, MIT. Teledyne Scientific Company (TSC)

Electronics with 2D Crystals: Scaling extender, or harbinger of new functions?

Analysis of Band-to-band. Tunneling Structures. Title of Talk. Dimitri Antoniadis and Judy Hoyt (PIs) Jamie Teherani and Tao Yu (Students) 8/21/2012

Simple Theory of the Ballistic Nanotransistor

High-Performance Complementary III-V Tunnel FETs with Strain Engineering

arxiv: v2 [cond-mat.mes-hall] 27 Dec 2017

Nanoscale CMOS Design Issues

Tunnel-FET: bridging the gap between prediction and experiment through calibration

III-V Nanowire TFETs

EECS130 Integrated Circuit Devices

Multiple Gate CMOS and Beyond

Towards Atomistic Simulations of the Electro-Thermal Properties of Nanowire Transistors Mathieu Luisier and Reto Rhyner

III-V CMOS: What have we learned from HEMTs? J. A. del Alamo, D.-H. Kim 1, T.-W. Kim, D. Jin, and D. A. Antoniadis

Effect of the High-k Dielectric/Semiconductor Interface on Electronic Properties in Ultra-thin Channels

MSE 310/ECE 340: Electrical Properties of Materials Fall 2014 Department of Materials Science and Engineering Boise State University

Self-Aligned InGaAs FinFETs with 5-nm Fin-Width and 5-nm Gate-Contact Separation

Lecture 9. Strained-Si Technology I: Device Physics

arxiv: v2 [cond-mat.mtrl-sci] 11 Sep 2016

Courtesy of S. Salahuddin (UC Berkeley) Lecture 4

InGaAs Double-Gate Fin-Sidewall MOSFET

A final review session will be offered on Thursday, May 10 from 10AM to 12noon in 521 Cory (the Hogan Room).

Analysis of InAs Vertical and Lateral Band-to-Band Tunneling. Transistors: Leveraging Vertical Tunneling for Improved Performance

Engineering interband tunneling in nanowires with diamond cubic or zincblende crystalline structure based on atomistic modeling

Challenges in the introduction of Band to Band tunneling in semiclassical models for Tunnel-FETs. DIEGM - University of Udine, IU.

Imaginary Band Structure and Its Role in Calculating Transmission Probability in Semiconductors

MOSFET: Introduction

Performance Analysis of Ultra-Scaled InAs HEMTs

Enhanced Mobility CMOS

Classification of Solids

New Tools for the Direct Characterisation of FinFETS

New Material Design and Device Simulation Tool. Dr. Gong Kui HZWTECH

Lecture 5: CMOS Transistor Theory

Defect and Temperature Dependence of Tunneling in InAs/GaSb Heterojunctions

L ECE 4211 UConn F. Jain Scaling Laws for NanoFETs Chapter 10 Logic Gate Scaling

A Computational Model of NBTI and Hot Carrier Injection Time-Exponents for MOSFET Reliability

A Numerical Study of Scaling Issues for Schottky Barrier Carbon Nanotube Transistors

ALD high-k and higher-k integration on GaAs

Section 12: Intro to Devices

EE410 vs. Advanced CMOS Structures

How a single defect can affect silicon nano-devices. Ted Thorbeck

Ultimately Scaled CMOS: DG FinFETs?

Study of Carrier Transport in Strained and Unstrained SOI Tri-gate and Omega-gate Si Nanowire MOSFETs

Field effect = Induction of an electronic charge due to an electric field Example: Planar capacitor

30 nm In 0.7 Ga 0.3 As Inverted-type HEMT with Reduced Gate Leakage Current for Logic Applications

Lecture 3: Heterostructures, Quasielectric Fields, and Quantum Structures

Part 5: Quantum Effects in MOS Devices

Evaluation of Electronic Characteristics of Double Gate Graphene Nanoribbon Field Effect Transistor for Wide Range of Temperatures

Timing Simulation of 45 nm Technology and Analysis of Gate Tunneling Currents in 90, 65, 45, and 32 nm Technologies

The Pennsylvania State University. Kurt J. Lesker Company. North Carolina State University. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company 1

Understanding the effect of n-type and p-type doping in the channel of graphene nanoribbon transistor

Quantum Phenomena & Nanotechnology (4B5)

Fundamentals of the Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor

Components Research, TMG Intel Corporation *QinetiQ. Contact:

SCHOTTKY BARRIER MOSFET DEVICE PHYSICS FOR CRYOGENIC APPLICATIONS

Stretching the Barriers An analysis of MOSFET Scaling. Presenters (in order) Zeinab Mousavi Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick Aseem Jain Jaspreet Wadhwa

CHAPTER 5 EFFECT OF GATE ELECTRODE WORK FUNCTION VARIATION ON DC AND AC PARAMETERS IN CONVENTIONAL AND JUNCTIONLESS FINFETS

(a) (b) Supplementary Figure 1. (a) (b) (a) Supplementary Figure 2. (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)

Long Channel MOS Transistors

A Multi-Gate CMOS Compact Model BSIMMG

ESE 570: Digital Integrated Circuits and VLSI Fundamentals

MOS Transistor Theory

Chapter 3 Properties of Nanostructures

Extensive reading materials on reserve, including

Dissipative Transport in Rough Edge Graphene Nanoribbon. Tunnel Transistors

Quantum-size effects in sub-10 nm fin width InGaAs finfets

The Prospects for III-Vs

P. R. Nelson 1 ECE418 - VLSI. Midterm Exam. Solutions

CMPEN 411 VLSI Digital Circuits. Lecture 03: MOS Transistor

Enhancement-mode quantum transistors for single electron spin

Semiconductor Physics Problems 2015

ESE 570: Digital Integrated Circuits and VLSI Fundamentals

Microelectronics Part 1: Main CMOS circuits design rules

MOS Transistors. Prof. Krishna Saraswat. Department of Electrical Engineering Stanford University Stanford, CA

Suppression of Gate-Induced Drain Leakage by Optimization of Junction Profiles in 22 nm and 32 nm SOI nfets

The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School DEVICE AND ARCHITECTURE CO-DESIGN FOR ULTRA-LOW POWER LOGIC USING EMERGING TUNNELING-BASED

AS MOSFETS reach nanometer dimensions, power consumption

EE115C Winter 2017 Digital Electronic Circuits. Lecture 3: MOS RC Model, CMOS Manufacturing

Electrostatics of Nanowire Transistors

Drift-diffusion model for single layer transition metal dichalcogenide field-effect transistors

FLCC Seminar. Spacer Lithography for Reduced Variability in MOSFET Performance

Semiconductor Physics fall 2012 problems

Indium arsenide quantum wire trigate metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor

Semiconductor Nanowires: Motivation

Gate Carrier Injection and NC-Non- Volatile Memories

EE130: Integrated Circuit Devices

Universal TFET model implementation in Verilog-A

ADVANCED BOUNDARY CONDITION METHOD IN QUANTUM TRANSPORT AND ITS APPLICATION IN NANODEVICES. A Dissertation. Submitted to the Faculty


Performance Comparison of Graphene Nanoribbon FETs. with Schottky Contacts and Doped Reservoirs

1 Name: Student number: DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS AND PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND. Fall :00-11:00

SPCC Department of Bio-Nano Technology and 2 Materials Science and Chemical Engineering, Hanyang University, Ansan, 15588, Republic of Korea.

MOS Transistor Properties Review

Technology Development for InGaAs/InP-channel MOSFETs

S=0.7 [0.5x per 2 nodes] ESE370: Circuit-Level Modeling, Design, and Optimization for Digital Systems. Today. Scaling ITRS Roadmap

Journal of Electron Devices, Vol. 18, 2013, pp JED [ISSN: ]

Transcription:

Physics an performance of III-V nanowire heterojunction TFETs including phonon and impurity band tails: An atomistic mode space NEGF quantum transport study. A. Afzalian TSMC, Leuven, Belgium (Invited) A. Afzalian 1

Outline Motivations Mode Space approach for full band atomistic simulation Scaling perspective for ideal III-V broken gap nanowire TFETs Impact of phonon scattering and impurity band tails Conclusions A. Afzalian 2

Concept Availability of carrier filtering through BTBT Benefits Why III-V NW GAA Heterojunction TFETs (HTFETs)? Homojunction TFET Steep swing for low power (LP) operation (V DD < 0.5V) S ON-state Long L tunneling Low I ON D Broken gap III-V heterojunction TFET (HTFET): High I ON S InAs/GaSb ON-state Short L tunneling High I ON D Challenges Low I ON due to BTBT in the path of the current) High Quality material, interface, and d scaling for SS < 60 and low leakage IEDM 2016 Scaled d: Key for improved electrostatic control and SS 3

Experimental III-V NW HTFETs On-Current I on ( A/ m) 100 10 1 InAs/GaSb V DD = 0.3 V [3] [4] n-tfet I off = 100 na/ m [1] InGaAs/InAs V DD = 0.5 V InA s/ Si V DD = 1 V GaAsSb/InGaAs V DD = 0.2 V [2] InAs/GaSb V DD = 0.3 V 0.1 10 20 30 40 50 Junction Size (nm) [5] [1] Memisevic, IEEE EDL 2016 [2] Dey, IEEE EDL, 2013 [3] Tomioka, VLSI Symp, 2012 [4] Fujimatsu, IPRM, 2012 [5] Zhao, IEDM, 2014 trends of improved I ON with d scaling sub 10 nm wires? III-V ptfet? 4

Computational challenge to assess performances of sub 10 nm III-V NW HTFETs d 6 scaling d 4 scaling BTBT + quantum confinement + heterojunction : Most expansive full band (e.g. Tight binding) quantum transport (e.g. NEGF) models NW: Full 3D simulation (3D geometry) (NW GAA (3D) time/iv 100 planar DG (2D) 5

Mode Space approach for full band atomistic simulation A. Afzalian et al. IEDM 2016 250 speedup <<d 6 scaling <RAM/10 <<d 4 scaling BTBT: Most expansive full band (e.g. Tight binding) quantum transport (e.g. NEGF) models Full 3D simulation (3D geometry) We have developed an efficient, accurate and innovative full-band mode space (MS) NEGF technique 6

Accuracy of Atomistic Mode Space (MS) technique A. Afzalian et al. VLSI-TSA 2016 (invited) 10 orbitals/atom MS vs. RS GaSb source InAs channel d = 5.45 nm InAs drain RS MS InAs / GaSb NW TFET [100] InAs/GaSb NW HTFET with > 100.000 atoms MS Speed up >150 Error <1% A. Afzalian 7

MS principle: Hamiltonian (H) size reduction by an incomplete basis transformation Reducing H size means loss of information Equivalent in a desired (smaller) energy range E-k points sampling to construct the MS basis (o) BS obtained using optimized MS basis ( ) vs. RS basis [100] InAs NW slab, d = 5.45 nm, sp 3 s * _so) MS H size is 5% of RS one Blue: Full Model (Real space (RS)) Red: reduced rank Model (Mode space (MS)) A. Afzalian et al. IWCE 2015 8

Unphysical branches Problem with MS Tight-binding (TB) Traditional effective masslike MS basis Optimized MS basis ok (A. Afzalian et al. IWCE 2015) Tailor extra basis vectors* MS Speed up >150 Error <1% Blue: Full Model (Real space (RS)) Red: reduced rank Model (Mode space (MS)) This study: >50 MS bases, speedup up to 10,000 *Mil nikov et al.,prb 85, 035317 (2012), A. Afzalian et al. arxiv:1705.00909 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (2017) 9

Reduction ratio (r) vs d Initial InAs MS bases d = 5.45 nm d = 18.2 nm Averaged r vs. d InAs/GaSb NW ntfet sp 3 s * SO Optimized InAs MS bases d = 5.45 nm d = 18.2 nm N atoms d 2 n modes << d 2 r=5% r= 1% # of UM s and challenge to clean MS bases: d r and speed up improves with d (A. Afzalian et al. arxiv:1705.00909 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (2017))

MS performances vs. d (A. Afzalian et al. SSDM 2017, invited, A. Afzalian et al. arxiv:1705.00909 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (2017)) InAs-GaSb NW ntfet 10.000 speedup d = 18.2 nm 1.080.000 atoms!! <<d 6 scaling sp 3 s * _so d = 5.5 nm 100.000 atoms RAM/100 <<d 4 scaling r and MS performances d MS enabled d, #atoms NW ever atomistically simulated.

Validation to fabricated III-V InAs NW MOSFET: (A. Afzalian et al. SSDM 2017, invited, A. Afzalian et al. arxiv:1705.00909 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (2017)) [100] d = 5.5 nm. L = 15 nm. [111] d =12 nm. L = 300 nm. sp 3 s*_so basis MOCVD grown InAs wire (T. Vasen et al. VLSI 2016) (a) (b) S InAs NW Gate D V D = 0.5V InAs NWs InAs Sub. (c) SiO 2 Back-Gate GAA Flow NW Growth High-k ALD Gate Metal Sputter NW Transfer to SiO 2 sub S/D Litho Gate Metal Wet Etch High-k Etch S/D Deposition + Liftoff Gate Pad Litho+Dep.+Liftoff Post Metallization Anneal Good Match with measured BTBT current Ballistic ratio (d) of 75% Support experimental program development

Scaling perspective for III-V broken gap nanowire TFETs 13

Simulated ideal (n)tfet devices: For each L, optimization on d, channel orientation, doping profiles, pockets, drain underlap Channel orientation:[100], [110], [111] d = 4 7 nm InAs I - channel InAs N + Drain N D ~1-10x10 18 cm -3 P GaSb P + Source N S N I Underlap (I) L UND N InAs N+ Pocket N P, L P Perf. boost: 2-3 Gate length L = 10-25 nm Gate oxide 1.816 nm of Al 2 O 3 EOT planar 0.7 nm, Dit=0 Tight Binding basis = sp 3 s* with SO (SO: spin orbit coupling, 10 orbitals /atom) 14

Optimized LP GAA NW InAs/GaSb TFETs vs. Si nmosfet ntfet TFET: V DD =0.3V MOSFET: V DD =0.45V ptfet Si nmos For each L, optimization on d, channel orientation, doping profiles, pockets, drain underlap. TFET performance degrades quickly for L < 20 nm A. Afzalian et al. IEDM 2016 15

Strong TFET performance degradation with L: Short channel effects: ntfet TFET: V DD =0.3V MOSFET: V DD =0.45V ptfet Si nmos For each L, full optimization 1) Increased Source-to-drain tunneling (SDT) at shorter L reduces design window (channel orientation,drain doping) 16

E (ev) Source to drain tunneling (SDT) Optimized [100] ntfets ntfet, L = 12 nm, @V G = 70 mv SDT degrades SS I ON E V-GaSb J(E) [A/eV] SS x (nm) SDT degrades TFET performances (SS -> I ON ) for L 20 nm Mitigation: L eff ( N D, underlap) 17

SDT vs. channel orientation: ntfet L = 20 nm: less SDT L = 12 nm: more SDT SDT [111]/[110]: T ON (Smaller E geff, lower m*) +50% I ON at L=20nm [100] : less SDT, but T ON : best at L = 12 nm A. Afzalian 18

SDT vs. channel orientation: ptfet L = 20 nm L = 12 nm [111]: best performance (+ 30% I ON ) at L = 20 nm [100] : best at L = 12 nm A. Afzalian 19

Drain engineering: trade-off *A. Afzalian et al. VLSI-TSA 2016 (invited), A. Afzalian et al. arxiv:1705.00909 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (2017) Balanced N D and optimized drain underlap for maximizing I ON at a given V D (V DD ) and I OFF spec. OFF leakage improves with N D ON current improves with N D Physical limiting mechanisms: Ambipolar current, SDT Physical limiting mechanism: on-current saturation A. Afzalian 20

E (ev) E (ev) Drain engineering: on-current saturation* *A. Afzalian et al. VLSI-TSA 2016 (invited), A. Afzalian et al. arxiv:1705.00909 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (2017) N D = 5x10 18 V G = 0.45 V N D = 1x10 18 E Fs E Cch DV G N D = 1x10 18 E Cd E Fd V D = 0.35 V E Cs x (nm) V G = 0.35 V 21 I ON saturates as Tunneling windows does not increase with V G : Max. windows is E Fs E Fd = V D (ev) smaller if S or D band edges are non-degenerated (e.g. N D is too low) E Fs E Vs E Cch E Vch x (nm) N D = 1x10 18 E Fd 5x10 18

Optimal doping vs. L@V DD = 0.3V n, L =20 [100] n, L =12 p, L =20 SDT/I ON sat p, L =12 Increased SDT at L = 12 nm reduces optimal drain doping penalty on I ON : Ptfet is most affected: VB-DoS D I ON saturation 22

Strong TFET performance degradation with L: Short channel effects: d = 5.5 d = 6.5 Si nmos d = 5.5 d = 5.5 d = 5.5 Optimal d [nm] 2) d scaling below ~5.5 nm is not effective for TFET (especially for ptfet) 23

ptfet Optimally balanced InAs/GaSb TFET transport properties @d ~5.5 nm L = 20 nm L = 12 nm [100], [111] d : SS ( Electrostatic control, m*, DoS, E geff ) d : on-regime : Area, T ON ( m*, E Geff ), I ON saturation (DoS D ) Optimal performances at d ~ 5.5 nm both for L = 20 and 12 nm 24

Energy delay LP benchmark I OFF = 50 pa/ m p n p L = 20Si V DD = 0.5 V V DD = 0.3 V L = 20 L = 12 Si Including extrinsic of an unloaded inverter cell with 3 NW/device 25

Impact of Fundamental sources of non-idealities: A. Afzalian 26

TFET: Electron-Phonon scattering: e-ph scattering is an intrinsic/ fundamental source of non ideality. Inelastic collisions may strongly degrade TFET BTBT filtering action What is the impact on SS and I ON? Strong inelastic coupling ( 5) Ballistic (close to onset) J(E) [A/eV] E C-InAs J(E) E V-GaSb E C-InAs? n + pocket Weak inelastic coupling ( 1) J(E) E C-InAs A. Afzalian 27

InAs/GaSb TFET: Electron-Phonon scattering (A. Afzalian et al. SSDM 2017, invited) SS and performance not strongly degraded (< 10 %) for low power CMOS application (weak inelastic coupling ( 1)) Using efficient Mode Space Form Factor Method*: Use equivalent MS expression directly. Efficient in case of local scattering. in dq iq x ( x x ) 2 1 1 n v', kl v, mm' ( x1, x2, E) e M q Nq 1 2 Gv' kl ( x1, x2, E q ) Fv, mm' ( x1, x2, q 3 t ) (2. ) 2 2 v', k, l q ballistic --o-- e-ph Acoustic, optical and polar optical (local) phonons Local Form factor*: simplifies as product of MS basis vectors F v', kl v, mm' v, m v, m' v', k v', l ( y, z; x ). ( y, z; x ). ( y, z; x ). ( y, z; x ) dydz ( x1 ) 1 1 1 1 *A. Afzalian JAP 110, 094517 (2011)

Discrete Impurity (DI) Band tails: (DI = main source of band tails in doped crystalline semiconductor*) Band tails* DI s create non-uniform spatial potential profile Spatially varying onset of tunneling What is the impact on SS and I ON? *P. Van Mieghem, Rev. Mod. Phys. 64 (1992) 755 p+ ~ 5 DI Smooth DI center DI star5 GaSb S p+ ~ 5 DI InAs Pocket n+ ~ 5 DI E VGaSb E C-InAs n+ ~ 5 DI DI DI DI center star5 diagonal DI s simulated in an atomistic fashion on atomic sites** 29 **A. Afzalian et al., EDL (2012) 33 (9) 1228

Energy delay LP benchmark I OFF = 50 pa/ m Si V DD = 0.5 V Including e-ph + DI: TFET Performance advantage for LP is not fundamentally lost ( EDP 20%) TFET ideal e-ph+di V DD = 0.3 V Si V DD = 0.3 V Including extrinsic of an unloaded inverter cell with 3 NW/device 30

Conclusions Capability to simulate in an atomistic fashion million atoms III-V NWs using an innovative and efficient TB mode space (MS) NEGF technique. In-depth atomistic study of scaling potential of III-V GAA NW HTFET. n- and ptfet performance best above L =20 nm (d= 5.5 nm, [111] orientation). TFET @ L =20 nm, V DD = 0.3 V can deliver same speed as Si @V DD = 0.5V but with ~3 power reduction. @L =12 nm (LP ITRS 2.0 HGAA beyond 5 nm node), [100] orientation best but 3 I ON and 2.4 EDP performance degradation vs. the 20 nm GAA design. Scattering and DI band tails do not fundamentally degrade steep slope and LP performance advantage of III-V NW HTFET. A. Afzalian 31

Acknowledgements Experimental III-V NW device: P. Ramvall, T. Vasen, M. Holland and M. Passlack (TSMC), C. Thelander, K.A. Dick, L.-E. Wernersson (Lund University). Support with NEMO5 coding: D. Lemus and T. Kubis (Purdue University). Thank you for your attention! aryan_afzalian@tsmc.com (Invited) 32