Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byScarlett Watts Modified over 9 years ago
1
The George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Science Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering ECE122 – Lab 7 MOSFET Parameters and Scaling Effects Jason Woytowich Ritu Bajpai Last revised on November 1, 2007
2
CMOS Scaling Devices are constantly shrinking in an effort to increase the number of devices on a chip. The state-of-the-art mass production is moving into ~65nm. Clock speeds are scaled up to increase performance.
3
Effects on the device Short-channel effects on V T : If we reduce the channel length beyond a certain limit the source and drain depletion regions begin to affect the threshold voltage. Velocity saturation: With devices getting smaller they are exposed to high electric fields leading to drift velocity reaching its upper bound.
4
Effects on the device Gate leakage current (IG):The gate dielectric is needed to prevent charge from passing from the gate to channel of a MOSFET. All insulators, when sufficiently thin, allow some electrons, and thus some current, to pass through due to quantum mechanical effects.
5
Effects on the device Sub threshold current (ID): This is the current flowing through the transistor when it is nominally off (I off ). Ideally we want this current to be low. But like I on it is also proportional to (V GS -V T ).
6
Effects on the circuit Decreased supply voltage: As supply voltage is reduced, the charge stored will be small. With larger subthreshold leakage current, coupling noise etc is will be a challenge to get circuits to operate properly. Increased role of wiring resistance, inductance and capacitance.
7
Effects on the circuit Interconnect coupling: Wires are getting thinner but not decreasing as rapidly in height. This makes them look like tall thin conductors which form parallel plate capacitors. IR Drop: Narrow wires have a non negligible resistance. Electromigration: This involves migration of metal molecules due to high current densities and narrow line widths leading to a short or open in the metal line.
8
Spice MODELS The standard spice model is not sufficient to capture all of these effects. There have been many upgrades to it in order to increase it’s effectiveness. Level 1~5 Parameters Level 49~100 Parameters
9
Review of Spice Parameters.model nmos nmos Level=1 + Vto=1.0Kp=3.0E-5Gamma=0.35 + Phi=0.65Lambda=0.02Tox=0.1u + Nsub=1.0E+15Nss=1.0E+10Ld=0.01u + Tpg=1.00Uo=700.0Af=1.2 + Kf=1.0E-26Is=1.0E-15Js=1.0E-8 + Pb=0.75Cj=2.0E-4Mj=0.5 + Cjsw=1.00E-9Mjsw=0.33Fc=0.5 + Cgbo=2.0E-10Cgdo=4.00E-11Cgso=4.00E-11 + Rd=10.0Rs=10.0Rsh=30.0
10
The “REAL” Data http://www.mosis.org/cgi- bin/cgiwrap/umosis/swp/params/ibm- 018/t67j_7wl_5lm_ma-params.txt file will serve as the real datahttp://www.mosis.org/cgi- bin/cgiwrap/umosis/swp/params/ibm- 018/t67j_7wl_5lm_ma-params.txt Save the above file as.md file. Make changes so as to correspond to the tanner.md format.
11
The test setup
12
The simulation A DC sweep of 100 points of VDS from 0 to 1.8V A Secondary sweep of 10 points of VGS from 0 to 1.8V.dc source VDS lin 100 0 1.8 sweep source VGS lin 10 0 1.8.include "C:\Documents and Settings\Student\Desktop\ECE122_Lab7\ml1_typ.md“ *replace with your path name *.include "C:\Documents and Settings\Student\Desktop\ECE122_Lab7\IBM_018u.md“// put your pathname.print dc i(M1,D) * Main circuit: MosfetTest M1 D G Gnd Gnd NMOS L=180n W=1u AD=66p PD=24u AS=66p PS=24u VGS G Gnd 5.0 VDS D Gnd 5.0 * End of main circuit: MosfetTest
15
Analysis and Results Show the I D vs. V DS characteristic for the spice level 1 and for the Mosis transistor data. Why do you think the two characteristic curves are different?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.