In recent years, the demand for power sensitive designs has grown significantly due to the fast growth of battery-operated portable applications. As the technology scaling continues unabated, subthreshold device design has gained a lot of attention due to the low-power and ultra-low-power consumption in various applications. Design of low-power high-performance submicron and deep submicron CMOS devices and circuits is a big challenge. Short-channel effect is a major challenge for scaling the gate length down and below 0.1 μm. Detailed review and potential solutions for prolonging CMOS as the leading information technology proposed by various researchers in the past two decades are presented in this paper. This paper attempts to categorize the challenges and solutions for low-power and low-voltage application and thus provides a roadmap for device designers working in the submicron and deep submicron region of CMOS devices separately.
1. Introduction
Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field-Effect-Transistor (MOSFET) has been the major device for integrated circuits over the past two decades. With technology advancement and the high scalability of the device structure, silicon MOSFET-based VLSI circuits have continually delivered performance gain and/or cost reduction to semiconductor chips for data processing and memory functions. A lot of research has gone into device design over the last thirty years, but the evolution of process technologies brings new obstacles as well as new opportunities to device designers. Continuous CMOS scaling has been the main driving factor of silicon technology advancement to improve the performance. Design of low-power high-performance CMOS devices and circuits is a big challenge. The process parameters in low power design are channel length, oxide thickness, threshold voltage, and doping concentration in the channel. As the technology is scaled down, process parameter variations have become severe problem for low-power design. The low-power design technique should be such that it is less sensitive to the process parameter variations. As technology scales down, the variations of these process parameters are expected to be significant in future generations. As a result, the yield of the circuit will be less. The variation of leakage power and delay in the transistors on a given die are different for different low-power design techniques. The role of threshold voltage (Vth) and subthreshold swing (S) has become increasingly important with VLSI applications emphasizing on low-voltage, low-power, and high-speed design. Short-channel effect is a major challenge for scaling the gate length down and below 0.1 μm. The dependence of Vth on channel length is stronger as compared to other factors that also cause Vth fluctuation at small device dimension such as random dopant distribution [1]. The gate oxide thickness in recent process technologies has approached the limit when direct tunneling starts to play a significant role in both off-state and on-state MOSFET transistor operation modes. This phenomenon, in addition to subthreshold leakage, results in a dramatic total standby leakage power dissipation. Thus, better design strategies to control the total leakage power are necessary. It is well known that gate tunneling currents are highly sensitive to the voltage variation across the gate oxide. Supply voltage attenuation can give significant reduction in gate leakage power consumption. Circuit design techniques to mitigate the impact of gate leakage would be much less efficient than the use of high-k material since gate leakage is a stronger function of process-induced oxide thickness fluctuation as compared to change in Vdd and threshold voltage. In addition to the gate-oxide scaling issue, higher doping concentrations would degrade subthreshold swing (S). Furthermore, Vdd scaling necessitates threshold voltage (Vth) reduction, which exponentially increases IOFF. IOFF reduction is critical where chips are often in standby mode of operation, and even during active operation, acceptable IOFF is required since leakage power consumption is rapidly increasing at a much faster rate compared to dynamic power [2]. Few front ends of line challenges faced by transistors in the deep submicron and ultradeep submicron region include diminishing Vgs-Vth, larger Vth/Vdd, thin junctions drive dopant levels to saturation, dopant loss and statistical dopant fluctuation on small geometry devices increase device variability, and increase in channel doping concentration to control DIBL reduces carrier mobility while increasing body effect, gate oxide scaling slowing as it approaches the monolayer thickness of SiO2 [3]. This paper is divided into three main sections. Section 2 discusses the CMOS scaling trends facing the challenges due to the feature size, supply voltage, threshold voltage, and oxide thickness. Section 3 focuses on the limitations of technology scaling, and therefore the potential solutions to be sought to face the above challenges are dealt with in Section 4. Section 5 gives the complete roadmap to device designers working below 0.1 micron region in tabular form and thus concludes the paper.
2. CMOS Scaling Trends
Device scaling is based upon simple principles; by reducing the sizes of devices and interconnects, density, and power, the speed and performance of transistors can be improved. This paper mainly focuses on the
scaling of threshold voltage with feature size,
scaling of gate oxide thickness with feature size,
scaling of supply voltage with feature size.
With technology scaling, the MOS device channel length is reduced. When the dimensions of a MOSFET are scaled down, both the voltage level and the gate-oxide thickness are also reduced. The supply voltage Vdd has been scaled down in order to keep the power consumption under control. The transistor Vth had to be scaled to maintain a high drive current and achieve performance improvement. In a given technology generation, since the source-body and drain-body depletion widths are predefined based on the dopings, the rate at which the barrier height increases as a function of distance from the source into the channel is constant. Therefore, when the channel length is reduced, the barrier for the majority carriers to enter the channel also is reduced as indicated in Figure 1. This results in reduced threshold voltage. In short channel transistor, the barrier height and therefore the threshold voltage are a strong function of the drain voltage [4]. As Figure 1 indicates, the barrier reduces as the drain voltage is increased.
Channel length reduces the barrier for the majority of carriers to enter the channel [4].
The gate material has long been polysilicon with silicon dioxide as the insulator between the gate and the channel; aggressive scaling of CMOS technology in recent years has reduced the silicon dioxide (SiO2) gate dielectric thickness below 20 Å (see Figure 3) [6]. In 90 nm, the gate oxide consists of about 5 atomic layers equivalent to 1.2 nm in thickness. The thinner the gate oxide, the higher the transistor current and consequently the switching speed. The sustained scaling process in the subnanometer regime (<25 nm) requires ultimately scaling down of the gate oxide thickness and increasing channel/body doping densities to overcome severe short-channel effects [2].
The scaling trend of power supply voltage (Vdd), threshold voltage (Vth), and gate-oxide thickness (Tox) as a function of CMOS channel length [5] is shown in Figure 2. When Vdd is reduced towards shorter channel lengths, it becomes increasingly difficult to satisfy both the performance and the off current requirements. Tradeoff between leakage current and circuit speed stems due to subthreshold nonscalability. For this reason and for compatibility with the standardized power supply voltage of earlier generation systems, the general trend is that Vdd has not been scaled down in proportion to L and Vth has not been scaled down in proportion to Vdd as is shown in Figure 2. Aggressive scaling of CMOS technology in recent years has reduced the silicon dioxide gate dielectric thickness below 20 Å.
Scaling trend of power supply voltage (Vdd), threshold voltage (Vth), and gate oxide thickness (Tox) as a function of CMOS channel length [5].
Scaling of CMOS technology versus gate dielectric thickness below 20 Å [6].
The effect of important factors like the gate oxide thickness and the gate leakage on CMOS scaling is quantified and is shown in Figure 3.
In Table 1, scaling relations are shown along with the scaling behavior of some of the other important physical parameters.
Technology scaling rules for three cases [8].
Physical parameters
Constant electric field scaling factor
Generalized scaling factor
Generalized selective scaling factor
Channel length, insulator thickness
1/α
1/α
1/αd
Wiring width, channel width
1/α
1/α
1/αw
Electric field in device
1
ε
ε
Voltage
1/α
ε/α
ε/αd
On-current per device
1/α
ε/α
ε/αd
Doping
α
εα
εαd
Area
1/α2
1/α2
1/αw2
Capacitance
1/α
1/α
1/αw
Gate delay
1/α
1/α
1/αd
Power dissipation
1/α2
ε 2/α2
ε 2/αwαd
Power density
1
ε 2
ε 2αw/αd
Scaling trends in [7] highlight that new device structures need to be judged on parasitic resistance and capacitance more than on channel transport properties. The sudden rise in parasitics at the end of the roadmap can be qualitatively understood as resulting from the space between neighboring devices decreasing to tens of nanometers since the source/drain and contact size need to be aggressively scaled to support the increased density in the absence of gate-length scaling. Figure 4 depicts the typical design rules of planar Si transistors for the 32-nm technology node. It can be seen that the source/drain contact and the gate are only tens of nanometers apart, which is undesirable in terms of parasitic resistance. Such small contact size leads to higher contact resistance and contact-to-gate capacitance. The parasitic resistance and capacitance are now becoming comparable and are on course to become even larger than the intrinsic device resistance and capacitance.
Design rules of planar Si transistors for the 32 nm technology node [7].
3. Challenges in the Submicron and Deep Submicron Region
To understand the behavior of sub-100-nm devices, numerous of studies have been conducted in nanoscale MOSFETs. The main challenges encountered by bulk MOSFETS in the submicron and deep submicron region for low-power, low-voltage applications are the short-channel effects, gate-induced drain leakage, threshold voltage roll-off, DIBL, hot carrier effects, polydepletion effects, BTBT, and so forth. These are discussed in detail in next subsections.
3.1. Gate-Leakage Current
The increased gate-leakage current is a well-recognized challenge to continued MOSFET scaling. It is the current flowing into the gate of the transistor also called the tunneling current. With current process technology parameters, gate leakage has increased to more than double the subthreshold current and will continue to increase at a much higher rate mandating the use of high-k materials other than silicon dioxide to enable the use of thicker oxide thicknesses [10]. Control of gate-leakage current is paramount in low-power CMOS circuit design. The evaluation of gate current due to tunneling through the thin-gate oxide between polysilicon gate and substrate has attracted special attention, since it represents one of the major leakage current components in nanoscale MOSFETs. The gate leakage current increases exponentially as the oxide thickness is scaled down. Gate currents components between polysilicon gate and semiconductor substrate in nanoscale MOSFETS are shown in Figure 6. Tunneling currents for oxide thicknesses ranging from 3.6 to 1.0 nm are plotted in Figure 5.
Tunneling currents for oxide thicknesses ranging from 3.6 to 1.0 nm versus gate voltage [8].
Gate currents components between polysilicon gate and semiconductor substrate in nanoscale MOSFET [9].
3.2. Gate Oxide Thickness
For CMOS devices with channel lengths of 100 nm or less, an oxide thickness of ~3 nm is needed. This thickness comprises only a few layers of atoms and is approaching fundamental limits. Scaling which reduces gate length also reduces the dielectric thickness, but the continued thickness reduction of conventional oxides results in reliability degradation and unacceptable current leakage. In a nanoscale device where SCE is extremely severe, an increase in the oxide thickness will increase the subthreshold leakage. To keep adverse 2D electrostatic effects on threshold voltage (i.e., short-channel effects) under control, gate-oxide thickness is reduced nearly in proportion to channel length. Researchers in [5] have shown the gate oxide scaling to a thickness of only a few atomic layers, where quantum mechanical tunneling gives rise to a sharp increase in gate leakage currents. Major causes for concern in further reduction of the SiO2 thickness include increased polysilicon gate depletion, gate dopant penetration into the channel region, and high direct-tunneling gate-leakage current, which leads to questions regarding dielectric integrity, reliability, and stand-by power consumption.
Devices with thick gate oxides have total gate capacitance approximately equal to the oxide capacitance. The situation changes for MOSFETs with very thin gate oxides (less than 10 nm thick). Since the device scaling rules demand thinner gate oxides, the degradation of the total gate capacitance, which defines MOSFET’s transconductance, is expected to have very important consequences on their performance. The degradation of the total gate capacitance due to finite inversion layer capacitance is significant in scaled silicon MOSFET’s [5]. C-V data of 15 Å oxides show about 40% less capacitance at inversion than that of the physical oxide; the currents are degraded by only 10–20%.
3.3. Gate-Induced Drain Leakage (GIDL)
GIDL at the NMOS gate drain edge is important at low current levels and high applied voltages. The electron thermal voltage, kT/q, is a constant for room temperature electronics; the ratio between the operating voltage and the thermal voltage shrinks. This leads to higher source-to-drain leakage currents stemming from the thermal diffusion of electrons. Thinner oxide thickness and higher Vdd enhance the electric field increasing GIDL [11]. At low drain doping values, the electric field not being high enough causes tunneling, whereas for very high drain doping, the depletion width and tunneling will be limited causing less GIDL.
3.4. Off-State Leakage Current
Static CMOS Leakage sources are shown in Figure 7. Other sources of leakage currents including DIBL, GIDL, weak inversion, and p-n junction reverse bias leakage components [8] are shown in Figure 8. The largest contributor of leakage currents in the submicron region is the off-state drain to source leakage (IOFF).
Contribution of different leakage components in NMOS devices at different technology generations is shown in Figure 9. Magnitude of the leakage components and their relative dominance on each other depends strongly on device geometry and doping profile [15].
Contribution of different leakage components in NMOS devices at different technology generations [14].
It can be observed that, for the 90-nm device, the major leakage component is the subthreshold leakage, but in the scaled devices, contributions of the junction leakage and the gate leakage have significantly increased. Variation of different leakage components with technology generation, oxide thickness, and doping profile are shown in [14].
The off-state current IOFF is also increased by drain-induced barrier lowering (DIBL). As the channel length becomes shorter, both channel length and drain voltage reduce this barrier height. This two-dimensional effect makes the barrier height be modulated by channel length variation resulting in threshold voltage variation as shown in Figure 10.
Barrier lowering (BL) resulting in threshold voltage roll-off with channel length reduction [4].
Transistor IOFF is related to Vth which in turn is modulated by DIBL. Drain-induced barrier lowering (DIBL) reduces threshold voltage for short channel devices and increases threshold voltage roll-off. For short channel devices, channel length variation (ΔL) translates to threshold voltage variation (ΔVth) [4]. DIBL occurs when the depletion region of the drain interacts with the source near the channel surface to lower the source potential barrier. It happens when a high drain voltage is applied to a short-channel device, lowering the barrier height and resulting in further decrease of the threshold voltage. The source then injects carriers into the channel surface without the gate playing a role. DIBL is enhanced at a higher drain voltage and shorter Leff. Surface DIBL typically happens before deep bulk punch-through. Ideally, DIBL does not change the slope S, but it does lower Vth. For a device with zero gate voltage and drain potential Vdd, significant band bending in the drain allows electron-hole pair generation. A deep depletion condition is created since the holes are rapidly swept out. This leakage mechanism is exacerbated by high source or drain-to-body voltages as well as high drain to gate voltages.
3.5. Band-to-Band Tunneling Currents
Transistor scaling has led to increasingly steep halo (or pocket) implants, where the substrate doping at the junction interfaces is increased while the channel doping is low. This allows punch-through and DIBL control with less impact on channel mobility. The resulting steep doping profile at the drain edge increases band-to-band tunneling currents there, particularly as Vtb is increased. Diode area leakage components from both the source drain diodes and the well diodes are generally negligible with respect to IOFF junction band to band tunneling and GIDL components.
3.6. Threshold Voltage
Threshold Voltage is one of the most important parameters in technology and circuit design. Scaled transistors reduce the threshold voltage Vth to maintain performance by maintaining Vgs-Vth, gate overdrive, as Vdd is lowered. This increases the IOFF exponentially as the subthreshold slope S is essentially fixed. Unlike the strong inversion region in which the drift current dominates, subthreshold conduction is dominated by the diffusion current. The carriers move by diffusion along the surface similar to charge transport across the base of bipolar transistors. The exponential relation between the driving voltage on the gate and the drain current is a straight line in a semilog plot. Weak inversion typically dominates modern device off-state leakage due to the low Vth used.
The subthreshold slope indicates how effectively the flow of the drain current of a device can be stopped when Vgs is decreased below Vth. Figure 11 shows schematic log ION-Vg characteristics to show the factor affecting power consumption. As the device dimensions and the supply voltage are being scaled down to enhance performance, power efficiency, and reliability, this characteristic becomes a limitation on how limited a power supply can be used. The parameter S is measured in millivolts per decade. For the limiting case of Tox~0 and at room temperature, S~60 mV/decade. Typical S values for a bulk CMOS process can range from 80 mV/decade to 120 mV/decade or more. A low value for subthreshold slope is most desirable. As noted in Section 3, threshold voltage is one of the most important parameters in technology and circuit design. Scaling of transistor threshold voltage is associated with exponential increase in subthreshold leakage current, along with other negative impacts such as increased DIBL, Vth roll-off, reduced on-off current ratio, and increased source drain résistance. Figures 12 and 13 show the relation between scaling and switching power, threshold voltage, and off current.
Schematic log ION–Vg characteristics to show the factor affecting power consumption [4].
Relationship between threshold voltage (Vth) and subthreshold leakage current (IOFF) [4].
Trend in subthreshold leakage and switching power with technology scaling [4].
Figures 14(a) and 14(b) show the experimental threshold voltage measured on real bulk devices that were fabricated using technological dimensions issued from CMOS 90- and 65-nm technologies, respectively. The main features are Tox=1.6/1.2nm,Lnominal=45/70nm, and Vd = 1/1 V for the devices based on the 90-nm/65-nm technology, respectively [15]. Figure 14(c) shows the on and off-state currents for the 90 nm and 65-nm technology.
(a)–(c) Threshold voltage measured on real bulk devices CMOS 90- and 65-nm technologies, ION–IOFF, respectively [15].
3.7. System Performance and Power Considerations
The delay of a CMOS gate may be expressed asTp=kdCLVddION,
where CL is the load capacitance and kd is a fitting parameter. The delay expression is clearly dominated by an exponential dependence on Vdd and Vth. The simulated delay of a CMOS inverter is shown in Figure 15 at nominal Vdd and at 250 mV. The delay at nominal Vdd improves with Lpoly, through a rate that is slower than the target of 30% per generation under generalized scaling. With the exception of the 32-nm device, the delay actually increases with device scaling at Vdd=250mV due to strict leakage constraints during device optimization as well as degraded S [16]. CMOS delay degradation due to polydepletion is studied in [17].
Simulated delay of a CMOS inverter is shown at nominal Vdd and at 250 mV [16].
Extrapolating current power trends, the off-state power consumption would be about equal to active power around the 10-nm node. As reported in [18], off-state power needs to be less than 10% to 20% of total power consumed, and current 90-nm technology is already approaching this limit. For low-power applications, meeting challenges in the subnanometer range is to meet performance and leakage requirements for highly scaled MOSFETS. For the 10-nm node, for low-standby-power (LSTP) applications at 25°C = 10 pA/μm, nominal saturation current drive=700μA/μM is predicted according to [19]. For low-operating-power (LOP) applications, Ileak=10000pA/μm and Idd=900μA/μM; for high-performance (HP) applications,Ileak=10μA/μM and Idd=1500μA/μM. For low-power transistors, the gate length lags behind the high-performance transistor gate length by two years reflecting historical trends and the need for very low leakage current in mobile applications.
3.8. Statistical Variations
Controlling systematic and random variation in device parameters during fabrication is becoming a great challenge for scaled technologies. The delay and leakage currents in a device depend on the transistor geometry (gate length, oxide thickness, width, the doping profile, “halo” doping concentration, etc.), the flat-band voltage, and the supply voltage. Any statistical variation in each of these parameters results in a large variation in different leakage components and significant spread in delay. Among the statistical variations, the random placement of dopants is of great concern because it is independent of transistor spatial location and causes threshold voltage mismatch between transistors even though they may be close to each other (intradie variation) resulting in significant leakage and delay variation of logic gates and circuits. Hence, any low leakage design needs to consider the spread of leakage and delay, both at circuit and device design phase, to minimize overall leakage, while maintaining yield with respect to a target delay under process variation. Figure 16 shows that σVth is negligible with respect to nominal Vth in 90-nm devices but becomes significant in 50-nm and 25-nm devices resulting in considerable spread in drive current and leakage power.
σVth due to random dopant fluctutation versus Vth [20].
3.9. Bulk Impurity Concentration
As MOSFET’s scale to shorter channel lengths, channel doping densities increase in order to suppress undesirable short-channel effects such as punchthrough and drain-induced barrier lowering. The doping concentration is raised to values of 1×1018 cm−3 as the channel length is scaled to 0.1 m and below, such high bulk-impurity concentrations lead to an increase of threshold voltage and to an electron mobility decrease, which strongly degrades the electric properties of the device [8].
The above section concludes that aggressive scaling of the devices not only leads to increased subthreshold leakage but also has other negative impacts such as increased drain-induced barrier lowering (DIBL), Vth roll-off, reduced ON-current to off current ratio, and increased source drain resistance. Limitations of scaling also include electronic thermal energy, quantum mechanical tunneling, standby power-active power increases, and slow performance gain. Thus, summarizing the challenges faced by submicron and deep submicron devices, it is clear that the three key factors limiting continued scaling in CMOS are
minimum dimensions that can be fabricated,
diminishing returns in switching performance,
off-state leakage.
4. Detailed Solutions for Achieving Low-Power and Low-Voltage Applications in Submicron and Deep Submicron Region
Subthreshold operation is an effective way to achieve ultralow power for systems which do not have high-performance requirement. Lowering operating voltage is useful to lower not only active power, but also leakage. Scaling Vdd slows a circuit down since the gate overdrive Vgs-Vth is reduced. To deal with this, [22] suggests using dynamic voltage scaling for systems to allow the lowest Vdd necessary to meet performance requirements. The subthreshold slope S can be made smaller by using a thinner oxide (insulator) layer to reduce Tox or a lower substrate doping concentration (resulting in larger Wdm). Changes in operating conditions, namely, lower temperature or a substrate bias, also cause S to decrease [13]. To avoid the short-channel effects, oxide thickness scaling and higher and nonuniform doping (“halo” and “retrograde well”) need to be incorporated as the devices are scaled to the nanometer regime. Solutions suggested by various researchers include optimizing doping profile, pushing Si depletion width to tunneling limit, and scaling till 20-nm gate length with non-scaled gate oxides and voltage levels; cooling to low temperature can provide additional design space needed to extend CMOS devices to 10 nm for server applications. The following subsections are divided into solutions feasible for few important aspects of low-power operation in nanoscaled technologies. Most of the solutions presented here are based on numerical simulation.
4.1. High-k Dielectrics to Combat Gate Tunneling Currents
Gate-leakage reduction is the key motivation for the replacement of SiO2 with alternative gate dielectrics. Higher k value material than the silica (SiO2) may be a solution as proposed in [18]. This would allow the actual thickness of the gate dielectric to be increased while still maintaining the same electric field in the channel.
For high-performance and low-operating-power logic applications, it is predicted that Si3N4 or SiOxNy will be usable through 2016. The need for high-k gate dielectrics such as HfO2 is more urgent for low-standby-power applications compared to high-performance logic applications. As the dielectric thickness indirectly controls the gate length, the effective gate length needs to be 40 times the dielectric thickness to properly control short channel effects (SCE). Thus, new materials and material modifications including low-resistivity conductors, strained Si, and low-k dielectrics are suggested to improve performance and overcome short channel effects. Promising results have been reported on the development of low-standby-power CMOS technology using HfO2 gate dielectric. Transistors with gate length down to 55 nm, HfO2 gate dielectric with electrical oxide thickness down to 15 Å, and off-state leakage current of 25 pA/μm were demonstrated in [10]. As a result, there is immense interest in alternative gate dielectrics with higher relative permittivities. For a given equivalent SiO2 thickness, using a high-k gate dielectric factor compared with SiO2 achieves significant suppression of the direct-tunneling gate current and therefore results in considerable reduction in power consumption. Gate dielectrics such as silicon nitride (Si3N4) or oxynitride (SiOxNy), zirconium oxide (ZrO2), hafnium oxide (HfO2), aluminum oxide (Al2O3), and lanthanum oxide (La2O3) have been thoroughly investigated. For physical gate length of 25 nm, supply voltage is 0.7 V, and the range of Tox,eq is 6–11 Å. At this technology node, the maximum tolerable gate dielectric leakage per unit device width for high-performance logic applications is 1 μA/μm. Transistors with 30-nm gate length and a 7 Å SiOxNy gate dielectric have been demonstrated with excellent electrical characteristics, suggesting that an SiOxNy gate dielectric can be used at least down to 7 Å for high-performance applications. Figure 17 compares the conventional SiO2 gate oxide with SiOxNy gate oxide for enhanced performance. If higher leakage-current density can be tolerated, the scaling limit of an SiOxNy gate dielectric can be pushed well below 7 Å.
SiOxNy gate oxide of high dielectric constant proves to be of much better use [21].
4.2. Strained Si Helps to Improve Electron and Hole Mobility
Strained Si is the process of introducing physical strain on the silicon lattice. Introducing lattice strain into the Si channel alters the band structure and addresses Si transport deficiencies compared with other high-mobility III–V semiconductors. Strain is used to create both a low conductivity mass in the channel direction and a high density of states by creating a very large conductivity mass in the plane of the transistor perpendicular to the channel direction [7]. Strain improves transistor performance by enhancing the channel mobility through reduced electron effective mass and intervalley scattering rate for NMOS and reduced hole effective mass and interband scattering rate for PMOS. To continue transistor Idsat improvement, efforts are being poured into strained Si channel transistors; 10 to 20% improvements have been reported using SiGe strained silicon [3]. Results from [23] show that the PMOS mobility gain induced by the biaxial compressive strain in SiGe increases with increasing Ge% in the SiGe layer and that the mobility gain does not reduce at high transverse channel electric fields as in the case of the biaxial tensile strain in Si.
4.3. High-k Gate Stack Structures to Reduce Gate Current
Replacing silicon dioxide layer with high-k gate stack structures for nanoscale MOSFETs has been used to reduce gate current. Incorporation of nitrogen at the dielectric interface suppresses dopant diffusion from gate polysilicon into the channel, which can cause a shift of threshold voltage. Incorporation of nitrogen into hafnium silicate (Hf/SiO), hafnium aluminate (Hf/AlO), and HfO2 greatly enhances the dielectric constant of silicates, suppresses dopant diffusion from gate polysilicon into the channel during high-temperature annealing process, and increases crystallization temperature of the high-k stacks [9].
4.4. High-k/Metal Gate Technology to Reduce the Intrinsic Parameter Fluctuations
The high-k/metal-gate technology is the key to reduce the intrinsic-parameter fluctuations. The use of metal as a gate material introduces a new source of random variation due to the dependence of work function on the orientation of metal grains. Influences of the intrinsic parameter fluctuations and the metal gate work-function fluctuation (WKF), process-variation effect (PVE), and random dopant fluctuation (RDF) on 16-nm-gate bulk MOSFETs’ dc/ac and circuits’ timing/power/high frequency characteristics are reported in [24]. The vast study assesses the fluctuations on digital circuit performance and reliability, which may benefit CMOS design and technology in the sub-22-nm era. Intrinsic parameter fluctuations were generated in 16-nm-gate bulk MOSFETs with amorphous-based Tin/HfSiON gate stacks with an EOT of 1.2-nm pMOSFETs with nMOSFETs and pMOSFETs randomly selected and used to study the circuit characteristic fluctuations. The WKF has shown its increasing importance in nanoscale transistors, particularly for pMOSFETs’ characteristics. This work shows that the WKF and RDF dominate the device threshold-voltage fluctuation and therefore rule the delay time of the explored digital inverter circuits.
4.5. Optimizing Doping Profile to Improve Short-Channel Behavior
Aggressive scaling of CMOS technology below 0.1 μm gate pitch has stringent requirements on standby power consumption and parametric yields. To control the short channel effects for higher parametric yield, substrate solutions such as the super halo doping and SOI structures become strong options in device design.
4.5.1. Stepped Doping Profile
The use of non uniform doping concentrations has been methodically investigated to increase bulk impurity concentration through boron implant, indium channel implant, silicon epitaxial growth on heavily doped substrates, and delta-doped MOSFET’s. A doping profile, which provides low channel doping and a high doping concentration just below the inversion zone, improves short-channel behavior of the device while decreasing the threshold voltage and raising carrier mobility. The use of a low-doped ultrathin epitaxial layer over a heavily doped substrate can also achieve similar result. With this stepped doping profile, the low-doped zone would provide a reduction in threshold voltage, which is essential in order to realize low-power CMOS. A stepped doping profile, with the appropriate choice of the low-doped zone thickness, enhances the electron mobility and reduces the threshold voltage while maintaining good electric behavior versus short-channel effects. The higher mobility and the lower threshold voltage provided by the low-doped zone near the interface greatly improve the electric behavior of submicrometer devices. By adding a low-doped zone of convenient thickness next to the interface over a high-doping substrate, both the electron mobility and the threshold voltage of the device are improved while avoiding short channel effects [25].
4.5.2. Super Steep Retrograde (SSR) Profile to Obtain Higher Threshold Voltage
Super steep retrograde doping is just a case of retrograde channel profile where the transition from the lightly doped surface to the heavily doped substrate is sharp. A retrograde doping profile which reduces the channel depletion width may give a more optimal tradeoff between short-channel characteristics and body effect. L+ and L- refer to devices with gate lengths 0.2 λ greater and 0.2 λ less than the nominal length, where λ is the technology parameter represented by the nominal length of the polygate. Figure 18 shows SSR profile with a lightly doped layer of thickness Xj where Xj is the extension depth; the technology parameter is the nominal gate length λ.
SSR profile with a lightly doped layer of thickness Xj where Xj is the extension depth [26].
The Vth roll off quantified by change in Vth between L- and L+ devices with drain biased at Vdd is shown in Figure 19; the results are those arrived due to numerical simulation. The main effect of SSR MOSFETs is to achieve low Vth without worsening Vth roll-off and hence better short channel characteristics than uniformly doped MOSFETs [26].
Vth roll-off quantified by change in Vth between L- and L+ devices with drain biased atVdd [26].
4.5.3. Superhalo Doping
With the nonscaled gate oxide and supply voltage, an optimized vertically and laterally non uniform doping profile called the superhalo is suggested for controlling short-channel effects. Such a profile can be realized by ion implantation self-aligned to the gate edges with very restricted amount of diffusion. One of the possible ways suggested is to create sub-50-nm bulk CMOS devices through the use of super halo doping. The highly non uniform profile sets up a higher effective doping concentration toward shorter devices, which counteracts short-channel effects. This results in off currents insensitive to channel length variations and allows CMOS scaling to the shortest channel length possible [8].
The superior short-channel effect obtained with the superhalo compared with a nonhalo retrograde profile is shown in Figure 20. The results obtained are due to device simulation. IOFF is nearly independent of channel length variations between 20 and 30 nm. Because of the nearly flat dependence on channel length, superhalo allows a nominal device to operate at a lower threshold voltage, thereby gaining significant performance benefit of 30–40% over nonhalo devices for 25-nm CMOS at 1.0 V. Higher surface and channel doping and shallow source/drain junction depths reduce the DIBL effect on the subthreshold leakage current. While high DIBL effects override body bias at high Vds, at low Vds it can still be useful. It should be pointed out that DIBL, which is still present in superhalo devices, has only a minor effect on the delay performance for a given high-drain bias.
The superior short-channel effect obtained with the superhalo compared with a nonhalo retrograde profile [8].
Since the channel doping mainly originates from tilted implantation through self-aligned source/drain extension, an additional mask can create selective source or drain doping. Doping implantation needs to be optimized to adjust the channel implant profiles to minimize the band to band tunneling while maintaining tight control on SCE. Figure 21 shows simulated results of SCEs in the super halo bulk CMOS devices. One-sided super halo design can achieve acceptable SCE behavior below 70-nm drawn gate length [27]. Figure 22 shows a doping profile for 25-nm MOSFET. This profile is realized by ion implantation self aligned to the gate edges with very restricted amount of diffusion.
SCEs in the super halo bulk CMOS devices [27].
Source, drain, and superhalo doping contours in a 25-nm nMOSFET design [8].
4.5.4. Abrupt Doping
In the design of 25-nm CMOS devices, [28] predicted good short channel effects (SCE) for gate length L≤25 nm when the net doping concentration decreases laterally with a slope of 4-5 nm/decade. For nMOSFET, [17] showed that superhalo doping could provide the required lateral slope. For an optimized device design, in the lateral direction, the S/D doping which is decreasing toward the gate edge can be balanced by the local channel doping which is increasing, such that the net doping profile is more abrupt than either the S/D or the local-channel doping profiles. With the process flow optimized for pMOSFET, 25-nm nMOSFET can also be designed with good characteristics, since the n+S/D doping can be made quite abrupt with low-energy arsenic implant.
4.5.5. Self-Aligned Local Channel V-Gate by Optical Lithography (SALVO)
SALVO uses optimized local channel doping to sharpen the lateral junctions in order to minimize the short channel effect for gate lengths down to 25 nm. This novel design flow shows that SALVO is capable of producing pMOSFET devices with lateral net doping slope as abrupt as 6 nm/dec for a metal gate and 8.5 nm/decade for a polysilicon gate, ensuring acceptable SCE down to 25-nm gate length [29]. Experimental results showing lateral concentration distribution of boron, arsenic, and phosphorus and lateral net doping profile of a metal gate SALVO pMOSFET and of the optimized polysilicon-gate PMOS with Tpoly=95°C are shown in Figure 23.
Lateral concentration distribution of boron, arsenic, and phosphorus and lateral net doping profile of a metal gate SALVO PMOS [29].
4.6. Lateral Channel Engineering to Limit Short Channel Effects
For shorter FETs, halo profiles work to create a higher average doping in the channel than that seen by a longer channel FET, thus tending to raise the Vth in opposition to short-channel effects that are lowering it. Such halos are used to achieve the 25-nm bulk CMOS design. The primary advantages of these alternate device structures are a better ideality factor, near unity, and the possibility of thinner Si channels than would be possible in bulk devices except at very low temperature [8]. This technique gives an extra degree of freedom in efforts to limit adverse SCE effects. Locally high doping concentrations in channels near source/drain junctions have been employed via lateral channel engineering, for example, Halo, pocket, tilted channel implantation, and tilted implantation punch-through stopper.
4.6.1. In-Halo Structures to Obtain High Performance
Indium has been successfully used in fabricating abrupt n-MOSFET profiles because of its low diffusion constant which leads to shallower deep submicron nMOSFET source/drain extension halo profiles. In-halo structures allow reduced VthS while increasing device resistance to SCEs. In halo nMOSFET, the junction leakage and capacitance are affected by indium dosages levels and off-state leakage increased due to an increase in the n+ junction break down field [30]. In-halo structures show better SCE margin for high-speed device design, and smaller poly gate overlapped channel diffusion areas can be obtained due to shorter poly-Si gate lengths.
4.6.2. Pocket Implant
This is a popular technique for improving short channel effect [1]. Compared with substrate engineering, pocket implant can place the implanted ions near the location where they are needed the most around the drain (and the source). Compared with epitaxial channel, pocket implant using ion implantation is rather of low cost.
4.6.3. Delta Doping
For applications whose IOFF is not a major concern but Vth, roll-off control is vital; delta-doped MOSFET is the choice when one wants to reduce oxide stress and oxide leakage. MOSFET with uniform channel doping has lower IOFF than delta-doped MOSFET required for some applications. Uniformly doped MOSFET of 0.09 nm minimum channel length Lmin can be achieved with Tox=30Å,Nsub=10l8cm-3,Xj~200Å, and Vth~0.35 V. Ideal delta doping profile can improve Lmin by 20% and Lmin of 0.07 μm can be achieved. This MOSFET is suitable for applications where larger current drive good digital design noise margin is needed but the stand-by power consumption can be relaxed, such as in high-end microprocessors. For applications where IOFF is important such as devices in memory array, uniformly doped MOSFET is better than delta-doped MOSFET in terms of Idsat/IOFF [1].
The schematic device cross sections of MOSFET devices and the definitions of their back gate thicknesses Xbg are shown in Figure 24, (a) Uniformly-doped MOSFET is used to approximate conventional MOSFET Xbg is depletion width. (b) Delta-doped MOSFET Xbg is lightly-doped layer width (Xld). (c) Pocket-Implanted MOSFET, Xbg is depletion width (d) Fully-depleted SO1 MOSFET's which has large Xbg.
4.6.4. Dual-Vth Design to Reduce Subthreshold Leakage
Dual-Vth design technique has proven to be extremely effective in reducing subthreshold leakage in both active and standby mode of operation of a circuit in submicrometer technologies. In nanoscaled bulk silicon technologies, high-Vth devices are obtained by changing the peak halo density and its location. An increase in the strength of the “halo” reduces subthreshold leakage and improves short channel effects. It also increases the variability due to random dopant fluctuation and the junction capacitance. Metal gates are being explored not only to have proper control on realizing devices having high Vth, but also to achieve high performance while maintaining short channel effect [20].
4.6.5. Highly Doped Drain (HDD) Implants to Ensure Good Short Channel Behaviour
In bulk Ge or on thick germanium-on-silicon substrates, fabrication of short-channel transistors requires a combination of well, extension, halo, and highly doped drain (HDD) implants to ensure good short-channel behavior. For decananometer CMOS p+-n junctions, it was found that the area component of the leakage depends heavily on the n-type doping level at the metallurgical junction, originating from the halo and well implants. As CMOS technologies are scaled, stronger halos are required to provide sufficient short-channel control. An important observation from [31] is that the halo-implant conditions with good short-channel control, evidenced by a low drain-induced barrier lowering (DIBL), show a high extension leakage JE and vice versa. All halo conditions with a short-channel DIBL below 200 mV/V have a JE above 4.3×10-7 A/μm or higher.
4.6.6. Lowering the Supply Voltage of the Technology to Obtain Lower Extension Leakage JE
Scaling a bulk Ge PMOS technology requires halo implants to provide sufficient gate control over the transistor channel, similar to that in silicon technology. These halos increase the electric field at the drain side, leading to enhanced drain leakage. As the BTBT mechanism depends strongly on the electric field, decreasing the supply voltage of the technology is one way to obtain lower extension leakage JE.. It was experimentally confirmed that JE is the dominant junction-leakage component in short-channel Ge pFETs. A tradeoff was found between short-channel control on the one hand and drain leakage on the other. Changing the halo or extension implant will provide better short-channel control only at the expense of increased leakage or vice versa. As a consequence, in sub-70-nm gate-length technologies, the drain leakage is likely 4×10-7 A/μm or higher at a supply voltage of 1 V, at room temperature. Through device simulations, it was found that the highest electric fields in off-state condition occur directly under the gate and under the extension region and reach up to 1.1 MV/cm for the centerpoint halo. As BTBT is generated in the presence of high electric fields, one option to reduce JE is to lower the supply voltage Vdd. For supply voltages below 0.7 V, it is shown that it is possible to obtain JE values below 1 × 10−7 A/μm, combined with DIBL values below 200 mV/V for 70 nm gate-length Ge transistors. Another suggested parameter that may influence JE is the spacer width; as a large portion of JE is generated under the spacers, it is possible that narrower spacers lead to lower leakage, at the expense of a reduced channel control [31].
4.6.7. Asymmetric Halo Doping to Reduce Static Leakage
Asymmetric halo bulk MOSFETs have been advocated over conventional symmetric halo MOSFETs for sub-50-nm gate lengths. They have negligible band to band tunneling leakage in the reverse-biased drain substrate junctions and comparatively lower subthreshold leakage, therefore dissipating less static power in the circuits [32].
For the same ION, there is a slight improvement in the subthreshold swing in AH transistor resulting in reduced IOFF. High halo doping on the source side in this nMOSFET reduces-drain induced barrier lowering (DIBL). AH CMOSFETs are more effective in saving power dissipation when the clock frequency is low and when static power is dominant [32].
4.6.8. Single Halo (SH), Lateral Asymmetric Channel (LAC), and Double Halo (DH) to Improve Device Performance
In any halo implant, it is important to optimize the tilt angle of implant. The effects of halo implant on the subthreshold performance of 100-nm CMOS devices and circuits for ultralow power analog/mixed-signal applications have been systematically investigated in [33]. Improvement in the device performance parameters like gm/Id, VA, intrinsic gain, and so forth, for such applications has been observed in the halo-implanted devices while the improvement is significant in LAC devices. Lower tilt angle has been found to produce better results in both LAC and DH devices. A more than 100% improvement in voltage gain has been observed in a current source CMOS amplifier with the use of LAC doping on both the p- and n-channel devices of such amplifiers in the subthreshold regime of operation.
Structures of different n-channel MOSFETs; (a) conventional structure, (b) LAC structure showing a p+-pocket near the source end, and (c) DH structure showing a p+-pocket near both the source and drain ends are shown in Figure 25 [33].
Structures of different n-channel MOSFETs. (a) Conventional structure, (b) LAC structure showing a p+-pocket near the source end, and (c) DH structure showing a p+-pocket near both the source and drain ends [33].
So, for the planar forms of the device, it is best to implant halo doping profiles into the channel, but then this would be subject to more fluctuations than for bulk devices because the volume available for such a doping is smaller due to the thikness of the channel. Lateral variations in the gate work function might also be promising. Interface chemistry might necessitate the use of metallic gate electrodes in which case metals must be found with work functions near those of n and p-poly-Si to achieve low VthS [8].
4.7. Highly Doped Gates to Deal with Polydepletion Effects
Polydepletion effects will become more severe with continued scaling of MOSFETs due to the significance of corner and edge effects. Achieving highly doped gates with less dopant gradient in the polygate can be the most appropriate solution to overcome these problems.
Gate-length effect on polydepletion in Figure 26 shows that an effective depletion width is wider for the shorter gate length, leading to an additional potential drop. Impact of non uniform dopant distributions and gate geometry to polydepletion effects is reported based on a study using device simulation. Vertically nonuniform and steep dopant profiles in poly-gate result in built-in electric field effects and potential drops in the gate region. Laterally uniform and convex dopant profiles in the poly-gate cause substantial edge potential drops for short gate lengths, mainly due to fringing fields [34].
Gate-length effect on polydepletion [34].
4.8. Insulated Shallow Extension (ISE) Structure to Suppress Short Channel Effects
An excellent control over SCE down to 20-nm gate length is realized with shallow junction technology [35]. For an optimized short channel behavior, it is indispensable to control the roll-off of the threshold voltage while keeping both the drain leakage current and threshold voltage at an acceptably low level. Figure 27 is the structure used to examine the effects of localized halo structures to minimize the roll-off of short channel threshold voltage with suitably low drain leakage current and threshold voltage level. To reduce the impact of heavily doped halo on the threshold voltage, it is essential to have a deep and short enough halo doping profile. The halo-to-extension spacing is most effective in the suppression of the short channel roll off and the drain leakage, while the use of large halo depth is required to achieve suitably low threshold voltage.
Highly localized uniform halo imposed on a conventional SSR channel [35].
With the ISE structure, a localized heavily doped halo up to 5×1019 cm−3 can be used to suppress the SCEs without limitation imposed by the drain leakage current. Figure 28 shows the sidewall oxide of the insulated shallow extension (ISE) structure to suppress the short channel effects of bulk MOSFETS.
Insulated shallow extension (ISE) structure [35].
An excellent roll-off behavior achieved for sub-50-nm bulk devices with localized halo ISE structures is shown in Figure 29. The results of drain current for conventional bulk devices and localized halo ISE devices are shown in Figure 30. Very good subthreshold behavior is observed for all localized halo ISE devices. The use of localized halo profile is very important for the design of sub-50-nm bulk devices. To reduce the impact of heavily doped halo on the threshold voltage, it is essential to have a deep and short enough halo doping profile. The halo-to-extension spacing is the most effective means to control the band to band tunneling leakage current and the threshold voltage roll off. Implanting the localized halo beneath the channel surface and away from the extension junction edges using ISE structure can realize sub-50-nm bulk MOSFET devices with reduced SCEs [35].
Excellent roll-off behavior achieved for sub-50-nm bulk devices with localized halo ISE structures [35].
Drain current for conventional bulk devices and localized halo ISE devices [35].
4.8.1. Limitations Imposed by Halo Doping
As CMOS devices are scaled down, the number of dopant atoms in the depletion region of a minimum geometry device decreases. Due to the discreteness of atoms, there is a statistical random fluctuation of the number of dopants within a given volume around its average value. Although the average concentration of doping is quite well controlled by ion implantation and annealing processes, these processes lead to randomness at the atomic scale in the form of spatial fluctuations in the local doping concentration, which in turn cause device-to-device variation in MOSFET threshold voltages. The threshold uncertainty increases with increasing junction depth because of the increasing body doping needed to maintain a fixed off current of 1 nA/m [8]. By separately simulating the effects of discrete donors or discrete acceptors, the simulations also show that the effect of discreteness in the source drain is usually negligible. Stochastic simulations also confirm the analytically predicted result that highly retrograde channel doping profiles can yield significantly lower σVths than uniformly doped channels. This is because the doping fluctuations are moved further away from the channel and closer to the body and so have less effect since they are screened by the free carriers in the body. Thus, it is widely understood that Vth should be set differently for different applications to control the subthreshold leakage dissipation.
4.9. Cooling Solutions to Reduce Leakage Currents
The decrease of thermal sensitivity of threshold voltage under technology scaling is one of the major reasons of effectiveness decrease of weak inversion current reduction by cooling. Punch-through leakage current is substantially reduced by the temperature lowering.
The simulated results of technology scaling and temperature reduction on the different leakage mechanisms of subquarter micron MOSFETs are investigated in Figures 31(a) and 31(b).
(a) and (b) GIDL and bulk BTBT currents as a function of technology scaling and temperature [36].
It shows GIDL and bulk BTBT currents as a function of technology scaling and temperature. The absolute value of the subthreshold leakage current is significantly increased with technology scaling. This component is reduced with reduction in temperature. However, the rate of leakage reduction with temperature is diminished with technology scaling. Punch-through leakage current is increased with technology scaling; however, it can be significantly reduced by cooling and by anti-punch-through implantation. Leakage current due to DIBL effect is increased with scaling and is almost insensitive to the temperature. Impact ionization leakage current is increased with technology scaling, and it is almost temperature independent in temperature interval from 300 to 77 K. GIDL and bulk BTBT currents are significantly increased with technology scaling and are almost temperature independent [36].
4.10. Grooved Gate MOSFETs
According to nonplanar device simulated results obtained by [37], grooved gate MOSFETS are highly resistant to short channel effects, apart from being highly well behaved in the sub micron region; these devices also offer a high packing density when compared to conventional planar MOSFETS.
The above analysis is summarized in the form of a roadmap for quick reference for the method to be applied for a particular range of operation for optimum results in various applications.
5. Roadmap in a Tabular Form
The high-performance devices (HP) employ the most aggressive scaling as very low threshold voltages are traditionally used, authorizing large SCE and DIBL. Low power in standby mode (LSTP) technologies nominal threshold voltage is large and thus their SCE, DIBL and S are required to be much better than those of HP technologies. The low-operating-power technology (LOP) requires speed in the active mode and low power in the standby mode [39]. Considering the three big families of products as high performance (HP), low operational power (LOP), and low standby power (LSTP), a roadmap is created as a ready reckoner for sub micron and deep submicron devices in Tables 2 and 3.
Roadmap for submicron CMOS devices.
Range ofoperation
Performance factors
Challenges
Technique/Solution
Enhanced performance
Applications
Sub-100 nm
Elevated off-state leakage due to lowering of Vth under tech. scaling
Reduce leakage currents
Lowering of temperatureCooling solutions
Total leakage current may be reduced by more than 200x by cooling from 127°C to 0°C
LOP [36]
Sub-100 nm
Device performance deteriorates due to polydepletion effects as devices scale down
Polydepletion effects
Using less dopant gradientHighly doped gates
Vertically nonuniform and steep dopant profile in polygate result in built electric field effect and potential drops in the gate region. Laterally nonuniform and convex dopant profiles in the polygate cause substantial edge pot. drops for short Lgs
LSTP [34]
Sub-100 nm
Vth lowering in short channel region
Subthreshold swing, reduced electric field at the drain
Optimizing junction depths and channel dopingGrooved gate MOSFET
Vth lowering not observed even beyond 0.1 m due to corner effect, Vth increases for shorter L for grooved gate MOSFETs
LOP [37]
Sub-100 nm
Control of gate-leakage current is paramount inlow-power CMOS circuit design
Reduce gate currents
Between the high-k layer and silicon substrate an interfacial oxide layer is present, and a transition layer between high-k dielectric and silicon substrate may existHigh-k gate stack
The gate current is reduced by the addition of a transition layer and with increasing thickness of the transition layer for the same EOT
LOP [9]
Sub-100 nm
Adverse Vth roll off
Vth roll off control
Ion implantationPocket implant
Pocket implant device through optimization of k parameter pushes Lmin to 55–60% of that of UD channel device, Vth overshoots 100 mV
HP-LOP [38]
Sub-100 nm
High bulk impurity conc. leads to an increase in Vth
Reduce Vth
Low-doped zone next to high-doped substrateStepped doping profile
Higher mobility and lower threshold voltage, ΔVth=0.5V
HP [25]
Sub-70 nm
Pot. Barrier lowering both in the inversion channel and in the body depletion region
Vth adjustment, body punch-through
Angle tilted implantationSuperhalo and a retrograde channel
Good Idrive/IOFF performance achieved for both n-p channel devices, excellent control of Vth roll-off down to 40 nm Lg, 935 μA/μm, 395 μA/μm on-state drive currents with Vdd of 1.5 V
Dissipates less static power in circuits, improvement in performance
LOP-LSTP [32]
Sub-50 nm
Large variation in different leakage components due to variation in device parameters
Vth variability, due to random dopant fluctuation and junction capacitance
Increase in strength of haloModified AH halo
Min jn. BTBT and highest performance for a given subthreshold leakage, reduces subthreshold leakage, improves SCE
LOP [26]
Sub-50 nm
Adverse Vth roll-off
DIBL
High halo doping on source sideNon uniform doping
Vth drop as a result of DIBL effect is reduced
LOP [32]
Sub-50 nm
Roll off of short channel Vth and gate/drain leakage
BTBT control, Vth roll-off
Halo to extension spacingImplant localized halo beneath the channel surface
Sub-50-nm bulk MOSFET devices can be achieved with small Vth roll-off, low DIBL, suitable Vth
LOP [35]
Sub-50 nm
Net doping conc. decreases laterally with a slope of 4-5 nm/dec, difficult to use superhalo tech. for PMOS
Acceptable short channel effects
Lat. conc. dis. of B, Ar, p+ optimized poly-Si gateLateral net doping profile in SALVO design
Produces PMOS devices with lateral net doping slope as abrupt as 6 nm/dec for a metal gate, 8.5 nm/dec for a poly Si gate down to 25 nm Lg
LSTP [29]
Sub-22 nm
Metal gate work function affects Vth of device and tuning and power of digital circuits
Intrinsic parameter fluctuations
Metal gate technologyHigh-k dielectrics
Intrinsic parameter fluctuations controlled
HP-LOP [24]
Sub-22 nm
Process variation effects, random dopant fluctuation affects Vth of device
Intrinsic parameter fluctuation
Random variation of work functionMetal gate technology
Metal as a gate material introduces a new source of random variation due to the dependence of work functions on the orientation of metal grains
HP-LSTP [24]
6. Conclusion
Subthreshold design is an inevitable choice in the semiconductor roadmap for achieving ultra-low-power consumption. In order to achieve optimal performance, device, circuit, and architectural level optimizations specific to the subthreshold operation need to be applied. Due to the high sensitivity of the subthreshold circuits to process variations, it is imperative to use innovative design techniques to improve circuit robustness. Enhanced channel mobility due to applied strain to the channel is a major contributor to meeting the MOSFET performance requirements. In order to successfully scale ICs to meet performance, leakage current, and other requirements, numerous major processes and material innovations, such as high-k dielectric, metal gate electrodes, elevated source/drain, and doping techniques, need to be implemented. Dealing with fluctuations, statistical process variations, impact of quantum effects, line edge roughness, and variation in the ultra thin body width needs to be understood for better deep submicron performance especially for low-power applications.
Acknowledgment
The authors would like to thank Dr. Joydip Dhar, Associate Professor, ABV-IIITM, Gwalior for the help and support extended throughout this work to them. The authors also gratefully acknowledge the Director, ABV-IIITM, Gwalior, for the support and encouragement for this research work.
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