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Vlsi Design

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Published in: Electronics | Physics
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Vlsi basics

Ankit N / Bangalore

3 years of teaching experience

Qualification: M.Tech (Indian Institute of Technology - 2016)

Teaches: Mathematics, Science, Algebra, Logic, Physics, AFCAT, Electronics, C / C++

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  1. EE 466: VLSI Design Lecture 03
  2. Channel Length Modulation The inversion layer charge QI represents the total mobile electron charge on the surface and its expression at the source end of the channel is: Q = =-C (V -V ) and the latx O ox GS TO inversion layer charge at the drain end of the channel is expressed as: QI at ox GS TO DS At the edge of saturation when the drain-to-source voltage reaches saturation (V -V -V -V ) the DS— DSAT— GS TO inversion layer charge at the drain end becomes zero. We can approximate the inversion layer charge at the drain end by QI at x-L=O (even though this is not quite true) When V —V the channel is DS— DSAT' pinched off at the drain end. Further increase of the drain-to- source voltage (VDS>VDSAT) results in even a larger pinched-off portion of the channel. The effective channel length is reduced to: L'=L-AL where AL is the length of the channel where Qro. The pinch-off point moves from the drain end of the channel towards the source end with increasing VDS.
  3. Channel Length Modulation For L'
  4. Channel Length Modulation We must modify the equation for saturation current so that it reflects the dependency on VDS. Note that the saturation current will increase with increasing V DS since L' decreases with increasing VDS. DSAT (VGS -VTO)2 AL 2 L 1- Let I-ALæ1-XVDs, with X being an empirical model parameter called the channel length modulation coefficient. Assume that then the saturation current becomes: uncox W (VGS DSAT The above equation can be used with sufficient confidence for most first order hand calculations The first term of the equation accounts for the channel length modulation effect. AL V DS DSAT
  5. The Threshold Voltage Any gate-to-source voltage less than VTO is not sufficient to establish an inversion layer. The MOSFET conducts no current between its source and drain terminals unless v GS is greater than v TO. Oxide (Si02) P-type Semiconductor (Si) Metal (Al) EFp ' Increasing the gate-to-source voltage above and beyond VTO will not affect the surface potential and the depletion region depth. There are 4 physical properties that affect the threshold voltage namely (i) the work function difference between the gate and the channel, (ii) the gate voltage component to change the surface potential, (iii) the gate voltage component to offset the depletion region charge and (iv) the voltage component to offset the fixed charges in the gate oxide and in the silicon oxide interface.
  6. The Threshold Voltage The work function difference ) reflects the built in gate-to-channel potential of the MOS structure which consists of the p-type substrate, the thin silicon dioxide layer and the gate electrode. (bF(substrate) —ØM if the gate material is metal (Aluminum) If polysilicon is the gate material: — ØF(substrate) — (gate) An externally applied voltage must be changed to achieve surface inversion i.e. to change the surface potential by -2ØF. The depletion region charge density at surface inversion (q -ØF) is QB 0 -(2qNA%iI-2ØF )-1/2 Assuming that the substrate is biased at a different voltage level than the source (at ground) then the depletion region charge density can be expressed as a function of the source-to-body voltage -2ØFI+ The third component offsets the depletion region charge and is equal to —QB/Cox (C —e /t ). ox ox ox
  7. The Threshold Voltage The gate voltage that is necessary to offset to the fixed positive charge density Qox (at the interface between the gate oxide and the silicon substrate) is ox ox • Combining all the voltage components we can determine the threshold voltage. For zero substrate bias VTO is given by: F BO ox ox ox Thus determine the expression for nonzero substrate bias.
  8. Body effect The most general form of the threshold voltage is: VT F ox ox B ox -2ØF+V B )-1/2) This becomes the most general expression of the threshold voltage with the parameter gamma being: VT VTO +
  9. The Threshold Voltage Gamma is called the substrate- bias or the body effect coefficient. The general expression for the threshold voltage can be used for both the n-channel and p-channel devices. The differences are as follows: Substrate Fermi potential is negative in nMOS but positive for pMOS. The depletion region charge densities QBO and QB are negative for nMOS but positive for pMOS ' Further differences: The substrate bias coefficient y is positive for nMOS and negative for pMOS. The substrate bias voltage v SB is positive in nMOS but negative for pMOS. Typically the threshold voltage of an enhancement mode n-type MOSFET is a positive quantity while that of a p-type MOSFET is negative.
  10. Sub-Threshold Conduction Ideally at < VT, ID = O. The MOS device is partially conducting for gate voltages below the threshold voltage. This is termed sub-threshold or weak inversion conduction. In most digital applications the presence of sub-threshold current is undesirable. Why? most digital applications .... Does this mean some digital applications can tolerate sub-threshold currents? A Sub-threshold digital circuit manages to satisfy the ultra-low power requirement. How? What type of digital applications can benefit from this ultra low power design approach?
  11. Subthreshold Conduction Below cut off current does not abruptly become zero vgs-vt VT Falls off exponentially 2 1.8 dso = PVT e Useful in low power CMOS VLSI design
  12. Junction Leakage Conduction even when transistor is in -1) cut-off Substrate to diffusion junctions are reverse biased However reverse biased diodes do conduct leakage current
  13. Leakge Current When the junction bias voltage is significantly more than the thermal voltage (N26mV @room temperature) the leakage current is —Is Junction leakage limits storage time in on- chip memory elements — Requires refreshing dynamic nodes
  14. Tunneling effects , Ideal MOS model — High input impedence — No static current flow through the gate terminal Quantum mechanical effect — Carriers "tunnel" through insulating barriers with finite probability — Insulating barrier has to be very thin for appreciable current Current gate oxide thickness N 10-15Å — Single atomic layer of silicon N3Å
  15. Tunneling current Current technology nodes — Tunneling current as significant as junction leakage and sub-threshold conduction Technique to reduce tunneling current — Use high-K materials in the gate oxide layer High dielectric constant makes high gate capacitance — Reduces the need to reduce the oxide thickness — Silicon Nitride is a good candidate for such materials
  16. Effects g(T) = g(Tr) Effect on Mobility Carrier mobility decreases with temperature kg is a parameter usually in the range 1 -2-2.0
  17. effects Threshold voltage — Vt decreases linearly with increase in Junction leakage also increases with increase in ternperature All combined results in decrease of On current and increase of Off current
  18. Issues Circuit performance is therefore generally worse at high temperatures Conversely cooling can enable better performance Cooling techniques — Convection Natural Fans Heat sinks — Active cooling Water cooling Liquid nitrogen Cost of methods have to be justified
  19. Non-ideal I-v Effects (Summary) Miniaturization has led to modern ' The current IDS is lower than devices having nonideal characteristics The saturation current increases less than quadratically with increasing v GSO Velocity saturation and mobility degradation are two of the effects that cause the non quadratic current increase with V GSO When carrier velocity ceases to increase linearly with field strength we have velocity saturation. expected at high VDS. There are several sources of leakage that result in current flow when the transistor is expected to be OFF. The source and drain diffusion regions are form reverse biased diodes which experience junction leakage into the substrate or well. The current into the gate IG is ideal zero, however as gate oxide thickness is reduced electrons tunnel through the gate, causing some current.