학술논문

Sustained Benefits of NCFETs Under Extreme Scaling to the End of the IRDS
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices IEEE Trans. Electron Devices Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on. 67(9):3843-3851 Sep, 2020
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Iron
Mathematical model
Capacitance
Transistors
Tunneling
Dielectrics
Performance evaluation
Ferroelectric
negative-capacitance field-effect transistors (NCFETs)
nonequilibrium Green’s function (NEGF)
scaling
Language
ISSN
0018-9383
1557-9646
Abstract
We use full quantum-transport simulations by coupling the Landau–Khalatnikov (LK) and Poisson equations self-consistently with the nonequilibrium Green’s function (NEGF) formalism, and calibrated to experimental results, to investigate extremely scaled negative-capacitance, field-effect transistors (NCFETs) having dimensions toward the end of the international roadmap for devices and systems (IRDS), that is, to sub-10-nm gate lengths, where channel transport can be expected to be governed by quantum-mechanical effects. We identify how the ferroelectric affects both thermionic emission and quantum-mechanical tunneling of electrons, both of which are relevant transport mechanisms for these ultrascaled devices. Our detailed results show that while NCFETs are not immune to the increase in the tunneling as they undergo extreme channel-length scaling, the metal–ferroelectric–insulator–semiconductor (MFIS) structure will continue to offer benefits to a subthreshold slope, ON- and OFF-currents, drain-induced barrier lowering, and output conductance until the end of the roadmap. These improvements allow MFIS NCFETs of any given node to achieve similar performance to nonferroelectric devices of the immediately preceding (higher-dimension) node. The fundamental reason for the improvements is identified to be the presence of voltage amplification at the top of the barrier (TOB) and suppression of TOB movement with drain voltage.