• DocumentCode
    641351
  • Title

    Schottky-barrier-type Graphene Nano-Ribbon Field-Effect Transistors: A study on compact modeling, process variation, and circuit performance

  • Author

    Ying-Yu Chen ; Sangai, Amit ; Gholipour, Morteza ; Deming Chen

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    15-17 July 2013
  • Firstpage
    82
  • Lastpage
    88
  • Abstract
    Graphene Nano-Ribbon Field-Effect Transistors (GNR-FETs) have emerged as promising next-generation devices. In particular, Schottky-barrier-type GNRFETs (SB-GNRFETs) have piqued interest due to their ambipolar I-V characteristics. Despite manufacturing successes, the lack of a SPICE-compatible compact model of SB-GNRFETs has hindered studies on evaluating the performance of this emerging technology on the circuit level. In this paper, we present the first SPICE-compatible model of SB-GNRFETs that takes various design parameters into account, which not only enables circuit-level simulations, but also provides a means to evaluate process variation, including effects of channel length, transistor width, oxide thickness, and graphene-specific edge roughness. With this model, we are able to explore the design space of SB-GNRFETs, evaluate delay and power performance of SB-GNRFET circuits, and compare them with conventional Si-CMOS and Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor-(MOS-)GNRFETs. Our study shows that SB-GNRFETs have higher speed and higher power dissipation, and have lower energy delay product than both Si-CMOS and MOS-GNRFETs, while MOS-GNRFETs are potentially good for low-power applications despite the presence of graphene-metal contact resistance that are not present in SB-GNRFET circuits. Two practical factors severely degrade the performance and even affect the functionality of SB-GNRFET circuits: 1) edge roughness and 2) limitation on operating point shifting.
  • Keywords
    SPICE; Schottky barriers; field effect transistors; graphene; nanoribbons; semiconductor device models; C; SPICE- compatible model; Schottky-barrier-type graphene nano-ribbon field-effect transistors; channel length; circuit performance; circuit-level simulations; compact modeling; graphene-metal contact resistance; graphene-specific edge roughness; operating point shifting; oxide thickness; process variation; transistor width; Graphene; Integrated circuit modeling; Mathematical model; Numerical models; Photonic band gap; Schottky barriers; Transistors;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Nanoscale Architectures (NANOARCH), 2013 IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Brooklyn, NY
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-0873-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/NanoArch.2013.6623049
  • Filename
    6623049