Title :
Accurate evaluation of mobility in high gate-leakage-current MOSFETs by using a transmission-line model
Author :
Tonomura, Osamu ; Shimamoto, Yasuhiro ; Miki, Hiroshi ; Saito, Shin-ichi ; Torii, Kazuyoshi ; Hiratani, Masahiko ; Yugami, Jiro
Author_Institution :
Central Res. Lab., Hitachi Ltd., Tokyo, Japan
Abstract :
The effect of high gate-leakage current on the accuracy of mobility evaluation was investigated. This investigation showed that a high gate leakage current makes it difficult to measure the mobility accurately in the case of using a conventional equivalent circuit with lumped circuit elements. To measure the mobility accurately, the authors therefore used a transmission-line model. Its validity was experimentally confirmed by using the capacitance-frequency characteristic of the gate of MOSFETs. The transmission-line model shows that a high gate-leakage current induces a voltage distribution in the channel, which causes a serious error in the mobility evaluation. Accordingly, a precision parameter, which clarifies the relation between channel length and measurement error, was defined. This parameter was then used to define a criterion for channel length for accurately measuring mobility. The channel-length criterion was used to successfully evaluate the mobility of n-MOSFETs with gate dielectrics of 1.4-nm-thick oxynitride (SiON).
Keywords :
MOSFET; electron mobility; leakage currents; semiconductor device models; transmission line theory; 1.4 nm; MOSFET; SiON; capacitance-frequency characteristic; channel-length criterion; equivalent circuit; gate dielectrics; high gate-leakage-current; lumped circuit elements; mobility evaluation; n-MOSFET; precision parameter; transmission-line model; voltage distribution; Capacitance-voltage characteristics; Current measurement; Dielectric measurements; Equivalent circuits; Leakage current; Length measurement; MOSFETs; Measurement errors; Transmission lines; Voltage; Leakage currents; MOSFETs; mobility; transmission-line model;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TED.2004.835624