• DocumentCode
    445333
  • Title

    Monte carlo study of germanium N- and P- MOSFETs

  • Author

    Ghosh, Bahniman ; Fan, Xiao-Feng ; Register, Leonard F. ; Banerjee, Sanjay K.

  • Author_Institution
    Microelectron. Res. Center, Texas Univ., Austin, TX
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    2005
  • fDate
    22-22 June 2005
  • Firstpage
    81
  • Lastpage
    82
  • Abstract
    As device dimensions are being scaled to their ultimate limits, channel mobility engineering seems to offer one of the best prospects of improved performance of metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs). In fact, new materials, such as Ge, with higher effective mobilities of electrons (2times) and holes (4times) than in Si are already being explored to increase the drive currents in MOSFETs. In addition, by straining the Ge channels, it is possible to further increase the mobilities of the holes. However, how this advantage in mobility translates to improved drive current in the short-channel length MOSFETs is not completely clear. For example, in the ballistic limit, it is thermal velocity that matters (Lundstrom, 1997) and these are comparable for Si and Ge. Although, there have been reports from some experimental and theoretical (in the ballistic limit) studies of the mobility and drive current enhancements of unstrained and strained Ge channel MOSFETs over Si MOSFETs, no Monte Carlo simulation taking into account full band structure, scattering, non local field effects, etc., has so far been been performed. The aim of this work was to perform a full band Monte Carlo simulation study of unstrained Ge bulk N- and P- MOSFETs and strained Ge bulk PMOSFETs and compare with their Si counterparts. Since biaxial strain along the (100) plane in Ge does not break the degeneracy of the conduction band L valleys of Ge, we have not considered strained Ge NMOSFETs
  • Keywords
    MOSFET; Monte Carlo methods; electron mobility; elemental semiconductors; germanium; hole mobility; semiconductor device models; Ge; Ge channels; Monte Carlo simulation; ballistic limit; biaxial strain; channel mobility engineering; drive current; electron mobility; germanium N-MOSFET; germanium P-MOSFET; hole mobility; metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors; thermal velocity; Charge carrier processes; Electron mobility; Germanium; Light scattering; MOSFETs; Monte Carlo methods; Particle scattering; Phonons; Rough surfaces; Surface roughness;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Device Research Conference Digest, 2005. DRC '05. 63rd
  • Conference_Location
    Santa Barbara, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-9040-7
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/DRC.2005.1553065
  • Filename
    1553065