Title :
Effects of High-κ (HfO2) Gate Dielectrics in Double-Gate and Cylindrical-Nanowire FETs Scaled to the Ultimate Technology Nodes
Author :
Gnani, Elena ; Reggiani, Susanna ; Rudan, Massimo ; Baccarani, Giorgio
Author_Institution :
DEIS, Bologna Univ.
Abstract :
In this work we investigate the performance of double-gate and cylindrical nanowire FETs with high-kappa gate dielectrics at their extreme miniaturization limits. The model fully accounts for quantum electrostatics; current transport is simulated by an improved quantum drift-diffusion approach supported by a new thickness-dependent mobility model which nicely fits the available measurements for both SiO2 and HfO2 gate dielectrics. The on-current is simulated using both the quantum drift-diffusion model and a full-quantum transport approach based on the quantum transmitting boundary method, which assumes a purely ballistic transport. The performance comparison between SiO2 and HfO2 insulated-gate FETs with the same electrical oxide thickness demonstrates that the latter provides a slight degradation of the short-channel effect compared with the former but, at the same time, gives an improved on-current due to lateral capacitive-coupling effects, despite the inherent degradation of the low-field mobility
Keywords :
ballistic transport; carrier mobility; dielectric materials; hafnium compounds; insulated gate field effect transistors; nanowires; semiconductor device models; silicon compounds; HfO2; SiO2; ballistic transport; capacitive-coupling effects; current transport; cylindrical-nanowire FETs; double-gate FETs; electrical oxide thickness; high-k gate dielectrics; low-field mobility; quantum drift-diffusion approach; quantum electrostatics; quantum transmitting boundary method; quantum transport approach; short-channel effect; thickness-dependent mobility; ultimate technology nodes; CMOS technology; Computational modeling; Degradation; Dielectrics; Double-gate FETs; Electrostatics; Hafnium oxide; MOSFETs; Predictive models; Quantum computing; HfO$_2$ ; Gate insulator; MOSFETs; high-$kappa$ materials; scaling issues;
Journal_Title :
Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNANO.2006.888547