4.6 Article

Multilevel 3-D Device Simulation Approach Applied to Deeply Scaled Nanowire Field Effect Transistors

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES
Volume 69, Issue 9, Pages 5276-5282

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TED.2022.3188945

Keywords

Drift diffusion (DD); Monte Carlo (MC); nanowire (NW); semiconductor device simulation; tight-binding (TB)

Funding

  1. Spain's Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion/Xunta deGalicia/European Regional Development Fund [RYC-2017-23312, PID2019-104834GB-I00, ED431F-2020/008]
  2. Spain's Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [RTI2018-097876-B-C21]

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In this study, three silicon nanowire field effect transistors were simulated using hierarchical multilevel quantum and semiclassical models, and verified against experimental characteristics. The research demonstrates the significant impact of accurate parameterization of band structure and quantum confinement on the computed characteristics of nanoscaled devices.
Three silicon nanowire (SiNW) field effect transistors (FETs) with 15-, 12.5- and 10.6-nm gate lengths are simulated using hierarchical multilevel quantum and semiclassical models verified against experimental I-D-V-G characteristics. The tight-binding (TB) formalism is employed to obtain the band structure in k-space of ellipsoidal NWs to extract electron effective masses. The masses are transferred into quantum-corrected 3-D finite element (FE) drift-diffusion (DD) and ensemble Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, which accurately capture the quantum-mechanical confinement of the ellipsoidal NW cross sections. We demonstrate that the accurate parameterization of the bandstructure and the quantum-mechanical confinement has a profound impact on the computed I-D-V-G characteristics of nanoscaled devices. Finally, we devise a step-by-step technology computer-aided design (TCAD) methodology of simple parameterization for efficient DD device simulations.

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