4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Characterization and Modeling of 28-nm Bulk CMOS Technology Down to 4.2 K

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF THE ELECTRON DEVICES SOCIETY
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 1007-1018

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JEDS.2018.2817458

Keywords

28 nm bulk CMOS; cryo-CMOS; subthreshold swing; freeze-out; cryoelectronics; cryogenic; interface charge traps; MOS transistor modeling; slope factor; 4.2 K

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme through MOS-Quito (MOS-Based Quantum Information Technology) [688539]

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This paper presents an experimental investigation, compact modeling, and low-temperature physics-based modeling of a commercial 28-nm bulk CMOS technology operating at cryogenic temperatures. The physical and technological parameters are extracted at 300, 77, and 4.2K from dc measurements made on various geometries. The simplified-EKV compact model is used to accurately capture the dc characteristics of this technology down to 4.2K and to demonstrate the impact of cryogenic temperatures on the essential analog figures-of-merit. A new body-partitioning methodology is then introduced to obtain a set of analytical expressions for the electrostatic profile and the freeze-out layer thickness in field-effect transistors operating from deep-depletion to inversion. The proposed physics-based model relies on the drift-diffusion transport mechanism to obtain the drain current and subthreshold swing, and is validated with the experimental results. This model explains the degradation in subthreshold swing at deep-cryogenic temperatures by the temperature-dependent occupation of interface charge traps. This leads to a degradation of the theoretical limit of the subthreshold swing at deep-cryogenic temperatures.

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