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Theoretical Study of Some Physical Aspects of Electronic Transport in nMOSFETs at the 10-nm Gate-Length

by: M. V. Fischetti, T. P. O'Regan, Sudarshan Narayanan, C. Sachs, Seonghoon Jin, Jiseok Kim, Yan Zhang
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on, Vol. 54, No. 9. (2007), pp. 2116-2136, doi:10.1109/ted.2007.902722  Key: citeulike:9639819

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Abstract

We discuss selected aspects of the physics of electronic transport in nMOSFETs at the 10-nm scale: Long-range Coulomb interactions, which may degrade performance and even prevent ballistic transport from occurring; scattering with high-k insulator interfacial modes, which depresses the electron mobility but is found to affect minimally the saturated transconductance of 15-nm devices; and the use of high-mobility small effective-mass substrates, which poses serious concerns related to performance limitations due to the density-of-states (DOS) bottleneck and to the band-to-band (Zener) leakage current. On the basis of our results, we argue that ballistic transport may not only be unachievable (because of unavoidable electron-electron collisions) but may also be undesirable, as it may enhance the DOS bottleneck. We also argue that the knowledge of low-field mobility is of little use in predicting quantitatively the performance of devices in the saturated region.


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