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Single-event effects are a serious concern for high-speed III-V semiconductor devices operating in radiation-intense environments. GaAs integrated circuits (ICs) based on field effect transistor technology exhibit single-event upset sensitivity to protons and very low linear energy transfer (LET) particles. The current understanding of single-event effects in III-V circuits and devices, and approaches for mitigating their impact, are discussed.
III-Nitride Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Heterojunction (MOSH) structure consists of a thin dielectric layer deposited on top of a semiconductor heterostructure with a 2D electron gas at the heterojunction interface. MOSH structures are the key components for high-power low-loss, fast RF switches. The paper discusses two types of high-power switches using III-Nitride MOSH structures. The first type uses the MOSH structure as the gate region of an AlGaN/GaN HFET. The second type uses MOSH structure as a switching capacitor. In the 2GHz - 10 GHz frequency range, switching powers from 20 to 60 W/mm have been achieved with the insertion loss below 1 dB.
The technology progress and increasing high density demand have driven the nonvolatile memory devices into nanometer scale region. There is an urgent need of new materials to address the high programming voltage and current leakage problems in the current flash memory devices. As one of the most important nanomaterials with excellent mechanical and electronic properties, carbon nanotube has been explored for various nonvolatile memory applications. While earlier proposals of "bucky shuttle" memories and nanoelectromechanical memories remain as concepts due to fabrication difficulty, recent studies have experimentally demonstrated various prototypes of nonvolatile memory cells based on nanotube field-effect-transistor and discrete charge storage bits, which include nano-floating gate memory cells using metal nanocrystals, oxide-nitride-oxide memory stack, and more simpler trap-in-oxide memory devices. Despite of the very limited research results, distinct advantages of high charging efficiency at low operation voltage has been demonstrated. Single-electron charging effect has been observed in the nanotube memory device with quantum dot floating gates. The good memory performance even with primitive memory cells is attributed to the excellent electrostatic coupling of the unique one-dimensional nanotube channel with the floating gate and the control gate, which gives extraordinary charge sensibility and high current injection efficiency. Further improvement is expected on the retention time at room temperature and programming speed if the most advanced fabrication technology were used to make the nanotube based memory cells.
We consider properties of junctions for the FET geometry were molecular crystals or conducting polymers are used as semiconducting layers. In the molecular crystal Coulomb interaction of free electrons with surface polar phonons of the dielectric layer can lead to selftrapping of carriers and to the formation of a strongly coupled long-range surface polaron. The effect is further enhanced at presence of the bias electric field. The pronounced polaronic effects in conducting polymers change drastically the contact properties of these materials with respect to traditional semiconductors. Instead of the usual band banding near the contact interface, new allowed electronic bands appear inside the band gap. As a result the bias electric field and the injected charge penetrate into the polymer via creation of the soliton lattice which period changes with the distance from the contact surface. The performed studies open the possibility to describe the stationary characteristics and the hysteresis of the FET junctions and the Schottky diodes as well as to explain the photoluminescence suppression or enhancement under the bias electric field.
In this study, nc-ZnO films deposited in a Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD) system at various temperatures were used to fabricate high performance transistors. As determined by Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) images, nc-ZnO films deposited at a temperature range of 25°C to 400°C were made of closely packed nanocolums showing strong orientation. The influences of film growth temperature and post growth annealing on device performance were investigated. Various gate dielectric materials, including SiO2, Al2O3, and HfO2 were shown to be suitable for high performance device applications. Bottom-gate FETs fabricated on high resistivity (>2000 ohm-cm) Si substrates demonstrated record DC and high speed performance of any thin film transistors. Drain current on/off ratios better than 1012 and sub-threshold voltage swing values of less than 100mV/decade could be obtained. Devices with 2μm gate lengths produced exceptionally high current densities of >750mA/mm. Shorter gate length devices (LG=1.2μm) had current and power gain cut-off frequencies, fT and fmax, of 2.9GHz and 10GHz, respectively.
Spatial wave-function switched field effect transistor (SWSFET) switches the current flow between different channels inside the FET based on the applied voltage in its gate terminal. SWSFET can be used to implement multi-valued logic circuit with less number of circuit elements. Recently we presented unipolar inverter circuit using SWSFET. In this paper we develop a circuit model of SWSFET based on BSIM 3.2.0 and BSIM 3.2.4 and implement membership function using that circuit model of SWSFET.
The spatial wave-function switched field effect transistor (SWSFET) has two or three low band-gap quantum well channels inside the substrate of the semiconductor. Applied voltage at the gate region of the SWSFET, switches the charge carrier concentration in different channels from source to drain region. A circuit model of SWSFET is developed in BSIM 3.2.0. Membership function is implemented using the circuit model of the SWSFET. Membership function implementation using less number of SWSFET will reduce the device count in future analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and digital-to-analog converter (DAC) circuits.
This paper presents multi-state quantum dot channel (QDC) FETs incorporating cladded quantum dots forming a novel superlattice (QDSL) as the transport channel. Harnessing QDSL mini-energy band transitions as well as the encoding of spatial location of carriers in the upper or lower quantum dot channels is utilized to obtain 8- and 16-logic states. Potentially, 32-logic states can be achieved by additionally incorporating QDSL between tunnel oxide and gate. This maybe an interim alternative to sub-milliKelvin Si/SiGe qubits.
The gate-all-around junctionless field-effect transistor (GAA JL FET)-based biosensor has recently attracted worldwide attention due to its good sensitivity to gate-all-around architecture and overall conduction mechanism. The effect of temperature usually affects the performance of transistors and sensors. Therefore, the impact of temperature on the 3D GAA JL FET-based biosensor has been investigated in this work. The dielectric modulation (DM) approach has been considered for including biomolecules. Consequently, the main proprieties of this biosensor have been investigated by ranging the temperature from 77K to 400K. The simulated results showed that the on-state current lowers as the temperature rises, but the off-state current increases. The off-current variation concerning the temperature is higher than the on-current change. Also, this type of biosensor appears to have a finer threshold voltage. Furthermore, the obtained results reveal that the current sensitivity is increased when ranging from temperature from 200K to 400K, and deteriorates for lower temperature values, like 100K and 77K. In addition, the GAA JL FET-based biosensor is more reliable for the detection of neutral biomolecules at high temperatures.
A carbon nanotube field effect transistor (CNTFET) has been studied based on the Schrödinger–Poisson formalism. To improve the saturation range in the output characteristics, new structures for CNTFETs are proposed. These structures are simulated and compared with the conventional structure. Simulations show that these structures have a wider output saturation range. With this, larger drain-source voltage (Vds) can be used, which results in higher output power. In the digital circuits, higher Vds increases noise immunity.
In this paper, our focus is on ABA trilayer graphene nanoribbon (TGN), in which the middle layer is horizontally shifted from the top and bottom layers. The conductance model of TGN as a FET channel is presented based on Landauer formula. Besides the good reported agreement with experimental study lending support to our model, the presented model demonstrates that minimum conductivity increases dramatically by temperature. It also draws parallels between TGN and bilayer graphene nanoribbon, in which similar thermal behavior is observed. Maxwell–Boltzmann approximation is employed to form the conductance of TGN near the neutrality point. Analytical model in degenerate regime in comparison with reported data proves that TGN-based transistor will operate in degenerate regime like what we expect in conventional semiconductors. Moreover, our model confirms that in similar condition, the conductivity of TGN is less than bilayer graphene nanoribbon as reported in some experiments.
This paper presents multi-state quantum dot channel (QDC) FETs incorporating cladded quantum dots forming a novel superlattice (QDSL) as the transport channel. Harnessing QDSL mini-energy band transitions as well as the encoding of spatial location of carriers in the upper or lower quantum dot channels is utilized to obtain 8- and 16-logic states. Potentially, 32-logic states can be achieved by additionally incorporating QDSL between tunnel oxide and gate. This maybe an interim alternative to sub-milliKelvin Si/SiGe qubits.
The gate-all-around junctionless field-effect transistor (GAA JL FET)-based biosensor has recently attracted worldwide attention due to its good sensitivity to gate-all-around architecture and overall conduction mechanism. The effect of temperature usually affects the performance of transistors and sensors. Therefore, the impact of temperature on the 3D GAA JL FET-based biosensor has been investigated in this work. The dielectric modulation (DM) approach has been considered for including biomolecules. Consequently, the main proprieties of this biosensor have been investigated by ranging the temperature from 77 K to 400 K. The simulated results showed that the on-state current lowers as the temperature rises, but the off-state current increases. The off-current variation concerning the temperature is higher than the on-current change. Also, this type of biosensor appears to have a finer threshold voltage. Furthermore, the obtained results reveal that the current sensitivity is increased when ranging from temperature from 200 K to 400 K, and deteriorates for lower temperature values, like 100 K and 77 K. In addition, the GAA JL FET-based biosensor is more reliable for the detection of neutral biomolecules at high temperatures.
The technology progress and increasing high density demand have driven the nonvolatile memory devices into nanometer scale region. There is an urgent need of new materials to address the high programming voltage and current leakage problems in the current flash memory devices. As one of the most important nanomaterials with excellent mechanical and electronic properties, carbon nanotube has been explored for various nonvolatile memory applications. While earlier proposals of “bucky shuttle” memories and nanoelectromechanical memories remain as concepts due to fabrication difficulty, recent studies have experimentally demonstrated various prototypes of nonvolatile memory cells based on nanotube field-effect-transistor and discrete charge storage bits, which include nano-floating gate memory cells using metal nanocrystals, oxide-nitride-oxide memory stack, and more simpler trap-in-oxide memory devices. Despite of the very limited research results, distinct advantages of high charging efficiency at low operation voltage has been demonstrated. Single-electron charging effect has been observed in the nanotube memory device with quantum dot floating gates. The good memory performance even with primitive memory cells is attributed to the excellent electrostatic coupling of the unique one-dimensional nanotube channel with the floating gate and the control gate, which gives extraordinary charge sensibility and high current injection efficiency. Further improvement is expected on the retention time at room temperature and programming speed if the most advanced fabrication technology were used to make the nanotube based memory cells.
III-Nitride Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Heterojunction (MOSH) structure consists of a thin dielectric layer deposited on top of a semiconductor heterostructure with a 2D electron gas at the heterojunction interface. MOSH structures are the key components for high-power low-loss, fast RF switches. The paper discusses two types of high-power switches using III-Nitride MOSH structures. The first type uses the MOSH structure as the gate region of an AlGaN/GaN HFET. The second type uses MOSH structure as a switching capacitor. In the 2GHz - 10 GHz frequency range, switching powers from 20 to 60 W/mm have been achieved with the insertion loss below 1 dB.
We consider properties of junctions for the FET geometry were molecular crystals or conducting polymers are used as semiconducting layers. In the molecular crystal Coulomb interaction of free electrons with surface polar phonons of the dielectric layer can lead to selftrapping of carriers and to the formation of a strongly coupled long-range surface polaron. The effect is further enhanced at presence of the bias electric field. The pronounced polaronic effects in conducting polymers change drastically the contact properties of these materials with respect to traditional semiconductors. Instead of the usual band banding near the contact interface, new allowed electronic bands appear inside the band gap. As a result the bias electric field and the injected charge penetrate into the polymer via creation of the soliton lattice which period changes with the distance from the contact surface. The performed studies open the possibility to describe the stationary characteristics and the hysteresis of the FET junctions and the Schottky diodes as well as to explain the photoluminescence suppression or enhancement under the bias electric field.
Single-event effects are a serious concern for high-speed III-V semiconductor devices operating in radiation-intense environments. GaAs integrated circuits (ICs) based on field effect transistor technology exhibit single-event upset sensitivity to protons and very low linear energy transfer (LET) particles. The current understanding of single-event effects in III-V circuits and devices, and approaches for mitigating their impact, are discussed.
In this study, nc-ZnO films deposited in a Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD) system at various temperatures were used to fabricate high performance transistors. As determined by Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) images, nc-ZnO films deposited at a temperature range of 25°C to 400°C were made of closely packed nanocolums showing strong orientation. The influences of film growth temperature and post growth annealing on device performance were investigated. Various gate dielectric materials, including SiO2, Al2O3, and HfO2 were shown to be suitable for high performance device applications. Bottom-gate FETs fabricated on high resistivity (>2000 ohm-cm) Si substrates demonstrated record DC and high speed performance of any thin film transistors. Drain current on/off ratios better than 1012 and sub-threshold voltage swing values of less than 100mV/decade could be obtained. Devices with 2μm gate lengths produced exceptionally high current densities of >750mA/mm. Shorter gate length devices (LG=1.2μm) had current and power gain cut-off frequencies, fT and fmax, of 2.9GHz and 10GHz, respectively.