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HW2 • • • • • • • • • • 2.3-3 2.3-5 2.4-4 2.4-6 3.1-4 (Also, use google scholar to find one or two well cited papers on symmetric models of MOSFET, and quickly study them.) 3.2-3 3.3-1 Q: Given a NMOST with VB=VS=0 and V_GS =constant >V_T+0.1V, when V_D is gradually increased from 0 to VDD >> V_GS, how does C_GD vary with V_D? How much total charge goes into or leave the gate terminal? Q: In a scenario similar to last question, examine how C_DB changes as V_D is varied from 0 to VDD=4phi. Let mj =mjsw = 0.5 and phi=phi_0=const. For faster operation, should you use a larger V_D or smaller V_D? Q: Assume level 1 model, hand sketch gm, r_ds and g_ds as V_D changes. CMOS Device Model • Objective – Hand calculations for analog design – Non-idealities and their effects – Efficient and accurate simulation • CMOS transistor models – Large signal model – Small signal model – Simulation model – Noise model Large Signal Model • Nonlinear equations for solving dc values of device currents, given voltages • Level 1: Shichman-Hodges (VT, K', g, l, f, and NSUB) • Level 2: with second-order effects (varying channel charge, short-channel, weak inversion, varying surface mobility, etc.) • Level 3: Semi-empirical short-channel model • Level 4: BSIM models. Based on automatically generated parameters from a process characterization. Good weak-strong inversion transition. Device is symmetric. Higher voltage side is drain, lower voltage side is source. BSIM5 and PSP models will enforce this symmetry. Transconductance when VDS is small Transconductance when VDS is small Voltage controlled resistor and attenuator Non-uniform channel potential non-uniform gate-substrate voltage and non-uniform threshold voltage Q( x) WCox vGS v( x) VTH Good for VDS <VGS-VTH After that, ID become saturated. dv( x) dx dv( x) iD WCox vGS v( x) VTH n dx 1 W 2 iD nCox 2(vGS VTH )vDS vDS 2 L i Q vel ; vel n ron 1 W nCox vGS VT L Pro: voltage control of resistivity. Con: nonlinear resistor. MOST Regions of Operation • Cut-off, or non-conducting: vGS <VT – iD=0 • Conducting: vGS >=VT – Saturation: vDS > vGS – VT iD μCoxW (vGS - VT )2 2L – Triode or linear or ohmic or non-saturation: vDS <= vGS – VT μCoxW v iD ((vGS VT )vDS ) L 2 2 DS With channel length modulation iD μCoxW 2 (vGS - VT ) ( 1 λvDS ) 2L VT VT 0 g ( 2|φ f | |v BS| μCoxW W K' L L 2|φ f | ) Capacitors Of The Mosfet C2 Weff ( L 2 LD )Cox Weff ( Leff )Cox C1 C3 (Weff )( LD )Cox (CGXO)Weff CBD and CBS include both the diffusion-bulk junction capacitance as well as the side wall junction capacitance. They are highly nonlinear in bias voltages. C4 is the capacitance between the channel and the bulk. It is highly nonlinear and depends on the operation of the device. C4 is not measurable from terminals. C5 (CGBO) Leff / 2 Gate related capacitances Transistor in off state : CGB C2 2C5 (Weff )( Leff )Cox (CGBO) Leff CGS C1 Cox ( LD )(Weff ) CGSO(Weff ) CGD C3 Cox ( LD )(Weff ) CGDO(Weff ) Transistor in saturation state : CGB 2C5 (CGBO) Leff CGS C1 2 C2 Cox LD (Weff ) 2 Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) 3 3 CGSO(Weff ) 2 Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) 3 CGD C3 Cox ( LD )(Weff ) CGDO(Weff ) Transistor in triode region : CGB 2C5 (CGBO) Leff CGS C1 0.5C2 Cox LD (Weff ) 0.5Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) CGSO(Weff ) 0.5Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) CGD C3 0.5C2 Cox ( LD )(Weff ) 0.5Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) CGDO(Weff ) 0.5Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) Small signal model Typically: VDB, VSB are in such a way that there is a reversely biased pn junction. Therefore: iD gm vGS gbd ≈ gbs ≈ 0 at quiescent point g mb g mbs iD g ds vDS iD vBS at quiescent point at quiescent point In saturation: g m 2CoxW / L I D (1 lVDS ) 2CoxW / L I D iD iD g mbs vSB VT But iD iD VT vGS VT vSB VT g g m g mbs g m g m 1/ 2 2(2 fF VSB ) vSB I Dl g ds g o I Dl 1 lVDS 2 CoxW 2 I D 2CoxW gm ID VEB g do L VEB L CGD CGDO *Weff g mbs g m 1 1 g ds I D l 2 CGS Cox ( Leff )(Weff ) 3 CSB CJ * Asource CJSW * Psource CGB CGBO * Leff CDB CJ * Adrain CJSW * Pdrain Example spice parameter In non-saturation region gm CoxW L g mbs g ds CoxW L VDS CoxW L very small VDS (VGS VT VDS ) CoxW (VGS VT ) L g m in saturation High Frequency Figures of Merit wT • • • • • • AC current source input to G AC short S, D, B to gnd Measure AC drain current output Calculate current gain Find frequency at which current gain = 1. Ignore rs and rd, Cbs, Cbd, gds, gbs, gbd all have zero voltage drop and hence zero current • Vgs = Iin /jw(Cgs+Cgb+Cgd) ≈ Iin /jw(Cgs+Cgd) • Io = − (gm − jwCgd)Vgs ≈ − gm Iin /jw(Cgs+Cgd) • |Io/Iin| ≈ gm/w(Cgs+Cgd) • At wT, current gain =1 • wT ≈ gm/(Cgs+Cgd)≈ gm/Cgs • or High Frequency Figures of Merit wmax • • • • • • • AC current source input to G AC short S, B to gnd Measure AC power into the gate Assume complex conjugate load Compute max power delivered by the transistor Find maximum power gain Find frequency at which power gain = 1. BSIM models • Non-uniform charge density • Band bending due to non-uniform gate voltage • Non-uniform threshold voltage – Non-uniform channel doping, x, y, z – Short channel effects • Charge sharing • Drain-induced barrier lowering (DIBL) – Narrow channel effects – Temperature dependence • Mobility change due to temp, field (x, y) • Source, drain, gate, bulk resistances “Short Channel” Effects • VTH decreases for small L – Large offset for diff pairs with small L • Mobility reduction: – Velocity saturation – Vertical field (small tox=6.5nm) – Reduced gm: increases slower than root-ID Threshold Voltage VTH • Strong function of L – Use long channel for VTH matching – But this increases cap and decreases speed • Process variations – Run-to-run – How to characterize? – Slow/nominal/fast – Both worst-case & optimistic Effect of Velocity Saturation • Velocity ≈ mobility * field • Field reaches maximum Emax – (Vgs-Vt)/L reaches ESAT • gm become saturated: – gm ≈ ½nCoxW*ESAT • But Cgs still 2/3 WL Cox • wT ≈ gm/Cgs = ¾ nESAT /L • No longer ~ 1/L^2 Threshold Reduction • When channel is short, effect of Vd extends to S • Cause barrier to drop, i.e. Vth to drop • Greatly affects sub-threshold current: 26 mV Vth drop current * e • 100~200 mV Vth drop due to Vd not uncommon 100’s or 1000 times current increase • Use lower density active near gate but higher density for contacts Other effects • Temperature variation • Normal-Field Mobility Degradation • Substrate current – Very nonlinear in Vd • Drain to source leakage current at Vgs=0 – Big concern for static power • Gate leakage currents – Hot electron – Tunneling – Very nonlineary • Transit Time Effects Consequences for Design • SPICE (HSPICE or Spectre) – BSIM3, BSIM4 models – Accurate but inappropriate for hand analysis – Verification (& optimization) • Design: – Small signal parameter design space: • gm, CL • gm/ID, ID • Av0= gmro (speed, noise) (power, output range, speed) (gain) – Device geometries from SPICE (table, graph); – may require iteration (e.g. CGS) Intrinsic voltage gain of MOSFET Sweep V1 Measure vgs Intrinsic voltage gain = gm/go = Dvds/Dvgs for constant Id Intrinsic voltage gain of MOSFET Sweep V1 Measure vgs + + Intrinsic voltage gain = gm/go = Dvds/Dvgs for constant Id Transconductance when VDS is small Effect of changing VDS for a large VGS Effect of changing VDS for a given VGS Effect of changing VDS for a given VGS Effect of changing VDS for various VGS VGS<=VT Effect of changing VDS for various VGS Effect of changing VDS for various VGS