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Types of Field-Effect Transistors MOSFET (Metal-Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor) Primary component in high-density VLSI chips such as memories and microprocessors JFET (Junction Field-Effect Transistor) Finds application especially in analog and RF circuit design J-FET (Junction Field Effect Transistor) Introduction The field-effect transistor (FET) controls the current between two points but does so differently than the bipolar transistor. The FET operates by the effects of an electric field on the flow of electrons through a single type of semiconductor material. This is why the FET is sometimes called a unipolar transistor. J-FET (Junction Field Effect Transistor) Introduction…cont Current moves within the FET in a channel, from the source (S) connection to the drain (D) connection. A gate (G) terminal generates an electric field that controls the current . The channel is made of either N-type or P-type semiconductor material; an FET is specified as either an N-channel or P-channel device Majority carriers flow from source to drain. In N-channel devices, electrons flow so the drain potential must be higher than that of the Source (VDS > O)- In P-channel devices, the flow of holes requires that VDS < 0 JFET Construction A schematic representation of an n channel JFET is shown in Figure 118. An n-type channel is formed between two p-type layers which are connected to the gate. Majority carrier electrons flow from the source and exit the drain, forming the drain current. The pn junction is reverse biased during normal operation, and this widens the depletion layers which extend into the n channel only (since the doping of the p regions is much larger than that of the n channel). As the depletion layers widen, the channel narrows, restricting current flow. J-FET (Junction Field Effect Transistor) Introduction…contd. The behavior of a JFET can be described in terms of a set of Characteristic Curves shown here. In the region shown with a green background the drain-source voltage is small and the channel behaves like a fairly ordinary conductor. In this region the current varies roughly in proportion to the drain-source voltage as if the JFET obeys Ohm's law. However, as we increase the drain-source voltage and move into the region with a light background we increase the drainchannel voltage so much that we start to ‘squeeze down’ the channel. Gate Voltage control S-D currents J-FET (Junction Field Effect Transistor) Hence a large increase in drain-source: ‘pulls harder’, trying to drag the electrons more quickly from source to drain. ‘squeezes down’ the channel making it harder for the electrons to get through. These effects tend to cancel out, leaving the current the same at all high drain-source voltage. The MOS Transistor Polysilicon Aluminum The NMOS Transistor Cross Section n areas have been doped with donor ions (arsenic) of concentration ND - electrons are the majority carriers Gate oxide Polysilicon W Gate Source Drain n+ n+ L p substrate Field-Oxide (SiO2) p+ stopper Bulk (Body) p areas have been doped with acceptor ions (boron) of concentration NA - holes are the majority carriers MOS Capacitor Structure First electrode - Gate : Consists of low-resistivity material such as highly-doped polycrystalline silicon, aluminum or tungsten Second electrode Substrate or Body: n- or ptype semiconductor Dielectric - Silicon dioxide: stable high-quality electrical insulator between gate and substrate. Substrate Conditions for Different Biases Accumulation VG << VTN Depletion VG < VTN Inversion VG > VTN Low-frequency C-V Characteristics for MOS Capacitor on P-type Substrate MOS capacitance is nonlinear function of voltage. Total capacitance in any region dictated by the separation between capacitor plates. Total capacitance modeled as series combination of fixed oxide capacitance and voltage-dependent depletion layer capacitance. NMOS Transistor: Structure 4 device terminals: Gate(G), Drain(D), Source(S) and Body(B). Source and drain regions form pn junctions with substrate. vSB, vDS and vGS always positive during normal operation. vSB must always reverse bias the pn junctions The Threshold Voltage VT = VT0 + (|-2F + VSB| - |-2F|) where VT0 is the threshold voltage at VSB = 0 and is mostly a function of the manufacturing process – Difference in work-function between gate and substrate material, oxide thickness, Fermi voltage, charge of impurities trapped at the surface, dosage of implanted ions, etc. VSB is the source-bulk voltage F = -Tln(NA/ni) is the Fermi potential (T = kT/q = 26mV at 300K is the thermal voltage; NA is the acceptor ion concentration; ni 1.5x1010 cm-3 at 300K is the intrinsic carrier concentration in pure silicon) = (2qsiNA)/Cox is the body-effect coefficient (impact of changes in VSB) (si=1.053x10-10F/m is the permittivity of silicon; Cox = ox/tox is the gate oxide capacitance with ox=3.5x10-11F/m) The Body Effect 0.9 0.85 VSB is the substrate bias voltage (normally positive for n-channel devices with the body tied to ground) l 0.8 0.75 0.7 0.65 0.6 0.55 A negative bias causes VT to increase from 0.45V to 0.85V l 0.5 0.45 0.4 -2.5 -2 -1.5 VBS (V) -1 -0.5 0 NMOS Transistor: Triode Region Characteristics Concept of Asymmetric Channel • It is to be noted that the VDS measured relative to the source increases from 0 to VDS as we travel along the channel from source to drain. This is because the voltage between the gate and points along the channel decreases from VGS at the source end to VGS-VDS. • When VDS is increased to the value that reduces the voltage between the gate and channel at the drain end to Vt that is , • VGS-VDS=Vt or VDS= VGS-Vt or VDS(sat) ≥ VGS-Vt Transistor in Saturation Mode Assuming VGS > VT VGS S VDS G D n+ VDS > VGS - VT - V -V + GS T ID n+ Pinch-off B The current remains constant (saturates). NMOS Transistor: Saturation Region iD vDSAT vGS VTN ' Kn W 2 L v VTN GS 2 for vDS vGS VTN is called the saturation or pinch-off voltage Channel-Length Modulation As vDS increases above vDSAT, the length of the depleted channel beyond pinch-off point, DL, increases and actual L decreases. iD increases slightly with vDS instead of being constant. channel length modulation parameter ' K n W 2 v V 1 v iD GS TN DS 2 L (pCox) Enhancement-Mode PMOS Transistors: Structure p-type source and drain regions in n-type substrate. vGS < 0 required to create p-type inversion layer in channel region For current flow, vGS < vTP To maintain reverse bias on source-substrate and drainsubstrate junctions, vSB < 0 and vDB < 0 Positive bulk-source potential causes VTP to become more negative Depletion-Mode MOSFETS NMOS transistors with VTN 0 Ion implantation process is used to form a built-in n-type channel in the device to connect source and drain by a resistive channel Non-zero drain current for vGS = 0; negative vGS required to turn device off. Problem-solving Technique :MOSFET DC Analysis STep1: Requires knowing the bias condition of the transistor such as cutoff or saturation or nonsaturation. Step2: If the bias condition is not obvious, one must guess the bias condition before analyzing the circuit. Step3 How can we Guess? (i) Assume that the transistor is biased in the saturation region, which implies that: VGS>VTN, ID>0, and VDS≥VDS(sat) If all the above conditions are satisfied, analyze the circuit using the saturation current voltage relations. (ii) If VGS<VTN, then transistor is probably in cutoff mode. (iii) If VDS<VDS(sat), the transistor is likely biased in nonsaturation region, analyze the circuit using nonsaturation current voltage relations. MOSFET Circuit Symbols (g) and (i) are the most commonly used symbols in VLSI logic design. MOS devices are symmetric. In NMOS, n+ region at higher voltage is the drain. In PMOS p+ region at lower voltage is the drain Summary of the MOSFET Current-Voltage relationship Table 5.1