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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

3D NANOTUBE FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTORS FOR HYBRID HIGH-PERFORMANCE AND LOW-POWER OPERATION WITH HIGH CHIP-AREA EFFICIENCY

Fahad, Hossain M. 03 1900 (has links)
Information anytime and anywhere has ushered in a new technological age where massive amounts of ‘big data’ combined with self-aware and ubiquitous interactive computing systems is shaping our daily lives. As society gravitates towards a smart living environment and a sustainable future, the demand for faster and more computationally efficient electronics will continue to rise. Keeping up with this demand requires extensive innovation at the transistor level, which is at the core of all electronics. Up until recently, classical silicon transistor technology has traditionally been weary of disruptive innovation. But with the aggressive scaling trend, there has been two dramatic changes to the transistor landscape. The first was the re-introduction of metal/high-K gate stacks with strain engineering in the 45 nm technology node, which enabled further scaling on silicon to smaller nodes by alleviating the problem of gate leakage and improving the channel mobility. The second innovation was the use of non-planar 3D silicon fins as opposed to classical planar architectures for stronger electrostatic control leading to significantly lower off-state leakage and other short-channel effects. Both these innovations have prolonged the life of silicon based electronics by at least another 1-2 decades. The next generation 14 nm technology node will utilize silicon fin channels that have gate lengths of 14 nm and fin thicknesses of 7 nm. These dimensions are almost at the extreme end of current lithographic capabilities. Moreover, as fins become smaller, the parasitic capacitances and resistances increase significantly resulting in degraded performance. It is of popular consensus that the next evolutionary step in transistor technology is in the form of gate-all-around silicon nanowires (GAA NWFETs), which offer the tightest electrostatic configuration leading to the lowest possible leakage and short channel characteristics in over-the-barrier type devices. However, to keep scaling on silicon, the amount of current generated per device has to be increased while keeping short channel effects and off-state leakage at bay. The objective of this doctoral thesis is the investigation of an innovative vertical silicon based architecture called the silicon nanotube field effect transistor (Si NTFET). This topology incorporates a dual inner/outer core/shell gate stack strategy to control the volume inversion properties in a hollow silicon 1D quasi-nanotube under a tight electrostatic configuration. Together with vertically aligned source and drain, the Si NTFET is capable of very high on-state performance (drive current) in an area-efficient configuration as opposed to arrays of gate-all-around nanowires, while maintaining leakage characteristics similar to a single nanowire. Such a device architecture offsets the need of device arraying that is needed with fin and nanowire architectures. Extensive simulations are used to validate the potential benefits of Si NTFETs over GAA NWFETs on a variety of platforms such as conventional MOSFETs, tunnel FETs, junction-less FETs. This thesis demonstrates a novel CMOS compatible process flow to fabricate vertical nanotube transistors that offer a variety of advantages such as lithography-independent gate length definition, integration of epitaxially grown silicon nanotubes with spacer based gate dielectrics and abrupt in-situ doped source/drain junctions. Experimental measurement data will showcase the various materials and processing challenges in fabricating these devices. Finally, an extension of this work to topologically transformed wavy channel FinFETs is also demonstrated keeping in line with the theme of area efficient high-performance electronics.

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