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The Physical Structure (NMOS)

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Presentation on theme: "The Physical Structure (NMOS)"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Physical Structure (NMOS)
Gate oxide Polysilicon Gate Al Al SiO2 SiO2 SiO2 S D Field Oxide Field Oxide n+ channel n+ L P Substrate contact Metal (G) L (S) n+ n+ (D) W Poly

2 Transistor Resistance
Two Components: Drain/ Sources Resistance: RD(S) = Rsh x no. of squares+ contact resistance. Channel Resistance: Depends on the region of operation: (G) : (S) L n+ n+ (D) W RS Rch RD Linear Saturation

3 Transistor Geometry

4 Transistor Geometry- Detailed

5 NMOS Operation-Linear
KN=K’. W/L Process Transconductance uA/V2 for 0.35u, K’ (Kp)=196uA/ V2 Gate oxide capacitance per unit area eox = 3.9 x eo = 3.45 x F/m tox Oxide thickness for 0.35 m , tox=100Ao Quick calculation of Cox: Cox= 0.345/tox (Ao) pf/um2 m = mobility of electrons 550 cm2/V-sec for 0.35 m process

6 NMOS Operation-Linear
Effect of W/L Effect of temperature W W Rds W/L temp m Rds

7 Variations in Width and Length
polysilicon 1. Width Oxide encroachment Weff= Wdrawn-2WD 2. Length Lateral diffusion LD = 0.7Xj Leff= Ldrawn-2LD Weff WD WD Wdrawn polysilicon Ldrawn LD Leff LD

8 Large Transistors Rchannel decrease with increase of W/L of the transistor

9 Semiconductor Resistors
R= p(l /A) = (p/t). (l /w) = Rsh. (l /w) For 0.5u process: N+ diffusion : 70  / □ M1: 0.06 P+ diffusion : 140  /□ M2: 0.06 Polysilicon : 12  /□ M3: 0.03 Polycide:2-3  /□ P-well: 2.5K N-well: 1K current t l w (A) Rsh values for 0.35u CMOS Process: Polysilicon 10 /□ Polycide /□ Metal /□ Metal II /□ Metal III /□ Contact resistance: PolyI to MetalI 50  Via resistance: Metal I to Metal II  Via resistance: Metal II to metal III 1.

10 Modelling: Resistance
Rint= Rsh [l/w] Rsh values for 0.35u CMOS Process: Polysilicon 10 / Polycide / Metal / Metal II / Metal III / Contact resistance: PolyI to MetalI 50  Via resistance: Metal I to Metal II  Via resistance: Metal II to metal III 1.

11 Semiconductor Resistors
polysilicon Diffusion n+ Al Al SiO2 Field oxide n+ Polysilicon Resistor Diffusion Resistor

12 Delay Definitions

13 Semiconductor Capacitors
1. Poly Capacitor: a. Poly to substrate b. Poly1 to Poly2 2. Diffusion Capacitor sidewall capacitances depletion region n+ (ND) bottomwall capacitance substrate (NA)

14 Dynamic Behavior of MOS Transistor
Prentice Hall/Rabaey

15 SPICE Parameters for Parasitics
Prentice Hall/Rabaey

16 SPICE Transistors Parameters
Prentice Hall/Rabaey

17 Computing the Capacitances
V V DD DD M 2 M 4 C C db 2 g 4 C gd 12 V V V in out out 2 C C C db 1 w g 3 M 3 M 1 Interconnect Fanout V in V out Simplified Model C L

18 Computing the Capacitances

19 CMOS Inverter: Steady State Response
DD DD R on V = V OH DD V V = 0 V out out OL R on V = V V = 0 in DD in

20 Switching Characteristics of Inverters
Transient Response

21 Step Response Fall Delay Time: TPHL MN OFF Saturation Linear IDN CL Vo
VDD=5V Vin G S D Vo GND MP MN CL VDD MN OFF Saturation Linear IDN V in = 5 Vin V in = 4 V in = 3 Vo VDD-VT VDD (VDSAT)

22 Step Response- Fall time, tf
vo 1 0.9 1-n tf=~ k is a constant vin 0.1 td1 td2 0.1 tr=~ k is a constant

23 Step Response-tPHL Assume normalized voltages vin= Vin/ VDD
vo= Vo/ VDD n = VTN/ VDD p = VTP/ VDD tPHL=td1+td2 Vo VDD VDD-VTN Vx VDD/ 2 Vin td1 td2 vo 1 1-n 0.5 vin td1 td2

24 Step Response Rise Delay tPLH and Rise Time tr
VDD S G VDD MP D Vin Vo 0.1 D CL G MN S (P= - 0.2) GND

25 Factors Influence Delay
Inverter Delay,td = (tPHL+tPLH)/2 The following factors influence the delay of the inverter: Load Capacitance Supply Voltage Transistor Sizes Junction Temperature Input Transition Time

26 Delay as a function of VDD

27 Delay as a function of Transistor Size
tPHL and tf decrease with the increase of W/L of the NMOS tPLH and tr decrease with the increase of W/L of the PMOS

28 Temperature Effect Temperature ranges: commercial : 0 to700C
industrial: -40 to 850C military: -55 to 1250C Calculation of the junction temperature tj= ta + ja X Pd Effect of temperature on mobility Delay and speed implications

29 Effect of Input Transition Times
The delay of the inverter increases with the increase of the input transition times r and f tPHL = (tPHL) step + (r /6).(1-2p) tPLH = (tPLH) step + (f/6).(1+2n) Vo r Vin

30 Transistor Sizing Define  = (W/L)p/(W/L)n
For Equal Fall and Rise Delay KN=KP  = n/ p For Minimum Delay dtD/d  = 0 opt = Sqrt (n/ p)

31 Power Dissipation in CMOS
Two Components contribute to the power dissipation: Static Power Dissipation Leakage current Sub-threshold current Dynamic Power Dissipation Short circuit power dissipation Charging and discharging power dissipation

32 Static Power Dissipation
VDD Leakage Current: P-N junction reverse biased current: io= is(eqV/kT-1) Typical value 0.1nA to temp. Total Power dissipation: Psl= i0.VDD Sub-threshold Current Relatively high in low threshold devices S G B MP D Vin Vo D G B MN S GND

33 Analysis of CMOS circuit power dissipation
The power dissipation in a CMOS logic gate can be expressed as P = Pstatic + Pdynamic = (VDD · Ileakage) + (p · f · Edynamic) Where p is the switching probability or activity factor at the output node (i.e. the average number of output switching events per clock cycle). The dynamic energy consumed per output switching event is defined as Edynamic =

34 Analysis of CMOS circuit power dissipation
The first term —— the energy dissipation due to the Charging/discharging of the effective load capacitance CL. The second term —— the energy dissipation due to the input-to-output coupling capacitance. A rising input results in a VDD-VDD transition of the voltage across CM and so doubles the charge of CM. CL = Cload + Cdbp +Cdbn CM = Cgdn + Cgdp

35 The MOSFET parasitic capacitances
• distributed, • voltage-dependent, and • nonlinear. So their exact modeling is quite complex. Even ESC can be modeled, it is also difficult to calculate the Edynamic. On the other hand, if the short-circuit current iSC can be Modeled, the power-supply current iDD may be modeled with the same method. So there is a possibility to directly model iDD instead of iSC.

36 Schematic of the Inverter

37

38 Analysis of short-circuit current
The short-circuit energy dissipation ESC is due to the rail-to-rail current when both the PMOS and NMOS devices are simultaneously on. ESC = ESC_C + ESC_n Where and

39 Charging and discharging currents
Discharging Inverter Charging Inverter

40 Factors that affect the short-circuit current
For a long-channel device, assuming that the inverter is symmetrical (n = p =  and VTn = -VTp = VT) and with zero load capacitance, and input signal has equal rise and fall times (r = f = ), the average short-circuit current [Veendrick, 1994] is From the above equation, some fundamental factors that affect short-circuit current are:  , VDD, VT,  and T.

41 Parameters affecting short cct current
For a short-channel device,  and VT are no longer constants, but affected by a large number of parameters (i.e. circuit conditions, hspice parameters and process parameters). CL also affects short-circuit current. Imean is a function of the following parameters (tox is process-dependent): CL, , T (or /T), VDD, Wn,p, Ln,p (or Wn,p/ Ln,p ), tox, … The above argument is validated by the means of simulation in the case of discharging inverter,

42 The effect of CL on Short CCt Current

43 Effect of tr on short cct Current

44 Effect of Wp on Short cct Current

45 Effect of timestep setting on simulation results

46 Thank you !


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