0.5 μm CMOS device design and characterization
H.I. Hanafi, M.R. Wordeman, et al.
ESSDERC 1987
This paper reports experimental data and simulation results on submicron MOSFET’s, which are used to support a physical explanation for two important anomalies in the dependence of device threshold voltage on channel length. The widely observed increase in threshold voltage with decreasing channel length (roll-up), and the more recent observation that the ultimate threshold voltage decrease (roll-off) occurs at a rate which is far in excess of that which can be explained with conventional models of laterally uniform channel doping. A new model is proposed that attributes roll-up as well as roll-off to lateral redistribution of doping near the source and drain junctions. This lateral redistribution is caused by crystal defects formed during post-source / drain-implant anneal. The resulting profile consists of an enhancement of background doping adjacent to the junction edge, bounded by a depression of the doping farther into the channel. © 1993 IEEE
H.I. Hanafi, M.R. Wordeman, et al.
ESSDERC 1987
Y. Mii, S.J. Wind, et al.
VLSI Technology 1994
D.K. Sadana, A. Acovic, et al.
IEDM 1992
D.S. Wen, W.H. Chang, et al.
VLSI-TSA 1991