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2.1 Introduction
Chapter 1 introduced the MOS transistor as a switch. The present chapter first develops the fundamental physical
characteristics of the MOS transistor, in which the electrical currents and voltages are the most important
quantities. The link between physical design and logic networks can be established. Figure 2.1 depicts various
symbols used for the MOS transistors. The symbol shown in Figure 2.1(a) is used to indicate only switch logic,
while that in Figure 2.1(b) shows the substrate connection.
Figure 2.2 depicts a simplified view of the basic structure of an n-channel enhancement mode transistor, which is
formed on a p-type substrate of moderate doping level. As shown in the figure, the source and the drain regions
made of two isolated islands of n+-type diffusion. These two diffusion regions are connected via metal to the
external conductors. The depletion regions are mainly formed in the more lightly doped p-region. Thus, the source
and the drain are separated from each other by two diodes, as shown in Figure 2.2. A useful device can, however,
be made only be maintaining a current between the source and the drain. The region between the two diffused
islands under the oxide layer is called the channel region. The channel provides a path for the majority carriers
(electrons for example, in the n-channel device) to flow between the source and the drain.
The channel is covered by a thin insulating layer of silicon dioxide (SiO2). The gate electrode, made of
polycrystalline silicon (polysilicon or poly in short) stands over this oxide. As the oxide layer is an insulator, the
DC current from the gate to the channel is zero. The source and the drain regions are indistinguishable due to the
physical symmetry of the structure. The current carriers enter the device through the source terminal while they
leave the device by the drain.
The switching behaviour of a MOS device is characterized by an important parameter called the threshold voltage (Vth),
Figure in the previous slide: Figure 2.9 Typical current-voltage characteristics for (a) enhancement mode and (b)
depletion mode nMOS transistors
2.2.2 Second Order Effects
The current-voltage equations in the previous section however are ideal in nature. These have been derived keeping
various secondary effects out of consideration.
Threshold voltage and body effect : as has been discussed at length in Sec. 2.1.6, the threshold voltage Vth does
vary with the voltage difference Vsb between the source and the body (substrate). Thus including this difference, the
generalized expression for the threshold voltage is reiterated as
..................................... (2.10)
in which the parameter , known as the substrate-bias (or body-effect ) coefficient is given by
Example 2.3:
As is clear, the threshold voltage increases by almost half a volt for the above process parameters when the source is
higher than the substrate by 2.5 volts.
Drain punch-through : In a MOSFET device with improperly scaled small channel length and too low channel doping,
undesired electrostatic interaction can take place between the source and the drain known as drain-induced barrier
lowering (DIBL) takes place. This leads to punch-through leakage or breakdown between the source and the drain, and
loss of gate control. One should consider the surface potential along the channel to understand the punch-through
phenomenon. As the drain bias increases, the conduction band edge (which represents the electron energies) in the
drain is pulled down, leading to an increase in the drain-channel depletion width.
In a long-channel device, the drain bias does not influence the source-to-channel potential barrier, and it depends on
the increase of gate bias to cause the drain current to flow. However, in a short-channel device, as a result of increase
in drain bias and pull-down of the conduction band edge, the source-channel potential barrier is lowered due to DIBL.
This in turn causes drain current to flow regardless of the gate voltage (that is, even if it is below the threshold voltage