+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Bound States Open Systems

Bound States Open Systems

Date post: 08-Jul-2016
Category:
Upload: rahul-roy
View: 218 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Solution technique of scchrodinger's equation.
70
Bound States, Open Systems and Gate Leakage Calculation in Schottky Barriers Dragica Vasileska
Transcript
Page 1: Bound States Open Systems

Bound States, Open Systemsand Gate Leakage Calculation in Schottky

Barriers

Dragica Vasileska

Page 2: Bound States Open Systems
Page 3: Bound States Open Systems
Page 4: Bound States Open Systems
Page 5: Bound States Open Systems
Page 6: Bound States Open Systems

Time Independent Schrödinger Wave Equation - Revisited

2 2

2 ( ) ( ) ( )2 *

V x x E xm x

K.E. Term P.E. Term

Solutions of the TISWE can be of two types, depending upon theProblem we are solving:

- Closed system (eigenvalue problem)- Open system (propagating states)

Page 7: Bound States Open Systems
Page 8: Bound States Open Systems

Closed Systems

• Closed systems are systems in which the wavefunction is localized due to the spatial confinement.

• The most simple closed systems are:– Particle in a box problem– Parabolic confinement– Triangular Confinement

Page 9: Bound States Open Systems
Page 10: Bound States Open Systems
Page 11: Bound States Open Systems
Page 12: Bound States Open Systems
Page 13: Bound States Open Systems
Page 14: Bound States Open Systems
Page 15: Bound States Open Systems
Page 16: Bound States Open Systems
Page 17: Bound States Open Systems
Page 18: Bound States Open Systems
Page 19: Bound States Open Systems
Page 20: Bound States Open Systems
Page 21: Bound States Open Systems

-20 -10 0 10 200

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

distance [nm]

Ene

rgy

[eV

]

-20 -10 0 10 200

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

distance [nm]

ener

gy [e

V]

-100 -50 0 500

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

distance [nm]

ener

gy [e

V]

Rectangularconfinement

Parabolicconfinement

Triangularconfinement

Sine + cosine Hermite Polynomials Airy Functions

Bound states calculation lab on the nanoHUB

Page 22: Bound States Open Systems

Summary of Quantum Effects

• Band-Gap Widening• Increase in Effective Oxide Thickness (EOT)

Schred Second Generation – Gokula Kannan -

Page 23: Bound States Open Systems

Motivation for developing SCHRED V2.0- Alternate Transport Directions -

• Conduction band valley of the material has three valley pairs• In turn they have different effective masses along the chosen crystallographic directions• Effective masses can be computed assuming a 3 valley conduction band model.

Page 24: Bound States Open Systems

Strained Silicon

Page 25: Bound States Open Systems

Arbitrary Crystallographic Orientation

• The different effective masses in the Device co-ordinate system (DCS) along different crystallographic directions can be computed from the ellipsoidal Effective masses ( A Rahman et al.)

Page 26: Bound States Open Systems

Other Materials Bandstructure Model

GaAs Bandstructure

Page 27: Bound States Open Systems

Charge Treatment• Semi-classical Model

– Maxwell Boltzmann– Fermi-Dirac statistics

• Quantum-Mechanical Model Constitutive Equations:

Page 28: Bound States Open Systems

Self-Consistent Solution

• 1D Poisson Equation:– LU Decomposition method (direct solver)

• 1D Schrodinger Equation:– Matrix transformation to make the coefficients matrix

symmetric– Eigenvalue problem is solved using the EISPACK routines

• Full Self-Consistent Solution of the 1D Poisson and the 1D Schrodinger Equation is Obtained

Page 29: Bound States Open Systems

1D Poisson Equation

• Discretize 1-D Poisson equation on a non-uniform generalized mesh • Obtain the coefficients and forcing function using 3-point finite difference scheme

Page 30: Bound States Open Systems

• Solve Poisson equation using LU decomposition method

Page 31: Bound States Open Systems

1D Schrodinger Equation

• Discretize 1-D Schrodinger equation on a non-uniform mesh

• Resultant coefficients form a non-symmetric matrix

Page 32: Bound States Open Systems

Matrix transformation to preserve symmetry

Let

Let where M is diagonal matrix with elements Li2

Where,

and

• Solve using the symmetric matrix H• Obtain the value of φ

where L is diagonal matrix with elements Li

(Tan,1990)

Page 33: Bound States Open Systems

1D Schrodinger Equation

• symmetric tridiagonal matrix solvers (EISPACK)• Solves for eigenvalues and eigenvectors• Computes the electron charge density

Page 34: Bound States Open Systems

Full Self-Consistent Solution of the 1D Poisson and the 1D Schrodinger Equation

• The 1-D Poisson equation is solved for the potential

• The resultant value of the potential is used to solve the 1-D Schrodinger equation using EISPACK routine.

• The subband energy and the wavefunctions are used to solve for the electron charge density

• The Poisson equation is again solved for the new value of potential using this quantum electron charge density

• The process is repeated until a convergence is obtained.

Page 35: Bound States Open Systems

Other Features Included in the Theoretical Model

• Partial ionization of the impurity atoms

• Arbitrary number of subbands can be taken into account

• The simulator automatically switches from quantum-mechanical to semi-classical calculation and vice versa when sweeping the gate voltage and changing the nature of the confinement

Page 36: Bound States Open Systems

Outputs that Are Generated

• Conduction Band Profile• Potential Profile• Electron Density• Average distance of the carriers from the interface• Total gate capacitance and its constitutive components• Wavefunctions for different gate voltages• Subband energies for different gate voltages• Subband population for different gate voltages

Page 37: Bound States Open Systems

Subset of Simulation ResultsConventional MOS Capacitors with arbitrary crystallographic orientation

Silicon

Subband energy Valleys 1 and 2 Confinement

DirectionTransport, width and confinement Effective mass

Valleys 1 and 2

(001) mZ 0.19

(110) mZ 0.3189(111) mZ 0.2598(001) mZ 1.17

(110) mZ 0.2223(111) mZ 0.1357

Page 38: Bound States Open Systems

Conventional MOS Capacitors with arbitrary crystallographic orientationSilicon

Subband energy Valley 3

Confinement Direction

Transport, width and confinement Effective mass

Valley 3

(001) mZ 0.98(110) mZ 0.19(111) mZ 0.2598(001) mxy 0.0361(110) mxy 0.3724(111) mxy 0.1357

Page 39: Bound States Open Systems

Subband population – Valley 3Subband population – Valleys 1 and 2

Page 40: Bound States Open Systems

Sheet charge density Vs gate voltage

Capacitance Vs gate voltage

Page 41: Bound States Open Systems

Average Distance from Interface Vs log(Sheet charge density)

Page 42: Bound States Open Systems

GaAs MOS capacitors

Capacitance Vs gate voltage(“Inversion capacitance-voltage studies on GaAs metal-oxide-semiconductorstructure using transparent conducting oxide as metal gate”, T.Yang,Y.Liu,P.D.Ye,Y.Xuan,H.Pal and M.S.Lundstrom, APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS 92, 252105 (2008))

Page 43: Bound States Open Systems

Subband population (all valleys)

Valley population (all valleys)

Page 44: Bound States Open Systems

Strained Si MOS capacitors

Capacitance Vs gate voltage(Gilibert,2005)

Page 45: Bound States Open Systems

More Complicated Structures- 3D Confinement -

Electron Density Potential Profile

Page 46: Bound States Open Systems
Page 47: Bound States Open Systems
Page 48: Bound States Open Systems
Page 49: Bound States Open Systems
Page 50: Bound States Open Systems
Page 51: Bound States Open Systems
Page 52: Bound States Open Systems
Page 53: Bound States Open Systems
Page 54: Bound States Open Systems

Open Systems- Single Barrier Case -

V(x)

x

V0E

Region 1(classically allowed)

Region 2(classically forbidden)

mk

E2

21

2

mEV

2

22

2

0

Region 3(classically allowed)

L

ikLikLLL

ikLikLLL

FeEeikDeCeLLFeEeDeCeLL

DCBAikDCBA

)()()()(

)()()0()0()0()0(

'3

'2

32

'2

'1

21

Page 55: Bound States Open Systems

Transfer Matrix Approach

FEMF

E

ekieki

ekieki

DC

DCMD

C

ki

ki

ki

ki

BA

LikLik

LikLik

2)()(

)()(

1

1211

21

1211

21

1211

21

1211

21

FEMF

EMMDCMB

A211

211

2 1)(mA

EET 3

1

kk

Page 56: Bound States Open Systems

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0

T(E

)

Energy [eV]

L=6 nm, V0=0.4 eV

m=6x10-32 kg

-0.2

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

0.0 5.0 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0

E=0.2 eVE=0.6 eVT(

E)

Barrier thickness L [nm]

Tunneling Exampleand

Transmission Over the Barrier

Page 57: Bound States Open Systems

Generalized Transfer Matrix Approach

rxxik

rxxik

r

lxxik

lxxik

l

xxebeaxxebea

xrlrrr

llll

,,

)( )()(

)()(

ii

ii

lik

lik

i ee

P0

0

rrrr

Bi 1111

21

rmmlr PBPBBPM 11221

Propagating domain

Interface between two boundaries

Transfer Matrix

Page 58: Bound States Open Systems
Page 59: Bound States Open Systems

Example 1: Quantum Mechanical Reflections from the Front Barrier in MOSFETs

VG = 0, VD > 0VG = 0, VD > 0

source

drainEC

dn/dE

dn/dE

Large potential barrier allows only few electrons to go from the source to the drain

(subthreshold conduction)

VG > VT , VD > 0VG > VT , VD > 0

source

drainEC

dn/dE

dn/dE

Smaller potential barrier allows a large number of electrons to go from the source

to the drain

PCPBT - tool

Page 60: Bound States Open Systems

Top panel: barrier height = 0.3 eV, barrier width = 2 nm, well width = 4 nm, Middle panel: barrier height

= 0.3 eV, barrier width = well width = 4 nm; Bottom panel: barrier height = 0.3 eV, barrier width = 6

nm and well width = 4 nm.

Example 2: Double Barrier Structure - Width of the Barriers on Sharpness of Resonances

Sharpresonance

Page 61: Bound States Open Systems

Example 3: Double Barrier Structure - Asymmetric Barriers

T < 1

Page 62: Bound States Open Systems

Example 4: Multiple Identical Barrier Structure - Formation of Bands and Gaps

Page 63: Bound States Open Systems

Example 5: Implementation of Tunneling in Particle-Based Device Simulators

• Tarik Khan, PhD Thesis: Modeling of SOI MESFETs, ASU

Tool to bedeployed

Page 64: Bound States Open Systems

Highlights• Reduced junction capacitance.• Absence of latchup.• Ease in scaling (buried oxide need not be

scaled).• Compatible with conventional Silicon

processing.• Sometimes requires fewer steps to

fabricate.• Reduced leakage.• Improvement in the soft error rate.

Drawbacks• Drain Current Overshoot.• Kink effect• Thickness control (fully depleted operation).• Surface states.

Welcome to the world of Silicon On Insulator

SOI–The Technology of the Future

Page 65: Bound States Open Systems

Principles of Operation of a SJT• The SJT is a SOI MESFET device

structure.• Low-frequency operation of

subthreshold CMOS (Lg > 1 μm due to transistor matching)

• It is a current controlled current source

• The SJT can be thought of as an enhancement mode MESFET.

2/T T gf U L

T.J. Thornton, IEEE Electron Dev. Lett., 8171 (1985)

Page 66: Bound States Open Systems

2D/3D Monte Carlo Device Simulator Description

Ensemble Monte Carlo transport

kernel

Ensemble Monte Carlo transport

kernel

Generate discrete impurity distributionGenerate discrete

impurity distribution

Molecular Dynamics routine

Molecular Dynamics routine

3D Poisson equation solver

Veff Routine

2D/3D Poisson equation solver

Veff Routine

Dopant atomsreal-space position

Dopant charge assigned to the

mesh nodes DeviceStructureAppliedBias

Coulomb Force

MeshForce

Particle charge assigned to the mesh points (CIC, NEC)

ScatteringRates

Nominal Doping Density

Transmissioncoefficient

Vasileska et al., VLSI Design 13, pp. 75-78 (2001).

Page 67: Bound States Open Systems

E

ai-1 ai ai+1

Vi

Vi+1

Vi-1 V(x)

Gate Current Calculation

• 1D Schrödinger equation:

• Solution for piecewise linear potential:

ExVdxd

m

)(

2 2

22

)()( )2()1( iiiii BCAC

- Use linear potential approximation- Between two nodes, solutions to the Schrödinger equationare linear combination of Airy and modified Airy functions

Page 68: Bound States Open Systems

1 2 1........T FI N BIM M M M M M

120

11

1 NT

kT

K m

' '1 1

0 0

' '1 1

0 0' '

1 1' '

1 1

1 1[ (0) (0)] [ (0) (0)]2 21 1[ (0) (0)] [ (0) (0)]2 2

( ) ( ) ( ) ( )

( ) ( ) ( ) ( )

i i i i

FI

i i i i

N i N N i N N i N N i NBI

n N i N N i N N i N N i N

r rA A B B

ik ikM

r rA A B B

ik ik

r B ik B r B ik BM

r r A ik A r A ik A

'

' ''1 1

( ) ( )( ) ( )

( ) ( )( ) ( )

i i i ii i i i ii

i i i i i i ii i i i i

A Br B BM

r r A r Br A A

Matrices that satisfycontinuity of the wave-functions and the deri-vative of the wavefunctions

Page 69: Bound States Open Systems

10-7

10-6

10-5

10-4

10-3

0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

Drain current Gate CurrentTunneling Current

Cur

rent

[A/u

m]

Gate Voltage [V]

Transfer Characteristic of a Schottky Transistor

Page 70: Bound States Open Systems

How is the tunneling current calculated?

• At each slice along the channel we calculate the transmission coefficient versus energy

• If an electron goes towards the interface and if its energy is smaller than the barrier height, then a random number is generated

• If the random number is such that:– r > T(E), where E is the energy of the particle, then that

transition is allowed and the electron contributes to gate leakage current

– r < T(E), where E is the energy of the particle, that that transition is forbidden and the electron is reflected back


Recommended