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An Applet Linked Discussion of MOSFETs


1. MOS Electrostatics If a bias voltage is applied to the Gate metal, relative to the silicon substrate, in excess of the Threshold Voltage, Vt, then charge carriers are gathered in sufficient concentration under the Gate oxide. The type of charge carriers conducting the channel current is opposite to that of the substrate. For example, if the substrate is p-type silicon, then electrons are the channel charge; for n-type silicon substrate, it is the holes. This is due to the need to separate electrically the MOSFET device from the silicon bulk. In an n-channel MOS structure, fabricated on a p-type silicon substrate, a Gate bias Vg greater than Vt will create an inversion n-channel under the gate oxide. The inversion layer charge, QN, is given by QN = - Cox (Vg - Vt) for Vg >= Vt

where Cox is the capacitance of the oxide layer. In the following applet, the inversion n-channel is formed by increasing Vg above Vt . The width of the inversion layer is on the order of 50 Angstrom. The increasing inversion layer charge with increasing Gate bias voltage is illustrated in this applet. For Vt = 1.0 Volts, a Gate bias Vg > 1.0 V will induce an n-channel. In the following applet, use the arrows next to "Vg" to change the gate bias and observe when the n-channel is formed. You may change the threshold voltage and see the effect on the necessary Gate bias voltage to induce an n-channel. Electrostatics of MOS Capacitor ( Inversion Channel and Threshold Voltage ) A p-channel MOS structure needs a bias voltage opposite to the n-channel MOS. Change the channel-type to p-channel in the above applet. For Vt = -1 V, a gate bias Vg < -1 V shall induce a p-channel under the Gate. That is, a Gate bias which is more negative than the Threshold Voltage will induce a sufficient concentration of positive charge carriers in the channel region (inversion p-channel). Quatitatively, an inversion channel is formed if the charge carrier concentration under the Gate is greater than or equal to the carrier concentration in the bulk. A normally-off (or enhancement-mode) n-MOSFET has a positive Vt . At Vg = 0 V, the Vg is less positive than Vt and thus no inversion n-channel is present.
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Likewise, a normally-off p-MOSFET has a negative Vt . The exact value of Vt is important as it controls at what applied voltage the device is switched. Its value should be well within the available battery source on the circuit. The Threshold voltage of a MOS structure depends on the physical properties of the MOS structure such as the kind of Gate metal, oxide thickness, and silicon doping level. It also depends on any fixed charge that may be present between the Gate metal and the oxide. The complete theory is rather complicated and is a topic in other applet pages. 2. A MOSFET in Saturation or as a Triode. Charge carriers in a MOSFET originate in Source and flow into Drain. The total amount of charge that flows depends on how much charge is injected into channel from Source. This is controlled by the Gate-Source bias, Vgs . The drain current may or may not depend on the voltage drop between Source and Drain. The following applet shows a visual simulation of the MOSFET characteristics as controlled by the GateSource bias, Vgs , and the Gate-Drain bias, Vgd . MOSFET Operation - I (Dependence of Inversion Channel on the Gate-Source Voltage and on the GateDrain Voltage)

First, this applet demonstrates the facts that the inversion channel at the Source-end is controlled by Vgs , and at the Drain-end by Vgd . For an nchannel MOSFET, the inversion channel is present at the Source-end of channel if Vgs > Vt and is present at the Drain-end of channel if Vgd > Vt . Use the arrows next to these voltages in the applet and observe that the blue n-channel is controlled at either end of the channel by these two voltages, respectively. n-MOSFET:
1. Triode If Vgs > Vt and Vgd > Vt , then the n-channel is continuous

all the way from S to D. The S and D are connected by a conductor (or a resistor) of a given resistance. The drain current increases if the voltage drop between S and D increases. The channel resistance depends on how much charge is injected at the S-end, which in turn is controlled by Vgs The Drain current Id depends on both Vgs and Vgd (or Vdg), and thus we call this region of operation a Triode. 2. Saturation If Vgs > Vt and Vgd < Vt , then n-channel is present (or induced) at the S-end, but the channel is depleted at the D-end. That
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is, the n-channel is pinched off at the Drain-end. What happens to all the electrons injected into channel from Source ? Once the drainend of channel is pinched off, the current no longer depends on the voltage drop between S and D (actually there is a small dependence of Id on Vgd . Why ? What is this phenomenon called ? 3. Cutoff If Vgs < Vt (and of course, Vgd < Vt ), then the no n-channel is present and no current flows. p-MOSFET: The same discussion applies as in the NMOS case except that the inequality reverses between Vgs (and Vgd) and Vt . 3. The Output Characteristics of MOSFET n-MOSFET: Triode For Vgs > Vt and Vds < Vds (sat) = Vgs - Vt (or equivalently, Vgd > Vt), the channel is continuous all the way from S to D. Thus the n-channel acts like a conductor (or resistor) whose conductance is proportional to the amount of electrons induced at the Source-end (and thus injected from Source into channel). The channel current (or drain current) is given by Id = k [ ( Vgs - Vt )Vds - 1/2 Vds *Vds ] MOSFET Operation - II Output Characteristics: Id vs. Vds Saturated Drain Current: Ids vs. Vgs Saturation At Vds = Vds (sat), where Vds (sat) is defined as Vgs - Vt the Drain-end of channel is just pinched off. Beyond this voltage, that is, Vds > Vds (sat), the channel is no longer acts as a resistor. This is in the sense that the current Id does not depend on the bias voltage Vds . The current is pretty much determined by how many carriers flow into the channel at the Source-end of channel. The saturated drain current, Ids, is given by Ids = 0.5 k ( Vgs - Vt )2. Increasing Vds while keeping Vgs constant does not increase the
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drain current. At the end of channel (channel pinch-off) all carriers are swept into Drain by the electric field. Actually, the Drain current Ids increases slightly as Vds increases. This is because the increasing Vds decreases the channel length (try to change Vds in the applet and watch the changing channel length). This is called channel length modulation. Mathematically, the channel length modulation introduces a Vds - dependent term in Ids : Ids = 0.5 k (Vgs - Vt) ( 1 + L *Vds ) where L is a small number. 4. Circuit model parameters for MOSFET Input resistance: The electrically insulating Gate oxide layer prevents any flow of current from Gate to Source. In a common-Source configuration with Gate as the input and Drain as the Output, the input resistance is infinity. This is because the input current (the Gate current Ig) is zero regardless of the value of the input voltage (the Gate-Source voltage Vgs ). Out resistance: The small-signal circuit model parameter for the output resistance in the common-Source configuration is calculated as follows. The Drain-Source voltage Vds is such that the MOSFET is in saturation. The ac output voltage is a small variation of Vds around the dc-bias point. As the Vds varies, the drain current Id (or Ids , the saturated value -- "s" stands for "saturation") varies a little due to the channel length modeulation. The variation in Ids is the ac output current, and its ratio to the ac output voltage is equal to the output resistance. The channel length modulation effect is expressed as Ids = 0.5 k (Vgs - Vt)2 [1 + L Vds ] and the output resistance is ro = del(Vds )/del(Ids ) = 1/[Ids0 L]. where Ids0 = 0.5k (Vgs - Vt)2. 5. The SPICE Model Parameters of MOSFET: Level 1 DC Model LAMBDA
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GAMMA PHI VT0 KP LD L Leff


n-Well CMOS Level 1 SPICE Model parameters

Level 1 SPICE Parameter


Gate oxide thickness TOX Transconductance Parameter KP Threshold Voltage VT0 Channel-length modulation parameter LAMBDA Bulk Threshold Parameter GAMMA Surface Potential PHI Gate-drain overlap capacitance CGDO Gate-source overlap capacitance CGSO Zero-bias planar bulk depeletion capacitance CJ Zero-bias sidewall bulk depletion capacitance CJSW Bulk junction potential PB Planar bulk junction grading coefficient MJ Sidewall bulk junction grading coefficient MJSW

n-channel MOSFET p-channel MOSFET Units


150 50 x 10-6 1.0 0.1/L L in micron 0.6 0.8 5 x 10-10 5 x 10-10 10-4 5 x 10-10 0.95 0.5 0.33 150 25 x 10-6 -1.0 0.1/L L in micron 0.6 0.8 5 x 10-10 5 x 10-10 3 x 10-4 3.5 x 10-10 0.95 0.5 0.33 Angstrom Amp/V2 Volts V-1 V1/2 V F/m F/m F/m2 F/m V None None

For visual effect, the increasing inversion layer charge with increasing Gate bias is illustrated by the increasing blue n-channel thickness (or red p-channel thickness). This does not, however, mean that the inversion layer thickness increases linearly with the applied Gate bias voltage. This is only for a visual effect which is to emphasize the increasing inversion layer charge. Carrier electrons at the pinched-off drain-end of the n-channel: Increasing Vds beyond Vds(sat), or equivalently decreasing Vgd below Vt , creates a fully depleted region between the inversion n-channel and the drain region. An electric field is set up in this region, pointing from the Drain region toward the inversion channel. Carrier electrons in the n-channel that reach the depletion boundary are swept across the depletion region into the Drain. This is similar to
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pn junction diode where the minority carrier electrons of the p-side are swept to the n-side by the built-in field whenever they reach the depletion boundary. Channel length modulation: The Drain-end of channel is pinched off at Vgd = Vt , or equivalently at Vds = Vds(sat) = Vgs - Vt. For an n-channel MOSFET, increasing Vds further so that Vds > Vds(sat) (or decreasing Vgd so that Vgd < Vt), the length of inversion channel (i.e., the blue inversion channel in the applet) is 'effectively' decreased. Since the channel resistance is proportional to the channel length, the channel resistance is decreased. This results in the slight increase of the drain current beyond the saturation level. Ids = (1/2) K' n(W/L) ( Vgs - Vt )2 (1 + LAMBDA * Vds). in which LAMBDA is called the channel-length modulation parameter and k = K' n * (W/L). Here, W is the width and L is the length of the channel. The typical values are 0.001 V-1 < LAMBDA < 0.1 V-1. In the saturation region, try to vary the bias voltage, Vgd or Vds, and watch the variation in the channel length and the (slight) increase/decrease of the drain current. In the applets, the changes in the channel length with Vds (or Vgd) is not drawn to scale.

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