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Stacked strained silicon transistors for low-power high-performance circuit applications

Lookup NU author(s): Santosh Shedabale, Dr Gordon Russell, Professor Alex Yakovlev

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Abstract

This paper explores the impact of strain on circuit performance when strained silicon (s-Si) devices are used for designing low-power high-speed circuits. An inverter circuit has been used for performance evaluation through simulation. The result shows a great promise for s-Si technology in future generation digital applications which require high throughput and low power. The well known property of high current-drive of s-Si makes it very attractive for circuit applications. However, it exhibits high leakage current compared to conventional Si devices with similar dimensions and under similar operating conditions. To improve the sub-threshold performance (low-leakage) keeping the high-speed advantage of s-Si devices, a stacking method (transistors connected in series) is applied to the n-MOS path of the inverter. For a supply voltage of IV the s-Si stacked inverter shows around 12% improvement in terms of speed than the non-stacked Si inverter hence giving a huge advantage when s-Si is used in larger fan-out circuits. Stack factor is calculated which is a measure of a gate's applicability to use in low-power circuits. An amount of strain equivalent to 0.59% in the channel of transistors is found to the optimum strain for future digital applications. ©2008 IEEE.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Ramakrishnan H, Shedabale S, Russell G, Yakovlev A

Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)

Publication status: Published

Conference Name: Proceedings - Electronic Components and Technology Conference

Year of Conference: 2008

Pages: 1793-1798

Publisher: IEEE

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ECTC.2008.4550224

DOI: 10.1109/ECTC.2008.4550224

Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item

ISBN: 9781424422302


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