Abstract
A comparison of device characteristics of n-channel and p-channel MOSFET's is made from the overall viewpoint of VLSI construction. Hot-carrier-related device degradation of device reliability, as well as effective mobility, is elaborately measured for devices having effective channel lengths of 0.5-5 µm. From these experiments, it is found that hot-electron injection due to impact ionization at the drain, rather than lucky hot imposes a new constraint on submicrometer p-channel device design, though p-channel devices have been reported to have much less trouble with hot-carrier effects than n-channel devices do. Additionally, p-channel devices are found to surpass n-channel devices in device reliability in that they have a highest applicable voltage BV DC that is more than two times as high as for n-channel devices. It is also experimentally confirmed that the effective hole mobility approaches the effective electron mobility when effective channel length L_{eff} µm. These significant characteristics of p-channel devices imply that p-channel devices have important advantages over n-channel devices for realization of sophisitcated VLSI's with submicrometer dimensions. It is also shown that hot holes, which may create surface states or trap centers, play an important role in such hot-carrier-induced device degradation as transconductance degradation.
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