Abstract

In the current work, a design space for developing the performance enhanced strain-engineered Si nanowire field-effect-transistors has been provided. The fraction of insertion of the nanowire channel into the Insulator-on-Silicon substrate with judicious selection of high-k gate insulators is used as the key design parameter. The combined effect of fractional insertion and gate insulators results in inducing stress into the nanowire channel and, depending on their selection, it changes from tensile to compressive. Such induced-stress alters the existing inherent phononic-stress, leading to the modification of the carrier transport in the device channel. The carrier transport behavior in such partially embedded nanowire FETs has been modeled by incorporating the relevant stress-related effects into the indigenously developed self-consistent quantum-electrostatic framework. These equations are solved by employing the non-equilibrium Green's function formalism. The study shows the phonon scattering under tensile strain to occur at the expense of electron energy; however, the electrons can also gain energy during such scattering in compressive stress. Thus, the device current has been observed to increase with tensile stress and it achieves relatively smaller values when the inherent tensile phononic stress is balanced by the induced compressive stress. However, the current is finally observed to increase once the compressive stress overcomes the inherent tensile phononic stress. In general, the present devices exhibit promising Ion/Ioff ratio for all of the fractional insertions and gate dielectrics with a maximum Ioff of <10 nA/μm, threshold voltage of sub-0.3 V, gm of ∼104 µS/µm, sub-threshold swing of ∼100 mV/dec, and drain-induced-barrier-lowering of ∼100 mV/V.

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