Abstract

Negative capacitance field-effect transistors (NCFETs) boost the electric field at the semiconductor-channel interface by virtue of the gate voltage amplification effect of a ferroelectric (fe) layer. NCFETs should be designed in such a way that this elevated field does not exceed the maximum electric field ( ${E}_{\max}$ ) determined by the reliability limit of the interfacial dielectric or NBTI/PBTI reliability. In this letter, a compact model-based methodology is presented to determine the NCFET design space considering several variables of the fe-layer and the baseline transistor, including the fe-layer thickness ( ${T}_{\mathrm {fe}}$ ), coercive field ( ${E}_{c}$ ), remnant polarization ( ${P}_{r}$ ), baseline transistor equivalent oxide thickness, supply voltage ( ${V}_{\mathrm {dd}}$ ), threshold voltage ( ${V}_{\mathrm {th}}$ ), and ${E}_{\max}$ . Using this methodology, an NC-FDSOI transistor is designed in TCAD, and the result shows that even without raising the maximum interface field as compared with the baseline transistor, NCFET achieves much better ${I}_ \mathrm{\scriptstyle ON}/{I}_ \mathrm{\scriptstyle OFF}$ ratio and sub-threshold swing while operating at lower ${V}_{\mathrm {dd}}$ .

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