Abstract

This paper provides a global overview of the radio-frequency (RF) performance potential of carbon-nanotube field-effect transistors (CNFET), which for the first time includes the impact of noise. We develop noise and manufacturing process variability extensions for the Stanford CNFET compact model, implemented in Verilog-A and compatible with conventional circuit simulators. CNFET figures-of-merit (FoM) are determined both on the device and on the circuit level. Compared to silicon technology, CNFET devices show much better performance in terms of most of the RF-CMOS requirements of the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors. FoM projections for basic RF building blocks (low-noise amplifier and oscillator) show that good performance can already be obtained with simple circuit topologies. The main advantage of CNFET circuits yet lies in easily reaching operation frequencies of several hundreds of gigahertz, which are hard to be exploited by silicon technologies at similar technology nodes.

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