Golfer247 - The latest news and products from the world of golf
Main Menu | News By Date | News By Supplier | News By Category | About Us
 

PURDUE ENGINEERS CREATE MODEL FOR TESTING TRANSISTOR RELIABILITY
30 November 2004 - Purdue University

Researchers at Purdue University have created a 'unified model' for predicting the reliability of new designs for silicon transistors - a potential tool that industry could use to save tens of millions of dollars annually in testing costs.

Researchers at Purdue University have created a 'unified model' for predicting the reliability of new designs for silicon transistors - a potential tool that industry could use to save tens of millions of dollars annually in testing costs.

The model is the first method that can be used to simultaneously evaluate the reliability of two types of transistors essential for so-called CMOS computer chips, the most common type of integrated circuits in use today. The two types of transistors degrade differently over time, and the model is able to relate these two different classes of degradation simultaneously.

'It is the first single tool for accurately predicting how new designs for both types of transistors will degrade over time,' said Ashraf Alam, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue.

The degradation revolves around bonds between atoms of hydrogen and silicon and hydrogen and silicon dioxide. Specifically, the mathematical model enables researchers to see the rates at which these hydrogen bonds in the two types of transistors will break over time. The breaking bonds are directly related to a transistor's long-term reliability. Because hydrogen bonds break differently in the two types of transistors, separate models have been required in conventional testing for new designs.

'This testing requires a huge amount of resources, costing companies millions of dollars annually,' Alam said. 'If you could explain both within the same framework, then you could cut down significantly on the number of measurements required to characterize the performance of the transistors.'

Findings about the new model will be detailed in a research paper to be presented Dec. 13 during the 50th annual IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting, sponsored by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, in San Francisco. The paper was written by Alam and Purdue engineering doctoral student Haldun Kufluoglu.

'A major goal of reliability models is to predict how well electronic components will work perhaps 10 years after they are manufactured,' Alam said. 'In order to do that, you first need to be able to understand the devices very well so that you can extrapolate how reliable they will be in the future.

'You need to understand the details of how the device operates and how various materials behave over time so that you can see how the different chemical bonds will gradually break and how the integrated circuit will gradually lose its function. For a multibillion dollar electronics industry, that knowledge has huge implications.'

Bonds between silicon and hydrogen are critical to the proper performance of transistors. 'Even for the tiniest transistor today, there are perhaps thousands of these silicon-hydrogen bonds,' Kufluoglu said. 'These bonds gradually break. Initially, it doesn't matter because there are so many of these bonds. But over a period of time, when lots of them begin to break, the different transistors within an integrated circuit start getting out of synch.'

CMOS, or complementary metal oxide semiconductor chips, are made of PMOS and NMOS transistors, both of which are essential for CMOS integrated circuits. Integrated circuits inside computers contain equal parts of PMOS (positive polarity) and NMOS (negative polarity) transistors.

'The important point is that the mechanisms by which the silicon-hydrogen bonds break are different for these two types of transistors,' Alam said. 'And that is why, for the past 30 years, we have treated these processes with separate models, because we didn't know how to put them in a common framework, or a common language, mathematically.'

The paper describes the underlying mechanism for the breaking bonds in the two types of transistors, he said.

The model not only describes the rate at which the silicon-hydrogen bonds break, but also how they 'repair' themselves.

'If you don't use your computer for some period of time, say 24 hours, gradually the hydrogen that went away will diffuse back and combine with silicon to make the bond whole again,' Alam said. 'Researchers already knew the rates at which the broken bonds are made whole again, but because these rates are much different in the PMOS and NMOS transistors, there was no model that could explain both simultaneously.'

The bonds repair themselves much faster in PMOS transistors than in NMOS transistors, he said.

The new model will likely be particularly useful to test the reliability of designs for silicon-based chips that use nanotechnology to create smaller and more compact transistors than exist in today's integrated circuits, Alam said.

Emil Venere
Purdue University
+1 765 494 4709
venere@purdue.edu

Sources: Ashraf Alam
+1 765 494 5988
alam@ecn.purdue.edu

Haldun Kufluoglu
+1 765 494 9034
haldun@purdue.edu

Related Web site:
IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting: http://www.his.com/~iedm/

ABSTRACT

A Geometrical Unification of the Theories of NBTI and HCI Time-Exponents and its Implications for Ultra-Scaled Planar and Surround-Gate MOSFETs

Haldun Kufluoglu and Muhammad Ashraful Alam

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University

A unification of time-exponents for Negative Bias Temperature Instability (NBTI) and Hot Carrier Injection (HCI) is established under the geometric interpretation of interface trap generation. Resolving the fundamental inconsistencies, a numerical reaction-diffusion (R-D) model that agrees with recent measurements is developed. The implications regarding the degradations of future sub-100 nm planar and surround-gate MOSFETs are presented.

http://https://engineering.purdue.edu/Engr

About: Purdue University
Since its founding in 1869, Purdue has built a reputation for educating outstanding engineers. Today, Purdue Engineering is renowned as one of the largest and most respected engineering schools in the world. Its graduate and undergraduate programs consistently rank high among national peers in surveys conducted by US News & World Report.

The professors who teach and conduct research create a vibrant intellectual environment. Among the fruits of their efforts: award-winning approaches to education (see Engineering Projects in Community Service), satellite trajectories to Jupiter, life-saving and -extending biomaterials, a sustainable environment, incredible machines and contributions to the radical shrinking of electronics through nanotechnology.

Some 6300 undergraduates and 1800 graduate students each year take a rigorous course of study, selecting from 13 ABET accredited programs or designing their own academic program. And outside the classroom, our students race cross-country in sun-powered vehicles, test their mettle in Purdue’s Engineering Olympics (a skewed version of the Greek original), build Mini-Baja go-carts for an annual competition, organize the country’s largest student-run job fair, and more—all through 60-plus student organizations. Approximately 15 percent of our undergraduates co-op, enriching their classroom education with on-the-job experience.


More News:
  • For November 2004
  • From Purdue University
  • For Silicon and Transistor Materials

 

©2008 New Materials International