Title: Leakage Components and Their Measurement
1Leakage Components and Their Measurement
- Puneet Sharma
- ECE Department, UCSD
2Leakage Components
- Subthreshold leakage
- Gate direct tunneling leakage
- Junction tunneling current (including gate
induced drain leakage (GIDL) and band-to-band
tunneling) - Others
- Hot carrier injection current
- Punchthrough current
3Subthreshold Leakage (Isub)
- Most significant component upwards of 25oC
- Dominates gate direct tunneling until 65nm
- High-K at 45nm and beyond will reduce gate direct
tunneling - Occurs in off state (VGS lt VTh) between source
and drain - Two stacked devices (i.e., off devices in series)
will dramatically reduce Isub for both (leakage
current is the same for all devices in the stack
but leakage power is primarily in the devices for
which VS ? 0 (body effect)) - Increases exponentially as VTh decreases
- Increases exponentially with temperature
- Depending on VTH roll-off curve, Isub can
increase or decrease with LGate. For most
processes Isub will increase significantly as
LGate is reduced from nominal
SPICE Measurement For NMOS D1, G0, S0,
B0 Measure b/w D and S For PMOS D0, G1, S1,
B1 Measure b/w D and S
Isub
4Gate Direct Tunneling Leakage (IGate)
SPICE Measurement For NMOS IGCS D0, G1, S0,
B0 Measure b/w G S IGCD D0, G1, S0,
B0 Measure b/w G D IGSO DX, G0, S1,
B0 Measure b/w G S IGDO D1, G0, SX,
B0 Measure b/w G and D IGB D1, G1, S1,
B0 Measure b/w G and B For PMOS IGCS D1, G0,
S1, B1 Measure b/w G S IGCD D1, G0, S1,
G1 Measure b/w G and D IGSO DX, G1, S0,
B1 Measure b/w G and S IGDO D0, G1, SX,
B1 Measure b/w G and D IGB D0, G0, S0,
B1 Measure b/w G and B In SPICE models IGCMOD
must be 1 for IGC and IGBOD 1 for IGB
- Due to quantum tunneling of electrons/holes
through gate oxide - Increases as gate oxide thickness decreases and
potential difference across gate oxide increases - Components
- Gate to channel (IGC)
- Main contributor for NMOS
- Occurs in on state and when source and drain
are in opposite state from gate - Comprises of gate to source (IGCS) and gate to
drain (IGCD) - Gate to source/drain overlap regions (a.k.a. edge
direct tunneling (EDT)) - Occurs in off state and when source and/or
drain are in opposite state from gate - Comprise of gate to source (IGSO) and gate to
drain (IGDO) - Gate to body (IGB)
- Occurs in on state and source and drain are in
same state as gate - Negligible for NMOS
- Comparable to or larger than IGC for PMOS
- Practically unaffected by threshold voltage and
temperature
5Junction Tunneling Current
- Occurs between drain/source to substrate due to
band-to-band tunneling (BTBT) in on state and
due to GIDL in off state - Occurs due to potential difference between body
and source/drain ? much more common to have
drain-to-body leakage than source-to-body - GIDL occurs from drain to body when D1, G0,
SX, B0
SPICE Measurement For NMOS IDB D1, G0, SX,
B0 D1, G1, S1, B0 Measure b/w D and
B ISB D1, G1, S1, B0 Measure b/w S and
B For PMOS IDB D0, G1, SX, B1 D0, G0,
S0, B1 Measure b/w D and B ISB D0, G0, S0,
B1 Measure b/w S and B
6Other Leakage Components
- Hot carrier injection
- Generally not considered leakage but more of a
reliability issue - Occurs from gate to substrate, increases as LGate
is reduced - Over time, HCI causes VTh shift which changes
Isub - Punchthrough current
- Occurs from drain to source
- Of concern only when physical gate length under
10nm
7Reverse Short Channel Effect
- Reverse short channel effect arises due to halo
implants - Due to DIBL, short channel effect causes VTh to
increase as LGate increases - To combat DIBL, halo implant is used for
non-uniform doping (higher doping at S/D
terminals, lower at channel center) - Halo induces reverse SCE (VTh decreases as LGate
increases) - Affects subthreshold leakage only
Halo doping (pocket implant) profile
8Narrow Channel (Width) Effects
- Narrow channel effects cause a shift in threshold
voltage as channel width is reduced - depend primarily on isolation technique (LOCOS or
STI) - For STI, reverse narrow channel effect (RNCE) is
observed which cause VTh to decrease as width is
decreased - For LOCOS, narrow channel effect (NCE) is
observed which causes VTh to increase as width
decreased
Reverse Narrow Channel Effect HsuehSDA88
9General Rules of Thumb
- Every 3A change in Tox gives 10X change in
IGate. High-K will, however, will reduce IGate by
100x. - Subthreshold swing is usually 85mV/dec at room
temp. and a bit higher at operating temp (i.e.,
90-100mV shift in VTh (or Vgs in subthreshold)
will lead to 10X change in Isub.) - In most 65nm technologies, we found SCE to
dominate RSCE up to 10 biasing - Gate biasing increases gate tunneling leakage due
to increase in tunneling area. However, not
enough to mitigate subthreshold leakage
reductions over 250C - RNCE becomes noticeable under 300nm for 90nm
process - Some results from AgarwalKMR04 (may not be
general)
10Sample Scripts and Results
- All leakage components described in these slides
(except for IGSO which is uncommon) can be
mesured through the following three SPICE files
in projects/LEAKAGE-TUT/example_scripts/ - d1g0s0b0.sp (NMOS terminals set as d1, g0, s0,
b0) - d0g1s0b0.sp
- d1g1s1b0.sp
- Results for NMOS, 90nm TT process, 1.2V, 80oC
- Isub 131.5pA
- IDB (with GIDL) 1.240pA
- IDB 1.202pA
- ISB 1.202pA
- IGCD 0.3428pA
- IGCS 0.3422pA
- IGDO 0.01043pA
- IGB 2.277e-06pA
11References
- K. Roy, S. Mukhopadhyay, H. Mahmoodi-Meimand,
Leakage Current Mechanisms and Leakage Reduction
Techniques in Deep-Submicrometer CMOS Circuits,
IEEE 2003. - A. Keshavarzi, K. Roy and C. F. Hawkins,
Intrinsic Leakage in Low Power Deep Submicron
CMOS ICs, ITC 1997. - A. Agarwal, C. H. Kim, S. Mukhopadhyay and K.
Roy, Leakage in Nano-Scale Technologies
Mechanisms, Impact and Design Considerations,
DAC 2004. - D. J. Frank, Power-Constrained CMOS Scaling
Limits, Vol. 46, No. 2/3, IBM Journal of RD,
2002. - B. Yu, E. Nowak, K. Noda and C. Hu, Reverse
Short-Channel Effects Channel-Engineering in
Deep-Submicron MOSFETs Modeling and
Optimization, 1996. - K. Hsueh, J. Sanchez, T. Demassa and L. Akers,
Inverse-Narrow-Width Effects and Small-Geometry
MOSFET Threshold Voltage Model, 1988.