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Introduction to

CMOS VLSI
Design

Lecture 5
CMOS Transistor Theory
Manoel E. de Lima

David Harris
Harvey Mudd College

Outline

Introduction
MOS Capacitor
nMOS I-V Characteristics
pMOS I-V Characteristics
Gate and Diffusion Capacitance
Pass Transistors
RC Delay Models

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 2

Introduction
So far, we have treated transistors as ideal switches
An ON transistor passes a finite amount of current
Depends on terminal voltages
Derive current-voltage (I-V) relationships
Transistor gate, source, drain all have capacitance
I = C (DV/Dt) -> Dt = (C/I) DV
Capacitance and current determine speed
Also explore what a degraded level really means

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 3

MOS Capacitor
Gate and body form MOS capacitor
Operating modes
Accumulation
Depletion
Inversion
Vg < 0

+
-

polysilicon gate
silicon dioxide insulator
p-type body

(a)

0 < V g < Vt

+
-

depletion region

(b)

V g > Vt
+
-

inversion region
depletion region

(c)

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 4

Terminal Voltages
Vg
Mode of operation depends on Vg, Vd, Vs
+
+
Vgs = Vg Vs
Vgs
Vgd
Vgd = Vg Vd
Vs
Vd
Vds = Vd Vs = Vgd - Vgs
+
Vds
Source and drain are symmetric diffusion terminals
By convention, source is terminal at lower voltage
Hence Vds 0
nMOS body is grounded. First assume source is 0 too.
Three regions of operation
Cutoff
Linear
Saturation
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 5

nMOS Cutoff
No channel
Ids = 0
Vgs 0
Vgs = 0

+
-

+
-

n+

n+

Vgd

p-type body
b

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 6

nMOS Linear
Channel forms
Current flows from d to s
V
e from s to d
Ids increases with Vds
Similar to linear resistor

gs

> Vt

+
-

+
-

n+

n+

Vgd = Vgs

Vds = 0

p-type body
b

Vgs > Vt

+
-

+
d

n+

n+

Vgs > Vgd > Vt


Ids
0 < Vds < Vgs-Vt

p-type body
b

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 7

I-V Characteristics
In Linear region, Ids depends on
How much charge is in the channel?
How fast is the charge moving?

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 8

Channel Charge
MOS structure looks like parallel plate capacitor while
operating in inversion
Gate oxide channel

gate
Vg

polysilicon
gate
W
tox
n+

n+

SiO2 gate oxide


(good insulator, ox = 3.9)

+
+
Cg Vgd drain
source Vgs
Vs
Vd
channel
+
n+
n+
Vds
p-type body

p-type body

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 9

Channel Charge
MOS structure looks like parallel plate capacitor
while operating in inversion
Gate oxide channel
Qchannel = CV
Cox = ox / tox
C = Cg = oxWL/tox = CoxWL
V = Vgc Vt = (Vgs Vds/2) Vt
gate
Vg

polysilicon
gate
W
tox
n+

n+

SiO2 gate oxide


(good insulator, ox = 3.9)

+
+
Cg Vgd drain
source Vgs
Vs
Vd
channel
+
n+
n+
Vds
p-type body

p-type body

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 10

Carrier velocity
Charge is carried by e Carrier velocity v proportional to lateral E-field
between source and drain
v=

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 11

Carrier velocity
Charge is carried by e Carrier velocity v proportional to lateral E-field
between source and drain
v = mE
m called mobility
E=

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 12

Carrier velocity
Charge is carried by e Carrier velocity v proportional to lateral E-field
between source and drain
v = mE
m called mobility
E = Vds/L
Time for carrier to cross channel:
t=

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 13

Carrier velocity
Charge is carried by e Carrier velocity v proportional to lateral E-field
between source and drain
v = mE
m called mobility
E = Vds/L
Time for carrier to cross channel:
t=L/v

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 14

nMOS Linear I-V


Now we know
How much charge Qchannel is in the channel
How much time t each carrier takes to cross

Qchannel
t
W
mCox
L

I ds

Cox= oxide capacitance

W
= mCox
L

V V Vds V
gs
t
2 ds

V
Vgs Vt ds Vds = (Vgs-Vt )Vds -Vds2/2 = (Vgs-Vt )Vds
2

It is a region called linear region. Here Ids varies linearly,


with Vgs and Vds when the quadratic term Vds2/2 is very small.
Vds << Vgs-Vt
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 15

nMOS Saturation

Channel pinches off


Ids independent of Vds
We say current saturates
Similar to current source
Vgs > Vt

+
-

+
-

Vgd < Vt

d Ids

n+

n+

Vds > Vgs-Vt

p-type body
b

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 16

nMOS Saturation I-V


If Vgd < Vt, channel pinches off near drain
When Vds > Vdsat = Vgs Vt
Now drain voltage no longer increases current

Qchannel
t
W
mCox
L

I ds

V V Vds V
gs
t
2 ds

V
Vgs Vt ds Vds = (V V )V -V 2/2
2
gs- t
ds
ds

Where 0 < Vgs Vt <Vds, considering (Vgs-Vt )=Vds we have

Ids = (Vgs-Vt ) 2/2


3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 17

nMOS I-V Summary


nMOS Characteristics

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 18

Example
We will be using a 0.6 mm process for your project
From AMI Semiconductor
tox = 100
2.5
V =5
2
m = 350 cm /V*s
2
Vt = 0.7 V
1.5
V =4
Plot Ids vs. Vds
1
V =3
Vgs = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
0.5
V =2
Use W/L = 4/2 l
V =1
0
Ids (mA)

gs

gs

gs

gs

gs

3.9 8.85 1014 W


W
mCox 350

8
L
100 10
L
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

120
m A /V 2

CMOS VLSI Design

Vds

Slide 19

pMOS I-V
All dopings and voltages are inverted for pMOS
Mobility mp is determined by holes
Typically 2-3x lower than that of electrons mn
120 cm2/V*s in AMI 0.6 mm process
Thus pMOS must be wider to provide same current
In this class, assume mn / mp = 2

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 20

Capacitance
Any two conductors separated by an insulator have
capacitance
Gate to channel capacitor is very important
Creates channel charge necessary for operation
Source and drain have capacitance to body
Across reverse-biased diodes
Called diffusion capacitance because it is
associated with source/drain diffusion

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 21

Gate Capacitance
Approximate channel as connected to source
Cgs = oxWL/tox = CoxWL = CpermicronW
Cpermicron is typically about 2 fF/mm

polysilicon
gate
W
tox
n+

n+

SiO2 gate oxide


(good insulator, ox = 3.90)

p-type body
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 22

Diffusion Capacitance
Csb, Cdb
Undesirable, called parasitic capacitance
Capacitance depends on area and perimeter
Use small diffusion nodes
Varies with process

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 23

Pass Transistors
We have assumed source is grounded
What if source > 0?
VDD
e.g. pass transistor passing VDD
VDD

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 24

Pass Transistors
We have assumed source is grounded
What if source > 0?
VDD
e.g. pass transistor passing VDD
VDD
Vg = VDD
If Vs > VDD-Vt, Vgs < Vt
Hence transistor would turn itself off
nMOS pass transistors pull no higher than VDD-Vtn
Called a degraded 1
Approach degraded value slowly (low Ids)
pMOS pass transistors pull no lower than Vtp
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 25

Pass Transistor
VDD
VDD

VDD

VDD

VDD

VDD

VDD
VDD
VSS

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 26

Pass Transistor Ckts


VDD

VDD
VDD

VDD

VDD

VDD
Vs = VDD-Vtn

Vs = |Vtp|

VDD-Vtn VDD-Vtn
VDD

VDD-Vtn

VDD-Vtn
VDD

VDD-2Vtn

VSS

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 27

Effective Resistance
Shockley models have limited value
Not accurate enough for modern transistors
Too complicated for much hand analysis
Simplification: treat transistor as resistor
Replace Ids(Vds, Vgs) with effective resistance R
Ids = Vds/R
R averaged across switching of digital gate
Too inaccurate to predict current at any given time
But good enough to predict RC delay

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 28

RC Delay Model
Use equivalent circuits for MOS transistors
Ideal switch + capacitance and ON resistance
Unit nMOS has resistance R, capacitance C
Unit pMOS has resistance 2R, capacitance C
Capacitance proportional to width
Resistance inversely proportional to width
d

d
k
s

s
kC

R/k

2R/k

g
kC

kC
s

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

kC

d
k
s

kC
g

kC
d

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 29

RC Values
Capacitance
C = Cg = Cs = Cd = 2 fF/mm of gate width
Values similar across many processes
Resistance
R 6 KW*mm in 0.6um process
Improves with shorter channel lengths
Unit transistors
May refer to minimum contacted device (4/2 l)
Or maybe 1 mm wide device
Doesnt matter as long as you are consistent
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 30

Inverter Delay Estimate


Estimate the delay of a fanout-of-1 inverter
R in pMOS is divided by 2 since its width is the double of the nMOS

2 Y

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 31

Inverter Delay Estimate


Estimate the delay of a fanout-of-1 inverter
2C
R

2 Y

2C

2C
Y

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 32

Inverter Delay Estimate


Estimate the delay of a fanout-of-1 inverter
2C
R

2 Y

2C

2C

2C

2C

Y
R

R
C

C
C

3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 33

Inverter Delay Estimate


Estimate the delay of a fanout-of-1 inverter
2C
R

2 Y

2C

2C

2C

2C

Y
R

R
C

C
C

d = 6RC
3: CMOS Transistor Theory

CMOS VLSI Design

Slide 34

+5V

+5V
R

In

Vil=0
Roff 1010

Out

Iih

Ioh
Voh(min)

Vih(min)
GND

GND

Transistor no conduz

Capacitor

Tenso(V)
Vih(min)

Nvel 1

Tempo (seg)
CMOS VLSI Design

+5V

+5V

R
In
Vih=1

Vol(max)
Ron 1 KW

Out

Iil

Iol

Vil(max)
GND

GND

Transistor conduz

Capacitor inicialmente carregado = 1


Tenso(V)
Nvel 0

Vil(max)
Tempo (seg)
CMOS VLSI Design

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