The effects of strain and surface roughness scattering on the quasi-ballistic hole transport in a strained gate-all-around germanium nanowire p-channel field-effect transistor (pFET) are investigated in this work. The valence subbands are shifted up and warped more parabolically by the influence of HfO2 due to the lattice mismatch. However, the boundary force only shifts the subbands downwards and has little effect on the reshaping of bands. Strain induced by HfO2 increases both the hole mobility and ON-current (/ON), but has little effect on the hole mobility. The/ON is degraded by the surface roughness scattering in both strained and unstrained devices.
In this paper, we investigate the performance of the bulk fin field effect transistor (FinFET) through a three- dimensional (3D) full band Monte Carlo simulator with quantum correction. Several scattering mechanisms, such as the acoustic and optical phonon scattering, the ionized impurity scattering, the impact ionization scattering and the surface roughness scattering are considered in our simulator. The effects of the substrate bias and the surface roughness scattering near the Si/SiO2 interface on the performance of bulk FinFET are mainly discussed in our work. Our results show that the on-current of bulk FinFET is sensitive to the surface roughness and that we can reduce the substrate leakage current by modulating the substrate bias voltage.
The uniformity of threshold voltage and threshold current in the In2 Se3 nanowire-based phase change memory (PCM) devices is investigated. Based on the trap-limited transport model, amorphous layer thickness, trap density, and trap depth are considered to clarify their influences upon the threshold voltage and threshold current through simulations.