Issue 10, 2021

Can ultra-thin Si FinFETs work well in the sub-10 nm gate-length region?

Abstract

Fin field-effect transistors (FinFETs) dominate the present Si FETs. However, when the gate length is scaled down to the sub-10 nm region, the experimental Si FinFETs suffer from poor performance due to a large fin width (the minimum value is 3 nm). In this paper, an ultra-thin Si FinFET with a width of 0.8 nm is investigated for the first time by utilizing ab initio quantum transport simulations. Remarkably, even with the gate length down to 5 nm, the on-state current, delay time, power dissipation, and energy-delay product of the optimized perfect ultra-thin Si FinFET still meet the high-performance applications’ requirements of the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors in the next decade. The overall performance of the simulated ultra-thin Si FinFET is even comparable with that of the typical two-dimensional FETs. Such a good performance can be significantly degraded by the defect. Hence, Si FinFETs have the potential to be scaled down to the sub-10 nm gate length as long as the width is scaled down while keeping a perfect structure.

Graphical abstract: Can ultra-thin Si FinFETs work well in the sub-10 nm gate-length region?

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Dec 2020
Accepted
04 Feb 2021
First published
04 Feb 2021

Nanoscale, 2021,13, 5536-5544

Can ultra-thin Si FinFETs work well in the sub-10 nm gate-length region?

S. Liu, J. Yang, L. Xu, J. Li, C. Yang, Y. Li, B. Shi, Y. Pan, L. Xu, J. Ma, J. Yang and J. Lu, Nanoscale, 2021, 13, 5536 DOI: 10.1039/D0NR09094H

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