scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

S. Mittal

Bio: S. Mittal is an academic researcher from IBM. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanowire & Grain boundary diffusion coefficient. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 16 publications receiving 556 citations.

Papers
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2009
TL;DR: In this article, undoped-body, gate-all-around (GAA) Si nanowire (NW) MOSFETs with excellent electrostatic scaling were demonstrated.
Abstract: We demonstrate undoped-body, gate-all-around (GAA) Si nanowire (NW) MOSFETs with excellent electrostatic scaling. These NW devices, with a TaN/Hf-based gate stack, have high drive-current performance with NFET/PFET I DSAT = 825/950 µA/µm (circumference-normalized) or 2592/2985 µA/µm (diameter-normalized) at supply voltage V DD = 1 V and off-current I OFF = 15 nA/µm. Superior NW uniformity is obtained through the use of a combined hydrogen annealing and oxidation process. Clear scaling of short-channel effects versus NW size is observed.

300 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
15 Jun 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the first top-down CMOS ring oscillators (ROs) fabricated with gate-all-around (GAA) silicon nanowire (NW) FETs having diameters as small as 3 nm were demonstrated.
Abstract: We demonstrate the world's first top-down CMOS ring oscillators (ROs) fabricated with gate-all-around (GAA) silicon nanowire (NW) FETs having diameters as small as 3 nm. NW capacitance shows size dependence in good agreement with that of a cylindrical capacitor. AC characterization shows enhanced self-heating below 5 nm.

111 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the engineering of GeSbTe ternary alloys along an isoelectronic tie line and the Ge/Sb 2 Te 3 tie line with the hope of finding a high performance material.
Abstract: Phase change memory has long suffered from conflicting material properties between switching speed and thermal stability. This study explores the engineering of GeSbTe ternary alloys along an isoelectronic tie line and the Ge/Sb 2 Te 3 tie line with the hope of finding a high performance material. Our efforts resulted in a new material that considerably outperforms the conventional GST-225. The switching speed is similar to undoped GST-225, with ∼ 30% lower reset current, and nearly 100°C higher T x , thus much better thermal stability. The promising properties of this new material are demonstrated in a 128Mb chip and tested both at wafer level and as packaged dies. These devices showed 1E8 cycling endurance and withstood 190 °C testing.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of impurities, Mn or Al, on interface and grain boundary electromigration (EM) in Cu damascene lines were investigated and it was found that the presence of bamboo grains in bamboo-polycrystalline lines played a critical role in slowing down the EM-induced void growth rate.
Abstract: The effects of impurities, Mn or Al, on interface and grain boundary electromigration (EM) in Cu damascene lines were investigated. The addition of Mn or Al solute caused a reduction in diffusivity at the Cu/dielectric cap interface and the EM activation energies for both Cu-alloys were found to increase by about 0.2 eV as compared to pure Cu. Mn mitigated and Al enhanced Cu grain boundary diffusion; however, no significant mitigation in Cu grain boundary diffusion was observed in low Mn concentration samples. The activation energies for Cu grain boundary diffusion were found to be 0.74 ± 0.05 eV and 0.77 ± 0.05 eV for 1.5 μm wide polycrystalline lines with pure Cu and Cu (0.5 at. % Mn) seeds, respectively. The effective charge number in Cu grain boundaries Z*GB was estimated from drift velocity and was found to be about −0.4. A significant enhancement in EM lifetimes for Cu(Al) or low Mn concentration bamboo-polycrystalline and near-bamboo grain structures was observed but not for polycrystalline-only alloy lines. These results indicated that the existence of bamboo grains in bamboo-polycrystalline lines played a critical role in slowing down the EM-induced void growth rate. The bamboo grains act as Cu diffusion blocking boundaries for grain boundary mass flow, thus generating a mechanical stress-induced back flow counterbalancing the EM force, which is the equality known as the “Blech short length effect.”

45 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
21 Jun 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, undoped-body, gate-all-around (GAA) Si nanowire (NW) MOSFETs with excellent electrostatic scaling were demonstrated.
Abstract: We demonstrate undoped-body, gate-all-around (GAA) Si nanowire (NW) MOSFETs with excellent electrostatic scaling. These NW devices, with a TaN/Hf-based gate stack, have high drive-current performance with NFET/PFET I DSAT = 825/950 µA/µm (circumference-normalized) or 2592/2985 µA/µm (diameter-normalized) at supply voltage V DD = 1 V and off-current I OFF = 15 nA/µm. Superior NW uniformity is obtained through the use of a combined hydrogen annealing and oxidation process. Clear scaling of short-channel effects versus NW size is observed. Additionally, we observe a divergence of the nanowire capacitance from the planar limit, as expected, as well as enhanced device self-heating for smaller diameter nanowires. We have also applied this method to making functional 25-stage ring oscillator circuits.

16 citations


Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review surveys the four physical mechanisms that lead to resistive switching materials enable novel, in-memory information processing, which may resolve the von Neumann bottleneck and examines the device requirements for systems based on RSMs.
Abstract: The rapid increase in information in the big-data era calls for changes to information-processing paradigms, which, in turn, demand new circuit-building blocks to overcome the decreasing cost-effectiveness of transistor scaling and the intrinsic inefficiency of using transistors in non-von Neumann computing architectures. Accordingly, resistive switching materials (RSMs) based on different physical principles have emerged for memories that could enable energy-efficient and area-efficient in-memory computing. In this Review, we survey the four physical mechanisms that lead to such resistive switching: redox reactions, phase transitions, spin-polarized tunnelling and ferroelectric polarization. We discuss how these mechanisms equip RSMs with desirable properties for representation capability, switching speed and energy, reliability and device density. These properties are the key enablers of processing-in-memory platforms, with applications ranging from neuromorphic computing and general-purpose memcomputing to cybersecurity. Finally, we examine the device requirements for such systems based on RSMs and provide suggestions to address challenges in materials engineering, device optimization, system integration and algorithm design. Resistive switching materials enable novel, in-memory information processing, which may resolve the von Neumann bottleneck. This Review focuses on how the switching mechanisms and the resultant electrical properties lead to various computing applications.

564 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
K. Kuhn1
TL;DR: Transistor architectures such as extremely thin silicon-on-insulator and FinFET (and related architecture such as TriGate, Omega-FET, Pi-Gate), as well as nanowire device architectures, are compared and contrasted.
Abstract: This review paper explores considerations for ultimate CMOS transistor scaling Transistor architectures such as extremely thin silicon-on-insulator and FinFET (and related architectures such as TriGate, Omega-FET, Pi-Gate), as well as nanowire device architectures, are compared and contrasted Key technology challenges (such as advanced gate stacks, mobility, resistance, and capacitance) shared by all of the architectures will be discussed in relation to recent research results

558 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
14 Aug 2015-Science
TL;DR: The advantages and challenges for incorporating nanomaterials into transistors to improve performance are discussed in the context of different transistor applications, along with the breakthroughs needed to enable the next generation of technological advancement.
Abstract: For more than 50 years, silicon transistors have been continuously shrunk to meet the projections of Moore's law but are now reaching fundamental limits on speed and power use. With these limits at hand, nanomaterials offer great promise for improving transistor performance and adding new applications through the coming decades. With different transistors needed in everything from high-performance servers to thin-film display backplanes, it is important to understand the targeted application needs when considering new material options. Here the distinction between high-performance and thin-film transistors is reviewed, along with the benefits and challenges to using nanomaterials in such transistors. In particular, progress on carbon nanotubes, as well as graphene and related materials (including transition metal dichalcogenides and X-enes), outlines the advances and further research needed to enable their use in transistors for high-performance computing, thin films, or completely new technologies such as flexible and transparent devices.

471 citations

Patent
19 Aug 2010
TL;DR: In this article, a system includes a semiconductor device consisting of a first single crystal silicon layer comprising first transistors, first alignment marks, and at least one metal layer overlying the first single-crystalline silicon layer.
Abstract: A system includes a semiconductor device. The semiconductor device includes a first single crystal silicon layer comprising first transistors, first alignment marks, and at least one metal layer overlying the first single crystal silicon layer, wherein the at least one metal layer comprises copper or aluminum more than other materials; and a second single crystal silicon layer overlying the at least one metal layer. The second single crystal silicon layer comprises a plurality of second transistors arranged in substantially parallel bands. Each of a plurality of the bands comprises a portion of the second transistors along an axis in a repeating pattern.

417 citations

Patent
28 Jun 2011
TL;DR: In this paper, a first layer and a second layer of layer-transferred mono-crystallized silicon, where the first layer comprises a first plurality of horizontally-oriented transistors, and the second layer includes a second plurality of vertically oriented transistors.
Abstract: A device comprising semiconductor memories, the device comprising: a first layer and a second layer of layer-transferred mono-crystallized silicon, wherein the first layer comprises a first plurality of horizontally-oriented transistors; wherein the second layer comprises a second plurality of horizontally-oriented transistors; and wherein the second plurality of horizontally-oriented transistors overlays the first plurality of horizontally-oriented transistors.

413 citations