L.K. Wang, G.P. Li, et al.
ECS Meeting 1984
This paper presents a detailed study on the narrow-emitter effect of advanced shallow-profile bipolar transistors. A methodology is established to assess the physical mechanisms behind both the base current and collector current modifications. It is shown that, in addition to a reduction in the active device area due to the lateral encroachment of extrinsic base into the intrinsic base area, the emitter polysilicon-single-crystal interface (bulk property of the polysilicon emitter) and the emitter/extrinsic-base overlap (perimeter property) also play important roles in determining the current gain for narrow-emitter bipolar transistors. The slopes of the collector saturation cur-rent density (Jcs) and the base saturation current density (Jbs) with respect to the perimeter-to-area (P/A) ratio are shown to be useful monitoring parameters for the lateral encroachment and the emitter polysilicon-single-crystal interface. The implications on the device and process design for future scaled-down devices are discussed. © 1988 IEEE
L.K. Wang, G.P. Li, et al.
ECS Meeting 1984
Maha M. Khayyat, Brent A. Wacaser, et al.
Nanotechnology
James Warnock, John D. Cressler, et al.
IEEE Electron Device Letters
Tze-Chiang Chen, Suryadever Basvaiah, et al.
IEEE T-ED