Publication | Closed Access
Picosecond hot electron light emission from submicron complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor circuits
84
Citations
6
References
1997
Year
EngineeringOptoelectronic DevicesIntegrated CircuitsSemiconductorsHigh-speed ElectronicsElectron SpectroscopyPhotonic Integrated CircuitPulse PowerLogic GatesCompound SemiconductorElectronic CircuitPhotonicsElectrical EngineeringPhotoluminescencePhotoelectric MeasurementMicroelectronicsApplied PhysicsTemporal WidthsBeyond CmosOptoelectronicsOptical EmissionOptical Logic Gate
Optical emission consisting of pulses with temporal widths of less than 270 ps has been detected from fully functional silicon integrated circuits fabricated using submicron complementary metal– oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) logic gates. Emission is observed under normal bias conditions and occurs when the gates are switching. The emission arises from the hot electron populations created by the transient current pulses present in the transistors during switching. The speed and spectral characteristics of the emission suggest future applications in the measurement of timing in high speed CMOS circuits.
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