Publication | Closed Access
A simple quantum mechanical treatment of scattering in nanoscale transistors
179
Citations
13
References
2003
Year
Categoryquantum ElectronicsEngineeringNanocomputingCharge TransportSemiconductorsQuantum ComputingNanoelectronicsNanoscale ModelingQuantum MatterLow-dimensional SystemCharge Carrier TransportDevice ModelingQuantum ScienceElectrical EngineeringNanoscale SystemPhysicsNanotechnologyElectron TransportQuantum Boundary ConditionsCondensed Matter TheorySimulation SchemeNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsLight ScatteringNanoscale TransistorsQuantum Devices
We present a computationally efficient, two-dimensional quantum mechanical simulation scheme for modeling dissipative electron transport in thin body, fully depleted, n-channel, silicon-on-insulator transistors. The simulation scheme, which solves the nonequilibrium Green’s function equations self consistently with Poisson’s equation, treats the effect of scattering using a simple approximation inspired by the “Büttiker probes,” often used in mesoscopic physics. It is based on an expansion of the active device Hamiltonian in decoupled mode space. Simulation results are used to highlight quantum effects, discuss the physics of scattering and to relate the quantum mechanical quantities used in our model to experimentally measured low field mobilities. Additionally, quantum boundary conditions are rigorously derived and the effects of strong off-equilibrium transport are examined. This paper shows that our approximate treatment of scattering, is an efficient and useful simulation method for modeling electron transport in nanoscale, silicon-on-insulator transistors.
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