【Semiconductor】🔬 01. Planar MOSFET and SCE

— The Real Reason Scaling Hit a Wall

topics: [“Semiconductor”, “MOSFET”, “SCE”, “Device Physics”]


🧭 Introduction

For many decades, MOSFET performance improvements were achieved simply by shrinking dimensions.
However, beyond a certain technology node, Short Channel Effects (SCE) became dominant, and
classical scaling could no longer be sustained.

In this article, we examine from a device-physics perspective:


⚡ The Physical Essence of Short Channel Effects

Typical manifestations of SCE include:

The key point is that these are not independent phenomena.
They all share a common physical origin:

“Electrodes other than the gate begin to dominate the channel potential.”


📐 The Problem Is Not Dimensions, but Electric Fields

Even if the gate length is reduced, once the gate can no longer sufficiently control
the channel potential, the planar MOSFET reaches a structural limit.

Specifically:

This is not a matter of lithography or process precision.

“From how many directions, and how strongly, can the electric field envelop the channel?”

This is fundamentally a structural problem, not a manufacturing one.


🚫 Why the Planar Structure Could Not Solve This

In a planar MOSFET, the gate controls the channel from only one side (the top).

As a result:

This leads to a reversal of dominance.

No amount of the following can fundamentally resolve the issue:

Because the problem lies in the insufficient directionality of gate electric-field control itself.


📉 “SCE Countermeasures” = Breakdown of Scaling Laws

Classical scaling theory (Dennard scaling) assumed:

Once SCE becomes significant:

Thus:

The emergence of SCE signifies the breakdown of scaling theory itself.


🔁 Structural Transition Was Not Evolution, but Necessity

The only viable solution was:

To change the device structure so that the gate controls the channel from multiple directions.

This led to:

These were:


📝 Summary


📘 Edusemi-v4x | Advanced Node Technologies (FinFET, GAA, CFET)