topics: [“Semiconductor”, “MOSFET”, “SCE”, “Device Physics”]
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:
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.”
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.
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.
Classical scaling theory (Dennard scaling) assumed:
Once SCE becomes significant:
Thus:
The emergence of SCE signifies the breakdown of scaling theory itself.
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:
GitHub Pages (Public Educational Material, English/Japanese)
https://samizo-aitl.github.io/Edusemi-v4x/f_chapter1_finfet_gaa/
GitHub (Source Management, Markdown Manuscripts)
https://github.com/Samizo-AITL/Edusemi-v4x/tree/main/f_chapter1_finfet_gaa