【Semiconductor】📐 03. Understanding Weff

— Width W Becomes a Structural Parameter

topics: [“Weff”, “FinFET”, “Circuit Design”, “Device Modeling”]


🧭 Introduction

The transition from planar MOSFETs to FinFETs was not merely
a change in device structure.

It fundamentally altered:

How circuit designers interpret and use “width W”

In this article, we organize:


📏 Width W in the Planar Era

In planar MOSFETs,
the channel width W was a pure layout dimension.

In other words, circuit designers could:

Freely tune W/L as an electrical parameter

In this era,
layout was merely the result of circuit design,
and current–voltage (I–V) characteristics were largely captured by equations.


🧱 Weff in FinFETs

With FinFETs, this assumption collapses.

This is because the channel is no longer a planar surface,
but a three-dimensional fin structure.

As a result, the effective channel width
is no longer an arbitrarily stretchable quantity, but:

A value determined by geometry (Weff)

Conceptually:

Weff ≒ 2 × Hfin + Wfin

Thus:

Current capability (I–V behavior) directly depends on geometry itself


🔢 The Meaning of “Increasing W” Has Changed

In the planar era, “doubling W” meant:

This was a continuous operation.

In FinFETs, however:

This signifies that:

Circuit design has entered a world of quantized width


🧩 Design Implications of Weff

The introduction of Weff brings fundamental changes.

🔹 1. Direct Coupling of Circuit Design and Layout


🔹 2. The End of “W/L-Based Design”

This can be interpreted as:

Circuit design stepping into the domain of device design


🔹 3. Changing Role of Compact Models

In the FinFET era:

and other multi-gate-aware models become essential.

These models do not merely fit I–V curves; they embed:

as physical parameters.

The compact model becomes
a translator between circuit intent and device structure.


⚖ Weff Is Not a Loss of Design Freedom

At first glance, Weff may appear to:

In reality, it simply enforces:

Design only within the regime where electric-field control is valid

This is a physically correct constraint
and is inseparable from the success of FinFETs.


📝 Summary

The concept of Weff quietly tells us that:

In deeply scaled technologies,
circuit design can no longer ignore structure


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


This article is positioned as an introduction that starts from
the physical limits of planar MOSFETs (SCE) and explains
why structural transitions became inevitable.
Reading it together with the subsequent FinFET, GAA, and CFET articles is recommended.