Non-Equilibrium Phonon Distributions in Sub-100nm Silicon Transistors

Author:

Sinha S.1,Pop E.2,Dutton R. W.2,Goodson K. E.1

Affiliation:

1. Thermosciences Division, Mechanical Engineering Department, Stanford University, California 94305-3030

2. Electrical Engineering Department, Stanford University, California 94305-3030

Abstract

Abstract Intense electron-phonon scattering near the peak electric field in a semiconductor device results in nanometer-scale phonon hotspots. Past studies have argued that ballistic phonon transport near such hotspots serves to restrict heat conduction. We reexamine this assertion by developing a new phonon transport model. In a departure from previous studies, we treat isotropic dispersion in all phonon branches and include a phonon emission spectrum from independent Monte Carlo simulations of electron-phonon scattering. We cast the model in terms of a non-equilibrium phonon distribution function and compare predictions from this model with data for ballistic transport in silicon. The solution to the steady-state transport equations for bulk silicon transistors shows that energy stagnation at the hotspot results in an excess equivalent temperature rise of about 13% in a 90nm gate-length device. Longitudinal optical phonons with non-zero group velocities dominate transport. We find that the resistance associated with ballistic transport does not overwhelm that from the package unless the peak power density approaches 50W∕μm3. A transient calculation shows negligible phonon accumulation and retardation between successive logic states. This work highlights and reduces the knowledge gaps in the electro-thermal simulation of transistors.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science

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