6.7 Analytic Solution for the MOS Capacitor


Table of Contents - Glossary - Study Aids - ¬ ­ ®
In this Section

  1. Introduction
  2. Electric field versus surface potential
  3. Inversion layer charge
  4. Low frequency capacitance
  5. Full text

Next: Chapter 7. The MOSFET


6.7.1 Introduction

An exact analytic solution can be obtained for the MOS capacitance as long as surface electron concentration is not degenerate. The non-linear second-order differential equation can then be solved yielding first the electric field as a function of the potential in the semiconductor. A solution for the electric field and/or the potential as a function of the position can not be obtained analytically. This requires a numeric integration. Combining the electrical field and the surface potential yields the gate voltage, since the field in the semiconductor and that in the oxide are related by their respective dielectric constants. The same approach also yields a good approximation for the charge in the depletion layer, the inversion layer or the accumulation layer. The derivative of the charge with the applied voltage equals the capacitance of the MOS structure. The calculation of the low-frequency or quasi-static capacitance is relative straight forward, while the calculation of the high-frequency capacitance requires an additional numeric integration. A detailed derivation of the items mentioned above as well as the deep depletion capacitance and an approximate expression for the high-frequency capacitance can be found in the full derivation.

6.7.2 Electric field versus surface potential

The solution for the electric field is obtained by solving Poisson's equation while including the charge due to electrons, holes and the ionized donors and acceptors. This solution provides the relation between the electric field at the surface of the semiconductor and the surface potential. The absolute value of the field is shown in the figure below. This figure was obtained for a substrate with an acceptor concentration, Na = 1017 cm-3, and an oxide thickness, tox = 20 nm.


mosexact.xls - mosfield.gif
When applying a positive potential (which can be done by applying a positive gate voltage) the surface of the silicon is first depleted. This causes an electric field which varies as the square root of the surface potential. At higher positive potential the surface inverts which results in a sharp rise of the electric field since the inversion layer charge increases exponentially with the surface potential. The vertical dotted line on the figure indicates the threshold voltage or the onset of strong inversion. The other dotted line represents the fraction of the surface field which is due to the electrons in the inversion layer. It is calculated from the ratio of the inversion layer charge and the dielectric constant of the semiconductor.

When applying a negative surface potential, the holes accumulate at the surface, yielding an exponential rise of the electric field with decreasing potential.

The above figure is an active figure which can be further explored by the reader. An MOS structure with a n-type substrate can also be analyzed by entering a negative doping density.


6.7.3 Charge in the inversion layer

The total charge in the inversion layer can also be calculated with this method. It is obtained by substracting the charge in the depletion layer from the total charge for the same surface potential. The details can be found in the full derivation. The gate voltage is obtained by adding the flat band voltage, the surface potential and the voltage across the oxide. The resulting charge density is plotted versus the gate voltage in the figure below. This figure was calculated for an oxide thickness of 20 nm. The doping density is also 1017 cm-3 as before.


mosexact.xls - moscharg.gif
The dotted line on the figure represents the standard approximation for the inversion layer charge: it implies that the charge is simply proportional to the gate oxide capacitance and the gate voltage minus the threshold voltage. For voltages below the threshold voltage, there is no inversion layer and therefore no inversion layer charge. While not exact, the standard approximation is very good.

6.7.4 Low frequency capacitance

The low frequency or quasi-static capacitance can be obtained by taking the derivative of the charge in the semiconductor with respect to the potential across the semiconductor. Since this derivative represents the change between two thermal equilibrium situations, this capacitance is also to be measured while maintaining equlibrium conditions at all times. The low-frequency or quasi-static measurement is typically obtained by measuring the current with a sensitive electrometer while varying the applied gate voltage.

The expected behavior of such measurement is shown in the figure below: The capacitance is close to the oxide capacitance except for a gate voltage between the flat band voltage and the threshold voltage, as charge is then added deeper into the semiconductor at the edge of the depletion layer, rather than at the oxide-silicon interface. This results in the characteristic dip in the capacitance curve.


mosexact.xls - moslfcap.gif
This figure was calculated using an oxide thickness of 20 nm and an acceptor concentration of 1017 cm-3. This is an active figure. The dotted lines indicate the high- and low-frequency capacitance as obtained using the full depletion approximation. It is clear from the figure that the approximation is rather crude when it comes to describing the full behavior, but it is sufficient to extract the oxide thickness and substrate doping concentration from a measured curve.


6.7.5 Full derivation of MOS parameters

The complete derivation contains a step by step derivation of the equations used to generate the above figures.
6.6 ¬ ­ ® 6.8

© Bart J. Van Zeghbroeck, 1996, 1997