Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering

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    Investigation of a highly-sensitive aluminum-based plasmonic device using antimonene for sensing applications
    (IOP, 2024-01) Arora, Pankaj
    Aluminum (Al) has gained popularity for surface plasmon resonance-based applications due to its affordability and compatibility with CMOS technology at the nanoscale. Over angle-interrogation mode, plasmonic interactions occurring at the metal-dielectric junction, are the outcomes of the attenuated total internal reflection phenomenon. Modified Al-based Kretschmann configuration results in phase-matching conditions that are seen as resonant points in the reflection characteristics. In our work, we have engineered an Al-based plasmonic device utilizing Antimonene as a 2D nanomaterial for bio-sensing purposes in the Near-Infrared (NIR) spectral domain. The study investigates the performance of Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) based refractive index sensor using different 2D nanomaterials with an optimized Al thickness of 30 nm. A comparative analysis of Al-based Kretschmann configurations in the presence of Graphene, Black Phosphorus, MXene, and Antimonene is presented using engineered intermediate layers. It is observed that the Al-antimonene-based plasmonic device exhibits improved sensing parameters in the NIR optical window.
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    Design and Analysis of Modified Strong Arm Latch Comparator with Reduced Kickback Noise
    (Springer, 2024-10) Gupta, Anu; Shekhar, Chandra; Chaturvedi, Nitin
    This research paper introduces three techniques to reduce kickback noise in the Strong Arm Latch Comparator (SAL). The first technique focuses on utilizing high clock power and generating two clocks with different duty cycles. While initially addressing the issue by applying a single clock to the kickback-reducing circuit, the reduction of kickback noise did not meet the desired level. To overcome this limitation, a new design is proposed, incorporating a delay in the programmability of the kickback-reducing circuit, which effectively eliminates the need for kickback and clock requirements. A comparative study is conducted, evaluating all the designs, including the proposed design, based on power, delay, and analysis of various types of noise. Results show that the proposed technique outperforms other kickback-reducing designs in terms of propagation latency, power consumption, and kickback currents. Additionally, the impact of a comparator’s common-mode voltage (Vcm) on its performance in TSMC 180 nm CMOS technology is demonstrated using the Cadence Schematic Editor tool.
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    Simulation, fabrication and characterization of high performance planar-doped-barrier sub 100 nm channel MOSFETs
    (IEEE, 1997-12) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    In this paper we present experimental and simulation results on planar-doped-barrier MOSFETs (PDBFETs) and show the advantages that arise from the channel delta doping. Early and higher magnitude of velocity overshoot, suppression of avalanche multiplication, reduced hot-carrier problems are some of the advantages offered by PDBFETs over the conventional homogeneously doped MOSFETs in the sub 100 nm regime. Our low-temperature characterizations show clear ballistic transport in the fabricated 85 nm channel MOSFETs.
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    Effect of Fringing Capacitances in Sub 100 nm MOSFET's with High-K Gate Dielectrics
    (IEEE, 2001) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    In this paper we look at the quantitative picture of fringing field effects by use of high-k dielectrics on the 70 nm node CMOS technologies. By using Monte-Carlo based techniques, we extract the degradation in gate-to-channel capacitance and the internal and external fringing capacitance components for varying values of K. The results clearly show the decrease in external fringing capacitance, increase in internal fringing capacitance and a slight decrease in overall capacitance, when the conventional SiO/sub 2/ is replaced by high-K dielectric. From the circuit point of view the lower total capacitance will increase the speed of the device, while the internal fringing capacitance will degrade the short-channel performance contributing to higher DIBL and drain leakage.
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    Suppression of boron penetration by hot wire CVD polysilicon
    (IEEE, 2002) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    In the current and future deep sub-micron technologies, boron penetration through the gate dielectric is a severe reliability concern for the dual gate CMOS technology. In this paper we report results of our attempts to exploit the potential of Hot Wire CVD (HWCVD) for depositing poly-Si gate for CMOS technology. The effect of grain size of poly-Si gate on boron penetration is studied by varying the poly-Si grain size through variation in the HWCVD parameters.
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    Analog Circuit Performance Issues with Aggressively Scaled Gate Oxide CMOS Technologies
    (IEEE, 2006) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    MOS transistors with sub 100 nm channel lengths need a gate oxide thickness in the range of 1-2 nm to combat the short channel effects. However at these gate dielectric thicknesses, the gate current is no longer negligible. In this paper, we report the device analog behavior with extremely scaled oxides for integrating mixed signal circuits using the scaled digital CMOS technologies. We show the performance of common source amplifiers and current mirror circuits with these technologies. Our results also show that though thin oxides result in good voltage gains of amplifier circuits, the increased gate leakage degrades the performance of current mirror circuits. We also analyze the performance of different classes of current mirror circuits in the presence of gate leakage and provide broad guidelines for analog circuit design in the presence of gate leakage.
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    Filament study of STI type drain extended NMOS device using transient interferometric mapping
    (IEEE, 2009-12) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    We present filament behavior of STI type DeNMOS devices using detailed Transient Interferometric Mapping experiments and 3D TCAD simulations. Device behavior at different TLP currents is discussed. The impact of localized base-push-out, power dissipation because of space charge build-up, regenerative NPN action and various events during the current filamentation are explored. By uniform turn-on of the device during base push-out the failure current could be improved by more than 2X.
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    Auto-BET-AMS: An automated device and circuit optimization platform to benchmark emerging technologies for performance and variability using an analog and mixed-signal design framework
    (IEEE, 2010) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    In this paper, we present Auto-BET-AMS, an automated device, circuit and system-level simulation platform suitable for benchmarking emerging technologies at the end of the CMOS roadmap. This platform is suitable for technologists and circuit designers alike. One of the features of Auto-BET-AMS is that no advanced knowledge of device and circuit design is needed to perform a fair evaluation of emerging technologies. To enable this, the platform comes with a versatile multi-variable optimizer that can be used to quickly optimize devices and circuits for a set of specifications. Using Auto-BET-AMS it is possible to accurately design digital and analog circuits and assess them in conventional and emerging technologies. The platform can handle definitions of charge-based devices in either the compact model form or a look-up table form. The latter is needed for devices which do not have mature compact models developed for them. Several representative digital and analog circuits like buffer chain, SRAM cell, two-stage Miller Op-Amp, three-stage low-voltage Op-Amp, temperature compensated current reference and Miller OTA are optimized by considering PVT variations using Auto-BET-AMS. Additionally, the impact of parametric variations on these circuits is studied.
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    Energy Efficient Lif Neuron Circuit Using Hybrid Cmos-Nems in 65 Nm Cmos Technology
    (IEEE, 2022-01) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    In this paper, we show that NEMS plays a key role to reduce the leakage current for designing the sub-threshold neuromorphic circuits in 65 nm CMOS technology. For the first time, we propose a novel energy efficient hybrid CMOS-NEMS leaky integrate and fire (LIF) neuron circuit and investigate the impact of fabricated sub-50 mV NEMS on the leakage power and overall energy consumption. As per the measurement results, the sub-50-mV NEMS having a small air gap of only 100 nm exhibits very low hysteresis (<20 mV), low turn ON delay (15 ns), and low sub-threshold swing of 2 mV/decade, a maximum ON-state conductance value of 0.1 A/(V·µm) with zero leakage current. We analyze the performance of a biologically-inspired energy efficient neuron circuit in terms of leakage power consumption with biologically plausible firing rates. Our results show that the proposed CMOS-NEMS neuron circuit gives around 8% reduction in energy per spike and 65% reduction in leakage power consumption than its equivalent CMOS design with the same complexity in standard 65 nm CMOS technology.
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    Analysis of Floating Body Effects in Thin Film Conventional and Single Pocket SOI MOSFETs using the GIDL Current Technique
    (IEEE, 2001-07) Rao, V. Ramgopal
    In this paper, we present an analysis of floating body effects in lateral asymmetric channel (LAC) and conventional homogeneously doped channel (uniform) SOI MOSFETs using a novel gate-induced-drain-leakage (GIDL) current technique. The parasitic bipolar current gain /spl beta/ has been experimentally measured for LAC and uniform SOI MOSFETs using the GIDL current technique. The lower parasitic bipolar current gain observed in LAC SOI MOSFETs is explained with the help of 2D device simulations.