NanoMOS

2-D simulator for thin body (less than 5 nm), fully depleted, double-gated n-MOSFETs

Launch Tool

This tool version is unpublished and cannot be run. If you would like to have this version staged, you can put a request through HUB Support.

Archive Version 3.5.1
Published on 23 Jun 2009, unpublished on 10 Jul 2009 All versions

doi:10.4231/D3F76666X cite this

Open source: license | download

Category

Tools

Published on

Abstract

== nanoMOS == nanoMOS is a 2-D simulator for thin body (less than 5 nm), fully depleted, double-gated n-MOSFETs. A choice of three transport models is currently available (drift-diffusion, classical ballistic, and quantum ballistic). The transport models treat quantum effects in the confinement direction exactly and the names indicate the technique used to account for carrier transport along the channel. Each of these transport models is solved self-consistently with Poisson's equation. Several internal quantities such as subband profiles, subband areal electron densities, potential profiles and I-V information can be obtained from the source code. ---- == Major nanoMOS versions in the past == * nanoMOS 1.0 Original nanoMOS code for silicon MOSFETs. Written in Matlab and developed by Zhibin Ren in 2000. * nanoMOS 2.0 Addition of Rappture interface support on nanohub.org * nanoMOS 3.0 Support for III-V materials in semi-classical and quantum ballistic transport models. * nanoMOS 3.5 Support for additional materials, enhanced drift-diffusion capabilities, and extensions and code restructuring for developers. 06/23/2009 A bug associated with temperature and mobility has been fixed. Now user can adjust the temperature and mobility model parameters and see the effects in output. ---- == nanoMOS related materials == '''nanoMOS 3.5 tutorial''' * [http://nanohub.org/resources/6542 Xufeng Wang (2009), "nanoMOS 3.5 First Time User Guide,"] '''nanoMOS 2.0 tutorial''' * [https://nanohub.org/resources/2845 Fodor, James K; Guo, Jing (2007), "Introduction to nanoMOS,"] '''An introduction on nanoMOS 2.0 and related simulators on nanoHUB''' * [https://nanohub.org/resources/2842 Fodor, James K; Guo, Jing (2007), "A Tutorial for Nanoelectronics Simulation Tools,"] '''nanoMOS 3.0 tutorial''' * [https://nanohub.org/resources/1533 Cantley, Kurtis; Lundstrom, Mark (2006), "NanoMOS 3.0 First Time User's Guide,"] '''Articles''' * Zhibin Ren, Ramesh Venugopal, Sebastien Goasguen, Supriyo Datta, and Mark S. Lundstrom "nanoMOS 2.5: A Two -Dimensional Simulator for Quantum Transport in Double-Gate MOSFETs," IEEE Trans. Electron. Dev., special issue on Nanoelectronics, Vol. 50, pp. 1914-1925, 2003 '''Thesis related to nanoMOS''' * [http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~lundstro/theses/zhibinren_thesis.pdf Zhibin Ren, "Nanoscale MOSFETS: Physics, Simulation and Design", 2001] * [http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~lundstro/theses/Venugopal_thesis.pdf Ramesh Venugopal, "Modeling Quantum Transport in Nanoscale Transistors", 2003] * Kurtis Cantley, "Performance Potential of III-V Materials in Nanoscale Transistors - a Device Simulation Perspective", 2007 '''Other related materials''' * [http://nanohub.org/resources/2039 Datta, Supriyo "CQT: Concepts of Quantum Transport"", 2006] * [http://nanohub.org/resources/1705 Lundstrom, Mark "ECE 612 Nanoscale Transistors (Fall 2006)"]

Credits

nanoMOS 1.0 was written in Matlab and developed by Zhibin Ren as part of his doctoral work at Purdue University. The development of NanoMOS was supported by the Semiconductor Research Corporation and by the Army Research Office through a Defense University Research Initiative on Nanotechnology grant.

Varies other people are also involved in the future development and expansion of nanoMOS. For the complete credits, please see the contributor list above.

Cite this work

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

  • , Sebastien Goasguen, Akira Matsudaira, Shaikh S. Ahmed, Kurtis Cantley, Mark Lundstrom, Xufeng Wang (2016), "NanoMOS," https://nanohub.org/resources/nanomos. (DOI: 10.4231/D3F76666X).

    BibTex | EndNote

Tags