Device Options and Trade-offs for 5 nm CMOS Technology Seminar Series

By Mark Lundstrom

Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

In This Series

  1. Nanometer-Scale III-V Electronics: from Quantum-Well Planar MOSFETs to Vertical Nanowire MOSFETs

    Online Presentations | 05 Oct 2015 | Contributor(s): Juses A. del Alamo

    This talk will review recent progress as well as challenges confronting III-V electronics for future logic applications with emphasis on the presenter’s research activities at MIT.

  2. Inter-band Tunnel Transistors: Opportunities and Challenges

    Online Presentations | 30 Oct 2015 | Contributor(s): Suman Datta

    In this talk, we will review progress in Tunnel FETs and also analyze primary roadblocks in the path towards achieving steep switching performance in III-V HTFET.

  3. Negative Capacitance Ferroelectric Transistors: A Promising Steep Slope Device Candidate?

    Online Presentations | 30 Oct 2015 | Contributor(s): Suman Datta

    In this talk, we will review progress in non-perovskite ALD based ferroelectric dielectrics which have strong implication for VLSI compatible negative capacitance Ferroelectric FETs.

  4. Green Light on Germanium

    Online Presentations | 02 Nov 2015 | Contributor(s): peide ye

    This talk will review recent progress as well as challenges on Ge research for future logic applications with emphasis on the breakthrough work at Purdue University on Ge nFET which leads to the demonstration of the world first Ge CMOS circuits on Si substrates. Ge device technology includes...

  5. A Tutorial Introduction to Negative-­Capacitor Landau Transistors: Perspectives on the Road Ahead

    Online Presentations | 04 Dec 2015 | Contributor(s): Muhammad A. Alam

    In this talk, I use a simple graphical approach to demystify the device and explain why the experimental results are easy to misinterpret. Since the NC-FET is just a special case of a much broader class of phase-change devices and systems (e.g., transistors, memories, MEMS, logic-in-memory...