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1. Effect of forward and reverse substrate biasing on low-frequency noise in silicon PMOSFETs
Deen, M.J.; Marinov, O.;
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
Volume 49,  Issue 3,  March 2002 Page(s):409 - 413
Abstract:

Forward body biasing improves the low-frequency noise performance of p-channel metal-oxide semiconductor (PMOS) transistors by about 8 dB/V. Therefore, for analog design, forward body biasing may be preferred if noise is a concern. This is in agreement with the improvement of other MOSFET parameters such as the decrease of the threshold voltage (VT) or the increase of unity current-gain frequency (fT) on forward substrate- (or body)-source biasing (VBS). Also, forward VBS is very attractive for low voltage supply (VDD<0.6 V) and low-power, low-noise circuits. A detailed analysis of the dependence of the noise level on VBS and on the gate-source (VGS) biasing showed that the dependence on VBS seems to be smaller in weak inversion, and it increases in strong inversion. The dependence on VGS has a turning point at VGS≈0.8 V, independent of body bias, which it seems is due to the activation of oxide traps, as the noise waveform showed a random telegraph signal (RTS) component at VGS >0.8 V. Generally, it is confirmed that the spectral density S I of the total low-frequency noise of the drain current ID is proportional to the square of ID, i.e., S I∝ID2, but it cannot be clearly ascribed to either number fluctuation or mobility fluctuation models. In addition, both models cannot accurately describe the dependence of the noise level on the body bias
Abstract | Full Text: PDF(141 KB)    IEEE JNL
 
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