There are other kinds of MOSFET's besides the one we have
studied so far. Strictly speaking, what we have seen up to now
is called an n-channel enhancement mode MOSFET. It
turns out that you can build a MOSFET which looks just like a
previous figure,
except that by putting some additional impurities under the gate
region, we can arrange it so that there is a channel formed,
even with
V
g
=0
V
g
0
.
The transistor now has a negative
VT
VT
. The process by which the additional
impurities are added is called a
VT
VT
adjust.
A MOSFET with a negative
VT
VT
can be expected to have
I
d
−
V
ds
I
d
V
ds
curves similar to those for a positive
VT
VT
device, except for one thing. For
V
gs
=0
V
gs
0
, the device is already turned on, and so we get a
usual MOSFET-type curve. Positive gate
voltage turns it on even more, while negative
Vgs
Vgs
tends to reduce the drain current. It
takes a negative gate voltage to turn the
thing off. Figure 1 shows comparative
characteristic curves for an enhancement and depletion mode
devices.
For an enhancement mode transistor, you have to get
V
g
>
V
T
V
g
V
T
(-1 Volt in this example) to
enhance the conductivity or channel to make
it conduct. For a depletion mode device, a gate voltage Vgs of
0, still finds the device conducting. You have to put some
negative voltage on the gate to deplete the
channel, in order to turn it off. We now have a depletion
mode n-channel MOSFET.
How would we use a depletion mode device in an inverter gate?
The answer is fairly straight-forward. In the schematic in Figure 2, we indicate a depletion mode MOSFET by adding
a second line, under the gate, to suggest that a channel already
exists in the device, even with no
Vg
Vg
. Note that the gate of the depletion
mode transistor (also sometimes called the pull up
transistor) is connected to its source, so, in fact,
Vgs
Vgs
does equal 0 for this device. The
input transistor (or the pull down transistor) is
just an enhancement mode MOSFET like we had before. It is not
hard to choose appropriate WW and
LL so that
Idsat
Idsat
for the pull up transistor is on the
order of the 500 μA that we need to get our 1 ns rise time
on the capacitive load.
In order to get the transfer characteristic for this circuit,
we first note that
V
sdd
=
V
dd
−
V
sde
V
sdd
V
dd
V
sde
(1)
where
Vsde
Vsde
is the source-drain voltage for the
pull-down, or enhancement transistor, and
Vsdd
Vsdd
, is the source-drain voltage for the
depletion-mode transistor. If we want to plot the
load-line for the pull-down transistor that is
created by the pull-up or depletion mode transistor, we should
take its
V
gs
=0
V
gs
0
characteristic curve, shift it over by an amount
Vdd
Vdd
, and then reverse its polarity. When
we do this we get the following shown in
Figure 3. Noting the intersection points of the
load line and the characteristic curves allows us
the opportunity for drawing the
transfer
characteristic. This is a better looking curve. It is
symmetric around the mid-voltage point, and gets closer to zero
for its output "low" condition. The transition from "high" to
"low" is also somewhat more abrupt, which is advantageous. Can
you figure out why?
Well, we solved one problem. At least we have a pull up
structure that we can manufacture. It turns out not to be too hard to
build an enhancement MOSFET that has an equivalent resistance in the
range we need without taking up too much chip area. We have not
solved the other problem however. We are still looking at a
huge current draw for large circuits. Since on
average, half of the inverter gates will be "on" in a
logic circuit, we still have a large current sink to ground. This is
something that would be completely prohibitive in a modern-day VLSI
integrated circuit.
Fortunately, we have not run out of options for MOS structures yet.
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