1997
DOI: 10.1088/0268-1242/12/6/004
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Spectroscopic photon emission measurements of n-channel MOSFETs biased into snapback breakdown using a continuous-pulsing transmission line technique

Abstract: As device dimensions decrease without a proportional reduction in the supply voltage, short-channel MOSFETs may be operated at voltages close to drain-to-source breakdown. The single-pulse transmission line technique has been used previously to study devices under electrostatic discharge (ESD) as it allows the suppression of unwanted reflections. In this paper, a modified continuous-pulsing transmission line technique is combined with a spectroscopic photon emission microscope set-up to investigate photon emis… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, light emission from Si NMOSFET operating in the saturation region is reviewed, and it is believed that the light emission is due to the snap-back breakdown that occurs at the high field region near the corner between drain and substrate [57,58]. The type of light emission is also a sensitive hot-carrier degradation monitor [59].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, light emission from Si NMOSFET operating in the saturation region is reviewed, and it is believed that the light emission is due to the snap-back breakdown that occurs at the high field region near the corner between drain and substrate [57,58]. The type of light emission is also a sensitive hot-carrier degradation monitor [59].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been known for long that, when a p-n junction is reversely biased above the breakdown voltage, it emits photons of a broad and continuous energy during the avalanche process [28]. By capturing the emission image, one can therefore reveal the electric field distribution and defect locations in devices, such as MOSFET [29], solar cell [30] and SPADs [16,17]. However, in the measurement of breakdown flash from SPADs, as the photons emitted from all the depths are collected together, the depth-dependent information is missed.…”
Section: Breakdown Flash Imagementioning
confidence: 99%