Current Trends In Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors

Current Trends In Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors
Author: M F Chang
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 437
Release: 1996-01-29
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9814501069

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Recent advances in communication, digital signal processing and computational systems demand very high performance electronic circuits. Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors (HBTs) have the potential of providing a more efficient solution to many key system requirements through intrinsic device advantages. This book reviews the present status of GaAs, InP and silicon-based HBT technologies and their applications to digital, analog, microwave and mixed-signal circuits and systems. It represents the first major effort to cover the complete scope of the HBT technology development in the past decade, starting from the fundamental device physics, material growth, device reliability, scaling, processing, modeling to advanced HBT integrated circuit design for various system applications.

Characterization, Simulation and Optimization of Type-II GaAsSb-based Double Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors

Characterization, Simulation and Optimization of Type-II GaAsSb-based Double Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors
Author: Nick Gengming Tao
Publisher:
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2006
Genre: Bipolar transisitors
ISBN:

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In recent years, GaAsSb/InP double heterojunction bipolar transistors (DHBTs) have been demonstrated to be promising alternatives to InP/InGaAs HBTs, for next generation microwave/millimeter wave applications and optoelectronic integrated circuits (OEICs). However, GaAsSb-based DHBTs featuring the novel base material and type-II band alignment have not been well studied. This thesis investigated type-II GaAsSb DHBTs in the following aspects: periphery surface recombination current, Kirk effect, two dimensional (2D) simulation and device optimization. The present work provided insights into device operation, and guidances for further device development. A series of physical models and parameters was implemented in 2D device simulations using ISE TCAD. Band gap narrowing (BGN) in the bases was characterized by comparing experimental and simulated results. Excellent agreements between the measured and simulated DC and RF results were achieved. Emitter size effects associated with the surface recombination current were experimentally characterized for emitter sizes of 0.5 by 6 to 80 by 80 square micrometer. The 2D simulations by implementing surface state models revealed the mechanism for the surface recombination current. Two device structures were proposed to diminish surface recombination current. Numerical simulations for type-II GaAsSb-InP base-collector (BC) junctions showed that conventional base "push-out" does not occur at high injection levels, and instead the electric field at the BC junction is reversed and an electron barrier at the base side evolves. The electron barrier was found to play an important role in the Kirk effect, and the electron tunnelling through the barrier delays the onset of the Kirk effect. This novel mechanism was supported by the measurement for GaAsSb/InP DHBTs with two base doping levels. The study also showed that the magnitude of the electric field at the BC junction at zero collector current directly affects onset of the Kirk effect. Finally, optimizations for the emitter, base and collector were carried out through 2D simulations. A thin InAlAs emitter, an (Al)GaAsSb compositionally graded base with band gap variance of 0.1eV, and a high n-type delta doping in the collector were proposed to simultaneously achieve high frequency performance, high Kirk current density and high breakdown voltage.

An Event-Driven Parallel-Processing Subsystem for Energy-Efficient Mobile Medical Instrumentation

An Event-Driven Parallel-Processing Subsystem for Energy-Efficient Mobile Medical Instrumentation
Author: Florian Stefan Glaser
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2022-12-02
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3866287771

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Aging population and the thereby ever-rising cost of health services call for novel and innovative solutions for providing medical care and services. So far, medical care is primarily provided in the form of time-consuming in-person appointments with trained personnel and expensive, stationary instrumentation equipment. As for many current and past challenges, the advances in microelectronics are a crucial enabler and offer a plethora of opportunities. With key building blocks such as sensing, processing, and communication systems and circuits getting smaller, cheaper, and more energy-efficient, personal and wearable or even implantable point-of-care devices with medicalgrade instrumentation capabilities become feasible. Device size and battery lifetime are paramount for the realization of such devices. Besides integrating the required functionality into as few individual microelectronic components as possible, the energy efficiency of such is crucial to reduce battery size, usually being the dominant contributor to overall device size. In this thesis, we present two major contributions to achieve the discussed goals in the context of miniaturized medical instrumentation: First, we present a synchronization solution for embedded, parallel near-threshold computing (NTC), a promising concept for enabling the required processing capabilities with an energy efficiency that is suitable for highly mobile devices with very limited battery capacity. Our proposed solution aims at increasing energy efficiency and performance for parallel NTC clusters by maximizing the effective utilization of the available cores under parallel workloads. We describe a hardware unit that enables fine-grain parallelization by greatly optimizing and accelerating core-to-core synchronization and communication and analyze the impact of those mechanisms on the overall performance and energy efficiency of an eight-core cluster. With a range of digital signal processing (DSP) applications typical for the targeted systems, the proposed hardware unit improves performance by up to 92% and 23% on average and energy efficiency by up to 98% and 39% on average. In the second part, we present a MCU processing and control subsystem (MPCS) for the integration into VivoSoC, a highly versatile single-chip solution for mobile medical instrumentation. In addition to the MPCS, it includes a multitude of analog front-ends (AFEs) and a multi-channel power management IC (PMIC) for voltage conversion. ...

An Open-Source Research Platform for Heterogeneous Systems on Chip

An Open-Source Research Platform for Heterogeneous Systems on Chip
Author: Andreas Dominic Kurth
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2022-10-05
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3866287747

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Heterogeneous systems on chip (HeSoCs) combine general-purpose, feature-rich multi-core host processors with domain-specific programmable many-core accelerators (PMCAs) to unite versatility with energy efficiency and peak performance. By virtue of their heterogeneity, HeSoCs hold the promise of increasing performance and energy efficiency compared to homogeneous multiprocessors, because applications can be executed on hardware that is designed for them. However, this heterogeneity also increases system complexity substantially. This thesis presents the first research platform for HeSoCs where all components, from accelerator cores to application programming interface, are available under permissive open-source licenses. We begin by identifying the hardware and software components that are required in HeSoCs and by designing a representative hardware and software architecture. We then design, implement, and evaluate four critical HeSoC components that have not been discussed in research at the level required for an open-source implementation: First, we present a modular, topology-agnostic, high-performance on-chip communication platform, which adheres to a state-of-the-art industry-standard protocol. We show that the platform can be used to build high-bandwidth (e.g., 2.5 GHz and 1024 bit data width) end-to-end communication fabrics with high degrees of concurrency (e.g., up to 256 independent concurrent transactions). Second, we present a modular and efficient solution for implementing atomic memory operations in highly-scalable many-core processors, which demonstrates near-optimal linear throughput scaling for various synthetic and real-world workloads and requires only 0.5 kGE per core. Third, we present a hardware-software solution for shared virtual memory that avoids the majority of translation lookaside buffer misses with prefetching, supports parallel burst transfers without additional buffers, and can be scaled with the workload and number of parallel processors. Our work improves accelerator performance for memory-intensive kernels by up to 4×. Fourth, we present a software toolchain for mixed-data-model heterogeneous compilation and OpenMP offloading. Our work enables transparent memory sharing between a 64-bit host processor and a 32-bit accelerator at overheads below 0.7 % compared to 32-bit-only execution. Finally, we combine our contributions to a research platform for state-of-the-art HeSoCs and demonstrate its performance and flexibility.