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A circuit design usually uses more than one type of PMOS or NMOS to cater for
different power supply voltages. For example, a design may use thicker gate-oxide
transistors to operate in higher power supply at the I/O interfaces. In order to
differentiate the various voltage range transistors, sometimes circuit designers
conveniently make use of the depletion-mode transistor symbol for this purpose.
Typically, the schematic symbols for the depletion-mode transistors are represented
with a thicker gate drawing
The MOS transistors performance varies with its channel length (L) and channel
width (W). The drain current (ID) that flows through the transistor operating in the
saturation mode is shown in the following equation.
We can treat MOS transistors as simple on-off switches with a source (S), gate (G)
(controls the state of the switch) and drain (D). 1 represents high voltage, VDD (5V,
3.3V, 1.8V, 1.2V, <=1.0V today, .....) 0 represent low voltage - GND or VSS. (0V for
digital circuits)
Signal Strengths Signals such as 1 and 0 have strengths, measures ability to sink or
source current VDD and GND Rails are the strongest 1 and 0 Under the switch
abstraction, G has complete control and S and D have no effect. In reality, the gate
can turn the switch on only if a potential difference of at least Vt exists between the
G and S. We will look at Vt in detail later on in the course. Thus signal strengths are
related to Vt and therefore p and n transistors produce signals with different
strengths Strong 1: VDD, Strong 0: GND, Weak 1 :(~VDD -Vt) and Weak 0 :(~GND +
Vt).
A silicide step, where highly conductive metal is deposited on the gate and
diffusion regions, reduces transistor terminal resistance To prevent potential
gatesource/drain shorting an oxide spacer is first formed before silicide deposition
-based design rules allow a process and feature size independent way
setting mask dimensions to scale
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