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Introduction Of Advanced Cmos Device Models Into The Curriculum At The Introductory Electronics Level

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Conference

2008 Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Publication Date

June 22, 2008

Start Date

June 22, 2008

End Date

June 25, 2008

ISSN

2153-5965

Conference Session

Technology in the Physics or Engineering Physics C

Tagged Division

Engineering Physics & Physics

Page Count

15

Page Numbers

13.807.1 - 13.807.15

DOI

10.18260/1-2--3688

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/3688

Download Count

629

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Paper Authors

author page

Raymond Winton Mississippi State University

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Abstract
NOTE: The first page of text has been automatically extracted and included below in lieu of an abstract

Introduction of advanced MOS device models into the curriculum at the introductory electronics level

Abstract

Most contemporary electronics design is accomplished in the CMOS technology and makes use of a design cycle that employs advanced MOS device models. These models accommodate many technologies, high-field effects, and second-order approximations and thereby must be deployed with a large parameter set. The models have a fairly high mathematics overhead. Consequently they are nearly impenetrable to the average student, even those with a relatively high level of expertise. In this respect it is almost unnecessary to do more with the models than the first-order treatments espoused by textbook reference and instead treat the subject of CMOS design in terms of a simulation methodology.

This paper identifies a set of simulation techniques and exercises that efficiently deploy this perspective. With the introductory electronics courses a set of simulation exercises have been developed which include the BSIM3V4 model, and identify effects in terms of the model simulation parameters, most of which can be associated with first-order physical roots. The process is simple and direct. In the classroom setting the effect of simulation at different CMOS levels is also appropriate and is deployed by these exercises, usually by collateral use of a spreadsheet utility and its graph/plot capabilities. The student version of Cadence/ORCAD/pSPICE, the most common classroom circuit simulation platform, is the principal operational utility, with the MS/Excel platform as a complementary spreadsheet utility.

Winton, R. (2008, June), Introduction Of Advanced Cmos Device Models Into The Curriculum At The Introductory Electronics Level Paper presented at 2008 Annual Conference & Exposition, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 10.18260/1-2--3688

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