Are gate-all-around 2D CFETs the optimal architecture for the A2 node and beyond?

Abstract

As logic scaling enters the angstrom era, vertically stacked complementary field-effect transistors (CFETs) based on atomically thin two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors offer a potential route to extend device scaling beyond the A2 node. Here, we develop an A2-oriented 2D CFET integration flow with a CPP of 36 nm and Lg of 10 nm and present initial demonstrations of several key process modules. Despite their atomically thin channels, 2D GAA CFETs do not provide a contacted poly pitch scaling advantage over Si GAA CFETs at the A2 node, because contact formation constraints impose a similar minimum CPP of 36 nm. We also combine a critical assessment with a multiscale power-performance-area (PPA) evaluation framework spanning quantum transport simulations, compact-model generation, A2-targeted 2D CFET gate-all-around (GAA) integration-flow definition, parasitic extraction and circuit-level benchmarking. Our analysis, however, shows that the expected benefits of 2D GAA CFETs are strongly constrained by non-idealities, in particular high contact resistance and dominant layout-induced parasitic capacitances. Although architectural optimization can improve the Ieff/Ceff ratio, the associated rise in absolute capacitance limits circuit-level gains. Meaningful progress will require co-optimization of contacts, transport and parasitics, together with 2D-specific CFET architectures.

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