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DAMOCLES: Monte Carlo simulation of semiconductor devices
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DAMOCLES is a self-consistent Poisson/Monte Carlo computer program simulating electronic transport in
semiconductor devices.
Transport of charge carriers (electrons and/or holes) is treated using an ensemble Monte
Carlo algorithm to solve the Boltzmann transport equation. The kinematics (free flights) and
dynamics (scattering) are modeled using the band-structure of the semiconductors
obtained from empirical pseudopotentials calculations.
A two-dimensional Poisson solver is used to calculate the electrostatic
potential self-consistently with the Monte Carlo charge distribution.
Devices of arbitrary geometry, realistic doping profiles, and a variety
of cubic and zinc-blend semiconductors can be simulated.
This site can be explored using the side navigation tabs or the links below:
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Overviews provides a quick introduction to DAMOCLES: why it
was created, which physical models it employs, what are Monte Carlo methods.
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Physics illustrates with a few examples how 'basic physics' can be applied
to understand basic issues of charge transport in semiconductors
(the determination of the scattering rates in Si, the calculation of the effective mobility in Si channels,
the simulation of electron injection into silicon dioxide, of sub-band-gap ionization in small Si FETs,
and the comparison of the performance of ultrasmall FETs based on various
semiconductors.
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Devices illustrates the capability of the program from a pure device perspective,
showing examples relative to Si n-channel and p-channel MOSFETs, SOIs,
double-gate Si FETs, and GaAs/InGaAs HEMTs
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References & links provides a list of our publications related to DAMOCLES,
links to Monte Carlo-related Web sites, and a historical digression.
Electrons in real-space (left) and k-space (right) in an nMOSFET as simulated by DAMOCLES.
Click on the pictures or on the following links to open a new window displaying higher-resolution versions
(792×612
and 671×605 jpeg).
DAMOCLES is a registered trademark of the IBM Corporation.
damoclesNO-SPAM@watson.ibm.com
(last updated: January 26, 1999)
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