In this paper, we propose and investigate an electrically doped (ED) PNPN tunnel field effect transistor (FET), in which the drain side tunneling barrier width is effectively controlled to obtain a suppressed ambipolar current. We present that the proposed PNPN tunnel FETs can be realized without chemically doped junctions by applying the polarity bias concept to a doped N+/P− starting structure. Using numerical device simulations, we demonstrate how the tunneling barrier width on the drain side can be influenced by several design parameters, such as the gap length between the channel and the drain (Lgap), the working function of the polarity gate, and the dielectric material of the spacer. The simulation results show that an ED PNPN tunneling FET with an ED drain, which has been explored for the first time, exhibits a low ambipolar current of 5.87 × 10−16 A/µm at a gap length of 20 nm. The ambipolar current is reduced by six orders of magnitude compared to that which occurs with a conventional ED PNPN tunnel FET with a uniformly doped drain, while the average subthreshold slope and the ON state and OFF state currents remained nearly identical.
Aiming at QoS multi-objective optimisation,this paper presents an improved genetic algorithm,which has been applied to solving the routing optimisation problem. This algorithm meets the requirements of bandwidth,delay and cost on the basis of router mathematical model. Also,it sets the targets of resource consumption and equilibrium load distribution,which makes the resource consumption least and balances the load distribution,thus, the occurrence of network congestion is reduced. Simulation proves that it has the advantages to certain extent.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.