Patents by Inventor Farid Nemati

Farid Nemati has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7320895
    Abstract: Switching operations, such as those used in memory devices, are enhanced using a thyristor-based semiconductor device adapted to switch between a blocking state and a conducting state. According to an example embodiment of the present invention, a thyristor-based semiconductor device includes a thyristor having first and second base regions coupled between first and second emitter regions, respectively. A first control port capacitively couples a first signal to the first base region, and a second control port capacitively couples a second signal to the second base region. Each of the first and second signals have a charge that is opposite in polarity, and the opposite polarity signals effect the switching of the thyristor at a lower power, relative to the power that would be required to switch the thyristor having only one control port.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 22, 2005
    Date of Patent: January 22, 2008
    Assignee: T-Ram Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Horch, Scott Robins, Farid Nemati
  • Patent number: 7304327
    Abstract: Switching operations, such as those used in memory devices, are enhanced using a semiconductor device having a thyristor adapted to switch between conducting and blocking states and operate at low power. According to an example embodiment of the present invention, thyristor characteristics are managed over a broad temperature range using a control circuit for coupling a signal, such as a DC voltage signal, to a portion of a thyristor for controlling temperature-related operation thereof, e.g., for controlling bipolar gains. In one implementation, a control port adaptively adjusts a signal coupled to the thyristor as a function of temperature, such that at relatively low temperatures unwanted increases in holding current (IH) are prevented. In another implementation, the control port couples the signal at relatively high temperature operation for controlling the forward blocking voltage (VFB) in such a manner that a blocking state of the thyristor is held.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 12, 2003
    Date of Patent: December 4, 2007
    Assignee: T-RAM Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Kailash Gopalakrishnan, Andrew E. Horch
  • Patent number: 7268373
    Abstract: A semiconductor may contain a plurality of circuits each comprising at least one thyristor having a base region. The base region of at least one of the thyristors has a different doping profile than the others. When a bias circuit is used to bias the thyristors, the effect of biasing on the thyristors is found to be affected by the doping profile. In a specific embodiment, the doping concentration is higher near an electrode of the thyristor than near a supporting substrate. The different doping profiles can be achieved by using different ion implant energies.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 23, 2004
    Date of Patent: September 11, 2007
    Assignee: T-RAM Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Rajesh Narendra Gupta, Farid Nemati
  • Patent number: 7245525
    Abstract: In a thyristor based memory cell, one end of a reversed-biased diode is connected to the cathode of the thyristor. During standby, the second end of the diode is biased at a voltage that is higher than that at the cathode of the thyristor. During restore operation, the second end is pulled down to zero or even a negative value. If the cell is storing a “1,” the voltage at the thyristor cathode can be approximately 0.6 volt at the time of the pull down. The large forward-bias across the diode pulls down the thryistor cathode. This causes the thyristor to be restored. If the cell is storing a “0,” the voltage at the thyristor cathode can be approximately zero volt. The small or zero forward-bias across the diode is unable to disturb the “0” state. As a result, the memory cell is restored to its original state.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 1, 2005
    Date of Patent: July 17, 2007
    Assignee: T-Ram Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Zachary K. Lee, Farid Nemati, Scott Robins
  • Patent number: 7195959
    Abstract: A thyristor-based semiconductor memory device may comprise at least a region thereof, e.g., a p-base region, having high ionization energy impurity, such as a dopant. This high ionization energy impurity within a base region may be operable to compensate for a gain-versus-temperature dependence of a constituent bipolar transistor of the thyristor element of a thyristor-based memory device. In particular embodiments, the high ionization energy impurity may include a donor and/or acceptor in silicon.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 4, 2004
    Date of Patent: March 27, 2007
    Assignee: T-Ram Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: James D. Plummer, Zachary K. Lee, Kevin J. Yang, Farid Nemati
  • Patent number: 7125753
    Abstract: A semiconductor memory device having a thyristor is manufactured in a manner that makes possible self-alignment of one or more portions of the thyristor. According to an example embodiment of the present invention, a gate is formed over a first portion of doped substrate. The gate is used to mask a portion of the doped substrate and a second portion of the substrate is doped before or after a spacer is formed. After the second portion of the substrate is doped, the spacer is then formed adjacent to the gate and used to mask the second portion of the substrate while a third portion of the substrate is doped. The gate and spacer are thus used to form self-aligned doped portions of the substrate, wherein the first and second portions form base regions and the third portion form an emitter region of a thyristor.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 23, 2005
    Date of Patent: October 24, 2006
    Assignee: T-RAM Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Horch, Scott Robins, Farid Nemati
  • Patent number: 7109532
    Abstract: A semiconductor device may comprise a partially-depleted SOI MOSFET having a floating body region disposed between a source and drain. The floating body region may be driven to receive injected carriers for adjusting its potential during operation of the MOSFET. In a particular case, the MOSFET may comprise another region of semiconductor material in contiguous relationship with a drain/source region of the MOSFET and on a side thereof opposite to the body region. This additional region may be formed with a conductivity of type opposite the drain/source, and may establish an effective bipolar device per the body, the drain/source and the additional region. The geometries and doping thereof may be designed to establish a transport gain of magnitude sufficient to assist the injection of carriers into the floating body region, yet small enough to guard against inter-latching with the MOSFET.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 23, 2003
    Date of Patent: September 19, 2006
    Inventors: Zachary K. Lee, Farid Nemati, Scott Robins
  • Patent number: 7078739
    Abstract: A thyristor-based memory may comprise a thyristor accessible via an access transistor. A temperature dependent bias may be applied to at least one of a supporting substrate and an electrode capacitively-coupled to a base region of the thyristor. The voltage level of the adaptive bias may change with respect to temperature and may influence and/or compensate an inherent bipolar gain of the thyristor in accordance with the change in bias and may enhance its performance and/or reliability over a range of operating temperature. In a particular embodiment, the thyristor may be formed in a layer of silicon of an SOI substrate and the adaptive bias coupled to a supporting substrate of the SOI structure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 19, 2003
    Date of Patent: July 18, 2006
    Assignee: T-Ram Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Kevin J. Yang
  • Patent number: 7075122
    Abstract: In a method of fabricating a semiconductor memory device, a thyristor may be formed in a layer of semiconductor material. Carbon may be implanted and annealed in a base-emitter junction region for the thyristor to affect leakage characteristics. The density of the carbon and/or a bombardment energy and/or an anneal therefore may be selected to establish a low-voltage, leakage characteristic for the junction substantially greater than its leakage absent the carbon. In one embodiment, an anneal of the implanted carbon may be performed in common with an activation for other implant regions the semiconductor device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 25, 2003
    Date of Patent: July 11, 2006
    Assignee: T-Ram Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Kevin J. Yang, Farid Nemati, Scott Robins, James D. Plummer, Hyun-Jin Cho
  • Publication number: 20060139996
    Abstract: A dynamically-operating restoration circuit is used to apply a voltage or current restore pulse signal to thyristor-based memory cells and therein restore data in the cell using the internal positive feedback loop of the thyristor. In one example implementation, the internal positive feedback loop in the thyristor is used to restore the conducting state of a device after the thyristor current drops below the holding current. A pulse and/or periodic waveform are defined and applied to ensure that the thyristor is not released from its conducting state. The time average of the periodic restore current in the thyristor may be lower than the holding current threshold. While not necessarily limited to memory cells that are thyristor-based, various embodiments of the invention have been found to be the particularly useful for high-speed, low-power memory cells in which a thin capacitively-coupled thyristor is used to provide a bi-stable storage element.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 24, 2006
    Publication date: June 29, 2006
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Hyun-jin Cho, Robert Igehy
  • Patent number: 7053423
    Abstract: A thyristor-based semiconductor device exhibits a relatively increased base-emitter capacitance. According to an example embodiment of the present invention, a base region and an adjacent emitter region of a thyristor are doped such that the emitter region has a lightly-doped portion having a light dopant concentration, relative to the base region. In one embodiment, the thyristor is implemented in a memory circuit, wherein the emitter region is coupled to a reference voltage line and a control port is arranged for capacitively coupling to the thyristor for controlling current flow therein. In another implementation, the thyristor is formed on a buried insulator layer of a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) structure. With these approaches, current flow in the thyristor, e.g., for data storage therein, can be tightly controlled.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 5, 2004
    Date of Patent: May 30, 2006
    Assignee: T-RAM, Inc.
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Scott Robins, Andrew Horch
  • Patent number: 7042759
    Abstract: A dynamically-operating restoration circuit is used to apply a voltage or current restore pulse signal to thyristor-based memory cells and therein restore data in the cell using the internal positive feedback loop of the thyristor. In one example implementation, the internal positive feedback loop in the thyristor is used to restore the conducting state of a device after the thyristor current drops below the holding current. A pulse and/or periodic waveform are defined and applied to ensure that the thyristor is not released from its conducting state. The time average of the periodic restore current in the thyristor may be lower than the holding current threshold. While not necessarily limited to memory cells that are thyristor-based, various embodiments of the invention have been found to be the particularly useful for high-speed, low-power memory cells in which a thin capacitively-coupled thyristor is used to provide a bi-stable storage element.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 22, 2005
    Date of Patent: May 9, 2006
    Assignee: T-RAM Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Hyun-Jin Cho, Robert Homan Igehy
  • Patent number: 7037763
    Abstract: In an example gated-thyristor circuit, formation of thyristor body regions involves an angled implant of a thyristor body region, such as a base region, to mitigate capacitive coupling of a gated voltage pulse from the thyristor gate to a body region that is not underlying the thyristor gate. According to a more particular example embodiment, such a thyristor switches between a current-passing mode and a current blocking mode in response to at least one voltage pulse coupling to an underlying thyristor base region. Using a first ion type to provide one polarity, an immediately-adjacent thyristor base region is angle implanted through an emitter body region that is located to other side of the adjacent thyristor base region. The emitter body region is then implanted using ions of another ion type to provide the opposite polarity. This angle implantation permits definition of the adjacent thyristor base region sufficiently distant from (e.g.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 18, 2003
    Date of Patent: May 2, 2006
    Assignee: T-RAM Semiconductor, Inc.
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Scott Robins, Andrew E. Horch
  • Publication number: 20060011940
    Abstract: A thyristor device can be used to implement a variety of semiconductor memory circuits, including high-density memory-cell arrays and single cell circuits. In one example embodiment, the thyristor device includes doped regions of opposite polarity, and a first word line that is used to provide read and write access to the memory cell. A second word line is located adjacent to and separated by an insulative material from one of the doped regions of the thyristor device for write operations to the memory cell, for example, by enhancing the switching of the thyristor device from a high conductance state to a low conductance state and/or from the low conductance state to the high conductance. This type of memory circuit can be implemented to significantly reduce standby power consumption and access time.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 18, 2005
    Publication date: January 19, 2006
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, James Plummer
  • Patent number: 6967358
    Abstract: A thyristor device can be used to implement a variety of semiconductor memory circuits, including high-density memory-cell arrays and single cell circuits. In one example embodiment, the thyristor device includes doped regions of opposite polarity, and a first word line that is used to provide read and write access to the memory cell. A second word line is located adjacent to and separated by an insulative material from one of the doped regions of the thyristor device for write operations to the memory cell, for example, by enhancing the switching of the thyristor device from a high conductance state to a low conductance state and/or from the low conductance state to the high conductance. This type of memory circuit can be implemented to significantly reduce standby power consumption and access time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 12, 2004
    Date of Patent: November 22, 2005
    Assignee: The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, James D. Plummer
  • Patent number: 6965129
    Abstract: Switching operations, such as those used in memory devices, are enhanced using a thyristor-based semiconductor device adapted to switch between a blocking state and a conducting state. According to an example embodiment of the present invention, a thyristor-based semiconductor device includes a thyristor having first and second base regions coupled between first and second emitter regions, respectively. A first control port capacitively couples a first signal to the first base region, and a second control port capacitively couples a second signal to the second base region. Each of the first and second signals have a charge that is opposite in polarity, and the opposite polarity signals effect the switching of the thyristor at a lower power, relative to the power that would be required to switch the thyristor having only one control port.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 6, 2002
    Date of Patent: November 15, 2005
    Assignee: T-Ram, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Horch, Scott Robins, Farid Nemati
  • Publication number: 20050233506
    Abstract: A method of fabricating a thyristor-based memory may include forming different opposite conductivity-type regions in silicon for defining a thyristor and an access device in series relationship. An activation anneal may activate dopants previously implanted for the different regions. A damaging implant of germanium or xenon or argon may be directed into select regions of the silicon including at least one p-n junction region for the access device and the thyristor. A re-crystallization anneal may then be performed to re-crystallize at least some of the damaged lattice structure resulting from the damaging implant. The re-crystallization anneal may use a temperature less than that of the previous activation anneal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 22, 2005
    Publication date: October 20, 2005
    Inventors: Andrew Horch, Hyun-Jin Cho, Farid Nemati, Scott Robins, Rajesh Gupta, Kevin Yang
  • Patent number: 6944051
    Abstract: In a thyristor based memory cell, one end of a reversed-biased diode is connected to the cathode of the thyristor. During standby, the second end of the diode is biased at a voltage that is higher than that at the cathode of the thyristor. During restore operation, the second end is pulled down to zero or even a negative value. If the cell is storing a “1,” the voltage at the thyristor cathode can be approximately 0.6 volt at the time of the pull down. The large forward-bias across the diode pulls down the thryistor cathode. This causes the thyristor to be restored. If the cell is storing a “0,” the voltage at the thyristor cathode can be approximately zero volt. The small or zero forward-bias across the diode is unable to disturb the “0” state. As a result, the memory cell is restored to its original state.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 29, 2003
    Date of Patent: September 13, 2005
    Assignee: T-Ram, Inc.
    Inventors: Zachary K. Lee, Farid Nemati, Scott Robins
  • Publication number: 20050185489
    Abstract: A dynamically-operating restoration circuit is used to apply a voltage or current restore pulse signal to thyristor-based memory cells and therein restore data in the cell using the internal positive feedback loop of the thyristor. In one example implementation, the internal positive feedback loop in the thyristor is used to restore the conducting state of a device after the thyristor current drops below the holding current. A pulse and/or periodic waveform are defined and applied to ensure that the thyristor is not released from its conducting state. The time average of the periodic restore current in the thyristor may be lower than the holding current threshold. While not necessarily limited to memory cells that are thyristor-based, various embodiments of the invention have been found to be the particularly useful for high-speed, low-power memory cells in which a thin capacitively-coupled thyristor is used to provide a bi-stable storage element.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 22, 2005
    Publication date: August 25, 2005
    Inventors: Farid Nemati, Hyun-Jin Cho, Robert Igehy
  • Patent number: 6911680
    Abstract: A semiconductor memory device having a thyristor is manufactured in a manner that makes possible self-alignment of one or more portions of the thyristor. According to an example embodiment of the present invention, a gate is formed over a first portion of doped substrate. The gate is used to mask a portion of the doped substrate and a second portion of the substrate is doped before or after a spacer is formed. After the second portion of the substrate is doped, the spacer is then formed adjacent to the gate and used to mask the second portion of the substrate while a third portion of the substrate is doped. The gate and spacer are thus used to form self-aligned doped portions of the substrate, wherein the first and second portions form base regions and the third portion form an emitter region of a thyristor.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 13, 2004
    Date of Patent: June 28, 2005
    Assignee: T-RAM, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew Horch, Scott Robins, Farid Nemati