(under subclass 101) Subject matter wherein the logic means includes a unipolar transistor in which current carriers are injected at a source terminal and pass to a drain terminal through a channel of semiconductor material whose conductivity depends largely on an electrical field applied to the semiconductor from a control electrode (gate).
(1) Note. In a unipolar transistor, the source to drain current involves only one type of charge carrier (i.e., holes in a p-type channel and electrons in an n-type channel).
(2) Note. Two types of FET structures are prevalent: (a) an all-junction device, known as a junction FET or JFET
characterized by having heavily doped impurity regions of one type (e.g., p-type material), known as gate regions, on both sides of a second type semiconductor bar (e.g., n+ type material, etc.) to form a pn junction and (b) a device such as a MOSFET/IGFET, consisting of a lightly doped substrate (e.g., p-type material, etc.) into which two highly doped regions (e.g., n+ type material, etc.) are diffused for forming source/drain regions with the area therebetween becoming the channel for current carriers (i.e., holes or electrons) and with a layer of insulating material (e.g., SiO2) grown over the channel surface for separating the channel from a control (i.e., gate) electrode.
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
44, for multifunctional or programmable logic circuits using field-effect transistors.