SOI technology is one of several manufacturing strategies to allow the continued miniaturization of
microelectronic devices, colloquially referred to as "extending
Moore's law" (or "more moore", abbreviated "MM"). Reported benefits of SOI relative to conventional silicon (
bulk CMOS) processing include: • Lower parasitic capacitance due to isolation from the
bulk silicon, which improves power consumption at matched performance • Resistance to
latchup due to complete isolation of the n- and p-well structures • Higher performance at equivalent
VDD. Can work at low VDDs • Reduced temperature dependency due to no doping • Better yield due to high density, better wafer utilization • Reduced antenna issues • No body or well taps are needed • Lower leakage currents due to isolation thus higher power efficiency • Inherently
radiation hardened (resistant to soft errors), reducing the need for redundancy From a manufacturing perspective, SOI substrates are compatible with most conventional fabrication processes. In general, an SOI-based process may be implemented without special equipment or significant retooling of an existing factory. Among challenges unique to SOI are novel
metrology requirements to account for the buried oxide layer and concerns about differential stress in the topmost silicon layer. The threshold voltage of the transistor depends on the history of operation and applied voltage to it, thus making modeling harder. The primary barrier to SOI implementation is the drastic increase in substrate cost, which contributes an estimated 10–15% increase to total manufacturing costs. FD-SOI (fully depleted silicon on insulator) has been seen as a potential low cost alternative to FinFETs. ==SOI transistors==