There is one thing I never quite understood about the saturation region of a long-channel MOSFET (NMOS) - if the channel does not exist anymore near the drain, how is there still current flowing from the source to the drain? None of my textbooks seem to provide an adequate explanation for this.
It makes sense for the short-channel devices, because it is viewed as a velocity saturated region, rather than a channel that doesn't exist at all.
It makes sense for the short-channel devices, because it is viewed as a velocity saturated region, rather than a channel that doesn't exist at all.