A model was developed for the operation of a GaN pn junction vertical diode which includes rate equations for carrier capture and thermally activated emission by substitutional carbon impurities and carrier generation by ionizing radiation. The model was used to simulate the effect of ionizing radiation on the charge state of carbon. These simulations predict that with no applied bias, carbon is negatively charged in the n-doped layer, thereby compensating n-doping as experimentally observed in diodes grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition. With reverse bias, carbon remains negative in the depletion region, i.e., compensation persists in the absence of ionization but is neutralized by exposure to ionizing radiation. This increases charge density in the depletion region, decreases the depletion width, and increases the capacitance. The predicted increase in capacitance was experimentally observed using a pulsed 70 keV electron beam as the source of ionization. In additional confirming experiments, the carbon charge-state conversion was accomplished by photoionization using sub-bandgap light or by the capture of holes under forward bias.
Vertical gallium nitride (GaN) p-n diodes have garnered significant interest for use in power electronics where high-voltage blocking and high-power efficiency are of concern. In this article, we detail the growth and fabrication methods used to develop a large area (1 mm2) vertical GaN p-n diode capable of a 6.0-kV breakdown. We also demonstrate a large area diode with a forward pulsed current of 3.5 A, an 8.3-mΩ$\cdot$cm2 differential specific ON-resistance, and a 5.3-kV reverse breakdown. In addition, we report on a smaller area diode (0.063 mm2) that is capable of 6.4-kV breakdown with a differential specific ON-resistance of 10.2 mΩ$\cdot$cm2, when accounting for current spreading through the drift region at a 45° angle. Finally, the demonstration of avalanche breakdown is shown for a 0.063-mm2 diode with a room temperature breakdown of 5.6 kV. In this work, these results were achieved via epitaxial growth of a 50-μm drift region with a very low carrier concentration of <1×1015 cm–3 and a carefully designed four-zone junction termination extension.
Li, Bingjun L.; Wang, Sizhen W.; Nami, Mohsen N.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Han, Jung H.
The ability to form pristine interfaces after etching and regrowth of GaN is a prerequisite for epitaxial selective area doping, which in turn is needed for the formation of lateral PN junctions and advanced device architectures. In this work, we report the electrical properties of etched-and-regrown GaN PN diodes using an in situ Cl-based precursor, tertiary butylchloride (TBCl). We demonstrated a regrowth diode with I–V characteristics approaching that from a continuously grown reference diode. The sources of unintentional contamination from the silicon (Si) impurity and the mediating effect of Si during the TBCl etching are also investigated in this study. Furthermore, this work points to the potential of in situ TBCl etching toward the realization of GaN lateral PN junctions.
Ultra-low voltage drop tunnel junctions (TJs) were utilized to enable multi-active region blue light emitting diodes (LEDs) with up to three active regions in a single device. The multi-active region blue LEDs were grown monolithically by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) without growth interruption. This is the first demonstration of a MOCVD grown triple-junction LED. Optimized TJ design enabled near-ideal voltage and EQE scaling close to the number of junctions. This work demonstrates that with proper TJ design, improvements in wall-plug efficiency at high output power operation are possible by cascading multiple III-nitride based LEDs.
Potts, Alexander M.; Bajaj, Sanyam; Daughton, David R.; Allerman, A.A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Razzak, Towhidur; Sohel, Shahadat H.; Rajan, Siddharth
Ultrawide bandgap Al0.7Ga0.3N MESFETs with refractory Tungsten Schottky and Ohmic contacts are studied in 300-675 K environments. Variable-temperature dc electrical transport reveals large ON-state drain current densities for an AlGaN device: 209 mA/mm at 300 K and 156 mA/mm at 675 K in the ON-state (25% reduction). Drain and gate currents are only weakly temperature-dependent, suggesting potential for engineering temperature invariant operation. The ON-/ OFF-ratio is limited by OFF-state leakage through the gate, which is attributed to damage from sputter deposition. Future work using refractory metals with larger work functions that are deposited by electron beam deposition is proposed.
Understanding the impact of high-energy electron radiation on device characteristics remains critical for the expanding use of semiconductor electronics in space-borne applications and other radiation harsh environments. Here, we report on in situ measurements of high-energy electron radiation effects on the hole diffusion length in low threading dislocation density homoepitaxial bulk n-GaN Schottky diodes using electron beam induced current (EBIC) in high-voltage scanning electron microscopy mode. Despite the large interaction volume in this system, quantitative EBIC imaging is possible due to the sustained collimation of the incident electron beam. This approach enables direct measurement of electron radiation effects without having to thin the specimen. Using a combination of experimental EBIC measurements and Monte Carlo simulations of electron trajectories, we determine a hole diffusion length of 264 ± 11 nm for n-GaN. Irradiation with 200 kV electron beam with an accumulated dose of 24 × 1016 electrons cm−2 led to an approximate 35% decrease in the minority carrier diffusion length.
Advanced GaN power devices are promising for many applications in high power electronics but performance limitations due to material quality in etched-and-regrown junctions prevent their widespread use. Carrier diffusion length is a critical parameter that not only determines device performance but is also a diagnostic of material quality. Here we present the use of electron-beam induced current to measure carrier diffusion lengths in continuously grown and etched-and-regrown GaN pin diodes as models for interfaces in more complex devices. Variations in the quality of the etched-and-regrown junctions are observed and shown to be due to the degradation of the n-type material. We observe an etched-and-regrown junction with properties comparable to a continuously grown junction.
We carefully investigate three important effects including postgrowth activation annealing, delta (δ) dose and magnesium (Mg) buildup delay as well as experimentally demonstrate their influence on the electrical properties of GaN homojunction p–n diodes with a tunnel junction (TJ). The diodes were monolithically grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) in a single growth step. By optimizing the annealing parameters for Mg activation, δ-dose for both donors and acceptors at TJ interfaces, and p+-GaN layer thickness, a significant improvement in tunneling properties is achieved. For the TJs embedded within the continuously-grown, all-MOCVD GaN diode structures, ultra-low voltage penalties of 158 mV and 490 mV are obtained at current densities of 20 A cm−2 and 100 A cm−2, respectively. The diodes with the engineered TJs show a record-low differential resistivity of 1.6 × 10−4 Ω cm2 at 5 kA cm−2.
This work provides the first demonstration of vertical GaN Junction Barrier Schottky (JBS) rectifiers fabricated by etch and regrowth of p-GaN. A reverse blocking voltage near 1500 V was achieved at 1 mA reverse leakage, with a sub 1 V turn-on and a specific on-resistance of 10 mΩ-cm2. This result is compared to other reported JBS devices in the literature and our device demonstrates the lowest leakage slope at high reverse bias. A large initial leakage current is present near zero-bias which is attributed to a combination of inadequate etch-damage removal and passivation induced leakage current.
Etched-and-regrown GaN pn-diodes capable of high breakdown voltage (1610 V), low reverse current leakage (1 nA = 6 μ A /cm2 at 1250 V), excellent forward characteristics (ideality factor 1.6), and low specific on-resistance (1.1 m Ω.cm2) were realized by mitigating plasma etch-related defects at the regrown interface. Epitaxial n -GaN layers grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition on free-standing GaN substrates were etched using inductively coupled plasma etching (ICP), and we demonstrate that a slow reactive ion etch (RIE) prior to p -GaN regrowth dramatically increases diode electrical performance compared to wet chemical surface treatments. Etched-and-regrown diodes without a junction termination extension (JTE) were characterized to compare diode performance using the post-ICP RIE method with prior studies of other post-ICP treatments. Then, etched-and-regrown diodes using the post-ICP RIE etch steps prior to regrowth were fabricated with a multi-step JTE to demonstrate kV-class operation.
Ammonothermal growth of bulk gallium nitride (GaN) crystals is considered the most suitable method to meet the demand for high quality bulk substrates for power electronics. A non-destructive evaluation of defect content in state-of-the-art ammonothermal substrates has been carried out by synchrotron X-ray topography. Using a monochromatic beam in grazing incidence geometry, high resolution X-ray topographs reveal the various dislocation types present. Ray-tracing simulations that were modified to take both surface relaxation and absorption effects into account allowed improved correlation with observed dislocation contrast so that the Burgers vectors of the dislocations could be determined. The images show the very high quality of the ammonothermal GaN substrate wafers which contain low densities of threading dislocations (TDs) but are free of basal plane dislocations (BPDs). Threading mixed dislocations (TMDs) were found to be dominant among the TDs, and the overall TD density (TDD) of a 1-inch wafer was found to be as low as 5.16 × 103 cm−2.
Steady-state photocapacitance (SSPC) was conducted on nonpolar m-plane GaN n-type Schottky diodes to evaluate the defects induced by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) dry etching in etched-and-regrown unipolar structures. An ∼10× increase in the near-midgap Ec - 1.9 eV level compared to an as-grown material was observed. Defect levels associated with regrowth without an etch were also investigated. The defects in the regrown structure (without an etch) are highly spatially localized to the regrowth interface. Subsequently, by depth profiling an etched-and-regrown sample, we show that the intensities of the defect-related SSPC features associated with dry etching depend strongly on the depth away from the regrowth interface, which is also reported previously [Nedy et al., Semicond. Sci. Technol. 30, 085019 (2015); Fang et al., Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 42, 4207-4212 (2003); and Cao et al., IEEE Trans. Electron Devices 47, 1320-1324 (2000)]. A photoelectrochemical etching (PEC) method and a wet AZ400K treatment are also introduced to reduce the etch-induced deep levels. A significant reduction in the density of deep levels is observed in the sample that was treated with PEC etching after dry etching and prior to regrowth. An ∼2× reduction in the density of Ec - 1.9 eV level compared to a reference etched-and-regrown structure was observed upon the application of PEC etching treatment prior to the regrowth. The PEC etching method is promising for reducing defects in selective-area doping for vertical power switching structures with complex geometries [Meyers et al., J. Electron. Mater. 49, 3481-3489 (2020)].
Researchers have been extensively studying wide-bandgap (WBG) semiconductor materials such as gallium nitride (GaN) with an aim to accomplish an improvement in size, weight, and power of power electronics beyond current devices based on silicon (Si). However, the increased operating power densities and reduced areal footprints of WBG device technologies result in significant levels of self-heating that can ultimately restrict device operation through performance degradation, reliability issues, and failure. Typically, self-heating in WBG devices is studied using a single measurement technique while operating the device under steady-state direct current measurement conditions. However, for switching applications, this steady-state thermal characterization may lose significance since the high power dissipation occurs during fast transient switching events. Therefore, it can be useful to probe the WBG devices under transient measurement conditions in order to better understand the thermal dynamics of these systems in practical applications. In this work, the transient thermal dynamics of an AlGaN/GaN high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) were studied using thermoreflectance thermal imaging and Raman thermometry. Also, the proper use of iterative pulsed measurement schemes such as thermoreflectance thermal imaging to determine the steady-state operating temperature of devices is discussed. These studies are followed with subsequent transient thermal characterization to accurately probe the self-heating from steady-state down to submicrosecond pulse conditions using both thermoreflectance thermal imaging and Raman thermometry with temporal resolutions down to 15 ns.
Gallium nitride substrates grown by the hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE) method using a patterned growth process have been characterized by synchrotron monochromatic beam X-ray topography in the grazing incidence geometry. Images reveal a starkly heterogeneous distribution of dislocations with areas as large as 0.3 mm2 containing threading dislocation densities below 103 cm−2 in between a grid of strain centers with higher threading dislocation densities (>104 cm−2). Basal plane dislocation densities in these areas are as low as 104 cm−2. By comparing the recorded images of dislocations with ray tracing simulations of expected dislocations in GaN, the Burgers vectors of the dislocations have been determined. The distribution of threading screw/mixed dislocations (TSDs/TMDs), threading edge dislocations (TEDs) and basal plane dislocations (BPDs) is discussed with implications for fabrication of power devices.
A sidewall activation process was optimized for buried magnesium-doped p-GaN layers yielding a significant reduction in tunnel junction-enabled light emitting diode (LED) forward voltage. This buried activation enabled the realization of cascaded blue LEDs with fully transparent GaN homojunction tunnel junctions. The initial optimization of buried p-GaN activation was performed on PN junctions grown by metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) buried under hybrid tunnel junctions grown by MOCVD and molecular beam epitaxy. Next the activation process was implemented in cascaded blue LEDs emitting at 450 nm, which were enabled by fully transparent GaN homojunction tunnel junctions. The tunnel junction-enabled multi-active region blue LEDs were grown monolithically by MOCVD. This work demonstrates a state-of-the-art tunnel junction-enabled cascaded LED utilizing homojunction tunnel junctions which do not contain any heterojunction interface.
AlGaN polarization-doped field-effect transistors were characterized by DC and pulsed measurements from room temperature to 500 °C in ambient. DC current-voltage characteristics demonstrated only a 70% reduction in on-state current from 25 to 500 °C and full gate modulation, regardless of the operating temperature. Near ideal gate lag measurement was realized across the temperature range that is indicative of a high-quality substrate and sufficient surface passivation. The ability for operation at high temperature is enabled by the high Schottky barrier height from the Ni/Au gate contact, with values of 2.05 and 2.76 eV at 25 and 500 °C, respectively. The high barrier height due to the insulatorlike aluminum nitride layer leads to an ION/IOFF ratio of 1.5 × 109 and 6 × 103 at room temperature and 500 °C, respectively. Transmission electron microscopy was used to confirm the stability of the heterostructure even after an extended high-temperature operation with only minor interdiffusion of the Ni/Au Schottky contact. The use of refractory metals in all contacts will be key to ensure a stable extended high-temperature operation.
Research results for AlGaN-channel transistors are reviewed as they have progressed from low Al-content and long-channel devices to Al-rich and short-channel RF devices. Figure of merit (FOM) analysis shows encouraging comparisons relative to today's state-of-the-art GaN devices for high Al-content and elevated temperatures. Critical electric field (EC), which fuels the AlGaN transistor FOM for high Al-composition, is not measured directly, but average gate-drain electric field at breakdown is substantially better in multiple reported AlGaN-channel devices compared to GaN. Challenges for AlGaN include the constraints arising from relatively low room temperature mobility dominated by ternary alloy scattering and the difficulty of making low-resistivity Ohmic contacts to high Al-content materials. Nevertheless, considerable progress has been made recently in the formation of low-resistivity Ohmic contacts to Al-rich AlGaN by using reverse compositional grading in the semiconductor, whereby a contact to a lower-Al alloy (or even to GaN) is made. Specific contact resistivity (ρc) approaching ρc ∼2 × 10-6ωcm2 to AlGaN devices with 70% Al-content in the channel has been reported. Along with scaling of the channel length and tailoring of the threshold voltage, this has enabled a dramatic increase in the current density, which has now reached 0.6 A/mm. Excellent ION/IOFF current ratios have been reported for Schottky-gated structures, in some cases exceeding 109. Encouraging RF performance in Al-rich transistors has been reported as well, with fT and fmax demonstrated in the tens of gigahertz range for devices with less than 150 nm gates. Al-rich transistors have also shown lesser current degradation over temperature than GaN in extreme high-temperature environments up to 500 °C, while maintaining ION/IOFF ratios of ∼106 at 500 °C. Finally, enhancement-mode devices along with initial reliability and radiation results have been reported for Al-rich AlGaN transistors. The Al-rich transistors promise to be a very broad and exciting field with much more progress expected in the coming years as this technology matures.
GaN p-n diodes were formed by selective area regrowth on freestanding GaN substrates using a dry etch, followed by post-etch surface treatment to reduce etch-induced defects, and subsequent regrowth into wells. Etched-and-regrown diodes with a 150 μm diameter achieved 840 V operation at 0.5 A/cm2 reverse current leakage and a specific on-resistance of 1.2 mΩ·cm2. Etched-and-regrown diodes were compared with planar, regrown diodes without etching on the same wafer. Both types of diodes exhibited similar forward and reverse electrical characteristics, which indicate that etch-induced defectivity of the junction was sufficiently mitigated so as not to be the primary cause for leakage. An area dependence for forward and reverse leakage current density was observed, suggesting that the mesa sidewall provided a leakage path.
Impacts of silicon, carbon, and oxygen interfacial impurities on the performance of high-voltage vertical GaN-based p–n diodes are investigated. The results indicate that moderate levels (≈5 × 1017 cm-3) of all interfacial impurities lead to reverse blocking voltages (Vb) greater than 200 V at 1 μA cm-2 and forward leakage of less than 1 µA cm-2 at 1.7 V. At higher interfacial impurity levels, the performance of the diodes becomes compromised. Herein, it is concluded that each impurity has a different effect on the device performance. For example, a high carbon spike at the junction correlates with high off-state leakage current in forward bias (≈100× higher forward leakage current compared with a reference diode), whereas the reverse bias behavior is not severely affected (> 200 V at 1 μA cm-2). High silicon and oxygen spikes at the junction strongly affect the reverse leakage currents (≈ 1–10 V at 1 μA cm-2). Regrown diodes with impurity (silicon, oxygen, and carbon) levels below 5 × 1017 cm-3 show comparable forward and reverse results with the reference continuously grown diodes. The effect of the regrowth interface position relative to the metallurgical junction on the diode performance is also discussed.
The impact of dry-etch-induced defects on the electrical performance of regrown, c-plane, GaN p-n diodes where the p-GaN layer is formed by epitaxial regrowth using metal-organic, chemical-vapor deposition was investigated. Diode leakage increased significantly for etched-and-regrown diodes compared to continuously grown diodes, suggesting a defect-mediated leakage mechanism. Deep level optical spectroscopy (DLOS) techniques were used to identify energy levels and densities of defect states to understand etch-induced damage in regrown devices. DLOS results showed the creation of an emergent, mid-gap defect state at 1.90 eV below the conduction band edge for etched-and-regrown diodes. Reduction in both the reverse leakage and the concentration of the 1.90 eV mid-gap state was achieved using a wet chemical treatment on the etched surface before regrowth, suggesting that the 1.90 eV deep level contributes to increased leakage and premature breakdown but can be mitigated with proper post-etch treatments to achieve >600 V reverse breakdown operation.