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Demonstration of >6.0-kV Breakdown Voltage in Large Area Vertical GaN p-n Diodes With Step-Etched Junction Termination Extensions

IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices

Yates, Luke Y.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Crawford, Mary H.; Steinfeldt, Jeffrey A.; Smith, Michael; Abate, Vincent M.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Binder, Andrew B.; Allerman, A.A.; Kaplar, Robert K.

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.

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A discussion on various experimental methods of impact ionization coefficient measurement in GaN

AIP Advances

Ji, Dong; Zeng, Ke; Bian, Zhengliang; Shankar, Bhawani; Gunning, Brendan P.; Binder, Andrew B.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Aktas, Ozgur; Anderson, Travis J.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Chowdhury, Srabanti

Impact ionization coefficients play a critical role in semiconductors. In addition to silicon, silicon carbide and gallium nitride are important semiconductors that are being seen more as mainstream semiconductor technologies. As a reflection of the maturity of these semiconductors, predictive modeling has become essential to device and circuit designers, and impact ionization coefficients play a key role here. Recently, several studies have measured impact ionization coefficients. We dedicated the first part of our study to comparing three experimental methods to estimate impact ionization coefficients in GaN, which are all based on photomultiplication but feature characteristic differences. The first method inserts an InGaN hole-injection layer, the accuracy of which is challenged by the dominance of ionization in InGaN, leading to possible overestimation of the coefficients. The second method utilizes the Franz-Keldysh effect for hole injection but not for electrons, where the mixed injection of induced carriers would require a margin of error. The third method uses complementary p-n and n-p structures that have been at the basis of this estimation in Si and SiC and leans on the assumption of a constant electric field, and any deviation would require a margin of error. In the second part of our study, we evaluated the models using recent experimental data from diodes demonstrating avalanche breakdown.

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Fabrication and field emission properties of vertical, tapered GaN nanowires etched via phosphoric acid

Nanotechnology

Kazanowska, Barbara A.; Sapkota, Keshab R.; Lu, Ping L.; Talin, A.A.; Bussmann, Ezra B.; Ohta, Taisuke O.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Jones, Kevin S.; Wang, George T.

The controlled fabrication of vertical, tapered, and high-aspect ratio GaN nanowires via a two-step top-down process consisting of an inductively coupled plasma reactive ion etch followed by a hot, 85% H3PO4 crystallographic wet etch is explored. The vertical nanowires are oriented in the [0001] direction and are bound by sidewalls comprising of 3362 ¯ } semipolar planes which are at a 12° angle from the [0001] axis. High temperature H3PO4 etching between 60 °C and 95 °C result in smooth semipolar faceting with no visible micro-faceting, whereas a 50 °C etch reveals a micro-faceted etch evolution. High-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy imaging confirms nanowire tip dimensions down to 8–12 nanometers. The activation energy associated with the etch process is 0.90 ± 0.09 eV, which is consistent with a reaction-rate limited dissolution process. The exposure of the 3362 ¯ } type planes is consistent with etching barrier index calculations. The field emission properties of the nanowires were investigated via a nanoprobe in a scanning electron microscope as well as by a vacuum field emission electron microscope. The measurements show a gap size dependent turn-on voltage, with a maximum current of 33 nA and turn-on field of 1.92 V nm−1 for a 50 nm gap, and uniform emission across the array.

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Recent Progress in Vertical Gallium Nitride Power Devices

Kaplar, Robert K.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Binder, Andrew B.; Abate, Vincent M.; Smith, Michael; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Sharps, Paul; Neely, Jason C.; Rashkin, Lee; Gill, Lee G.; Goodrick, Kyle J.; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Hite, J H.; Ebrish, M.E.; Porter, M.A.; Zeng, K.Z.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Ji, D.J.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Vertical GaN PN Diodes for Grid Resiliency and Medium-Voltage Power Electronics

Kaplar, Robert K.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Binder, Andrew B.; Abate, Vincent M.; Smith, Michael L.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Sharps, Paul; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.J.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Hite, J.H.; Ebrish, M.E.; Porter, M.A.; Zeng, K.Z.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Ji, D.J.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Vertical GaN Devices for Medium-Voltage Power Electronics

Kaplar, Robert K.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Binder, Andrew B.; Abate, Vincent M.; Smith, Michael L.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Sharps, Paul; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.J.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Hite, J.H.; Ebrish, M.E.; Porter, M.A.; Zeng, K.Z.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Ji, D.J.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Improved forward voltage and external quantum efficiency scaling in multi-active region III-nitride LEDs

Applied Physics Express

Jamal-Eddine, Zane; Gunning, Brendan P.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Rajan, Siddharth

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.

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All-MOCVD-grown gallium nitride diodes with ultra-low resistance tunnel junctions

Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics

Hasan, Syed M.N.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Eddine, Zane J.; Chandrasekar, Hareesh; Crawford, Mary H.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Rajan, Siddharth; Arafin, Shamsul

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.

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Ultralow Voltage GaN Vacuum Nanodiodes in Air

Nano Letters

Sapkota, Keshab R.; Leonard, Francois L.; Talin, A.A.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Kazanowska, Barbara A.; Jones, Kevin S.; Wang, George T.

The III-nitride semiconductors have many attractive properties for field-emission vacuum electronics, including high thermal and chemical stability, low electron affinity, and high breakdown fields. Here, we report top-down fabricated gallium nitride (GaN)-based nanoscale vacuum electron diodes operable in air, with record ultralow turn-on voltages down to ∼0.24 V and stable high field-emission currents, tested up to several microamps for single-emitter devices. We leverage a scalable, top-down GaN nanofabrication method leading to damage-free and smooth surfaces. Gap-dependent and pressure-dependent studies provide new insights into the design of future, integrated nanogap vacuum electron devices. The results show promise for a new class of high-performance and robust, on-chip, III-nitride-based vacuum nanoelectronics operable in air or reduced vacuum.

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Vertical GaN Power Electronics - Opportunities and Challenges (invited)

Kaplar, Robert K.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Binder, Andrew B.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Sharps, Paul; Neely, Jason C.; Rashkin, Lee; Gill, L.G.; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Ebrish, M.E.; M., Porter M.; Martinez, R.M.; Zeng, K.Z.; Ji, D.J.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Low voltage drop tunnel junctions grown monolithically by MOCVD

Applied Physics Letters

Jamal-Eddine, Zane; Hasan, Syed M.N.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Chandrasekar, Hareesh; Crawford, Mary; Armstrong, Andrew; Arafin, Shamsul; Rajan, Siddharth

Tunnel junction devices grown monolithically by metal organic chemical vapor deposition were optimized for minimization of the tunnel junction voltage drop. Two device structures were studied: an all-GaN homojunction tunnel junction and a graded InGaN heterojunction-based tunnel junction. This work reports a record-low voltage drop in the graded-InGaN heterojunction based tunnel junction device structure achieving a de-embedded tunnel junction voltage drop of 0.17 V at 100 A/cm2. The experimental data were compared with a theoretical model developed through technology computer-aided design (TCAD) simulations that offer a physics-based approach to understanding the key components of the design space, which lead to a more efficient tunnel junction.

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Development of High-Voltage Vertical GaN PN Diodes (invited)

Kaplar, Robert K.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Binder, Andrew B.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Sharps, Paul; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Ebrish, M.E.; Parter, M.P.; Zeng, K.Z.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Development of High-Voltage Vertical GaN PN Diodes (invited)

Kaplar, Robert K.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Binder, Andrew B.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Sharps, Paul; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Ebrish, M.E.; Porter, M.A.; Martinez, R.M.; Zeng, K.Z.; Ji, D.J.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Development of High-Voltage Vertical GaN PN Diodes (invited)

Kaplar, Robert K.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Binder, Andrew B.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Sharps, Paul; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Ebrish, M.E.; Porter, M.A.; Martinez, R.M.; Zeng, K.Z.; Ji, D.J.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

A Study on the Impact of Mid-Gap Defects on Vertical GaN Diodes

IEEE Transactions on Semiconductor Manufacturing

Ebrish, Mona A.; Anderson, Travis J.; Koehler, Andrew D.; Foster, Geoffrey M.; Gallagher, James C.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Hobart, Karl D.

GaN is a favorable martial for future efficient high voltage power switches. GaN has not dominated the power electronics market due to immature substrate, homoepitaxial growth, and immature processing technology. Understanding the impact of the substrate and homoepitaxial growth on the device performance is crucial for boosting the performance of GaN. In this work, we studied vertical GaN PiN diodes that were fabricated on non-homogenous Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy (HVPE) substrates from two different vendors. We show that defects which stemmed from growth techniques manifest themselves as leakage hubs. Different non-homogenous substrates showed different distribution of those defects spatially with the lesser quality substrates clustering those defects in clusters that causes pre-mature breakdown. Energetically these defects are mostly mid-gap around 1.8Ev with light emission spans from 450nm to 700nm. Photon emission spectrometry and hyperspectral electroluminescence were used to locate these defects spatially and energetically.

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Development of High-Voltage Vertical GaN PN Diodes (invited)

Kaplar, Robert K.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Flicker, Jack D.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Yates, Luke Y.; Binder, Andrew B.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Anderson, T.J.; Gallagher, J.C.; Jacobs, A.G.; Koehler, A.D.; Tadjer, M.J.; Hobart, K.D.; Ebrish, M.E.; Porter, M.A.; Martinez, R.M.; Zeng, K.Z.; Ji, D.J.; Chowdhury, S.C.; Aktas, O.A.; Cooper, J.A.

Abstract not provided.

Recovery from plasma etching-induced nitrogen vacancies in p-type gallium nitride using UV/O3treatments

Applied Physics Letters

Koehler, Andrew; Ebrish, Mona; Gallagher, James E.; Anderson, Travis M.; Noesges, Brenton; Brillson, Leonard; Gunning, Brendan P.; Hobart, Karl D.; Foster, Geoffrey M.; Kub, Francis

Plasma etching of p-type GaN creates n-type nitrogen vacancy (VN) defects at the etched surface, which can be detrimental to device performance. In mesa isolated diodes, etch damage on the sidewalls degrades the ideality factor and leakage current. A treatment was developed to recover both the ideality factor and leakage current, which uses UV/O3 treatment to oxidize the damaged layers followed by HF etching to remove them. The temperature dependent I-V measurement shows that the reverse leakage transport mechanism is dominated by Poole-Frenkel emission at room temperature through the etch-induced VN defect. Depth resolved cathodoluminescence confirms that the damage is limited to first several nanometers and is consistent with the VN defect.

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Results 1–25 of 54
Results 1–25 of 54