Normally-Off GaN Field Effect Power Transistors: Device Design and Process Technology Development

Similar documents
Traps in MOCVD n-gan Studied by Deep Level Transient Spectroscopy and Minority Carrier Transient Spectroscopy

Strain and Temperature Dependence of Defect Formation at AlGaN/GaN High Electron Mobility Transistors on a Nanometer Scale

AlGaN/GaN-based HEMT on SiC substrate for microwave characteristics using different passivation layers

Electrical measurements of voltage stressed Al 2 O 3 /GaAs MOSFET

Dual-metal-gate Structure of AlGaN/GaN MIS HEMTs Analysis and Design

Role of Electrochemical Reactions in the Degradation Mechanisms of AlGaN/GaN HEMTs

EE115C Winter 2017 Digital Electronic Circuits. Lecture 3: MOS RC Model, CMOS Manufacturing

Study of Interface Traps in AlGaN/GaN MISHEMTs Using LPCVD SiN x as Gate Dielectric

Time Dependent Dielectric Breakdown in High Voltage GaN MIS HEMTs: The Role of Temperature

Analytical Evaluation of Energy and Electron Concentrations in Quantum Wells of the High Electron Mobility Transistors.

Electrical Degradation of InAlAs/InGaAs Metamorphic High-Electron Mobility Transistors

OFF-state TDDB in High-Voltage GaN MIS-HEMTs

M R S Internet Journal of Nitride Semiconductor Research

Supporting Online Material for

Electronics with 2D Crystals: Scaling extender, or harbinger of new functions?

J. Price, 1,2 Y. Q. An, 1 M. C. Downer 1 1 The university of Texas at Austin, Department of Physics, Austin, TX

Lecture 6: 2D FET Electrostatics

R. Ludwig and G. Bogdanov RF Circuit Design: Theory and Applications 2 nd edition. Figures for Chapter 6

MOS Capacitors ECE 2204

Device and Monte Carlo Simulation of GaN material and devices. Presenter: Ziyang Xiao Advisor: Prof. Neil Goldsman University of Maryland

1 Name: Student number: DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS AND PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND. Fall :00-11:00

Planar View of Structural Degradation in GaN HEMT: Voltage, Time and Temperature Dependence

Impact of oxide thickness on gate capacitance Modelling and comparative analysis of GaN-based MOSHEMTs

MSE 310/ECE 340: Electrical Properties of Materials Fall 2014 Department of Materials Science and Engineering Boise State University

Fig The electron mobility for a-si and poly-si TFT.

ECE-305: Fall 2017 MOS Capacitors and Transistors

Recent Progress in Understanding the DC and RF Reliability of GaN High Electron Mobility Transistors

Electrical Characteristics of Multilayer MoS 2 FET s

ECE 342 Electronic Circuits. 3. MOS Transistors

JFET/MESFET. JFET: small gate current (reverse leakage of the gate-to-channel junction) More gate leakage than MOSFET, less than bipolar.

Reliability and Instability of GaN MIS-HEMTs for Power Electronics

Recent Progress in Understanding the Electrical Reliability of GaN High-Electron Mobility Transistors

ECE 342 Electronic Circuits. Lecture 6 MOS Transistors

Lecture 18 Field-Effect Transistors 3

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA College of Engineering Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences. Fall Exam 1

Section 12: Intro to Devices

Modelling of capacitance and threshold voltage for ultrathin normally-off AlGaN/GaN MOSHEMT

Final Examination EE 130 December 16, 1997 Time allotted: 180 minutes

Microelectronics Reliability

Avalanche breakdown. Impact ionization causes an avalanche of current. Occurs at low doping

Supporting information

2D-2D tunneling field effect transistors using

Semiconductor Physics fall 2012 problems

6.012 Electronic Devices and Circuits

ECE 340 Lecture 39 : MOS Capacitor II

META-STABILITY EFFECTS IN ORGANIC BASED TRANSISTORS

6.012 Electronic Devices and Circuits

The Devices. Digital Integrated Circuits A Design Perspective. Jan M. Rabaey Anantha Chandrakasan Borivoje Nikolic. July 30, 2002

GaN based transistors

Surfaces, Interfaces, and Layered Devices

Semiconductor Detectors

L ECE 4211 UConn F. Jain Scaling Laws for NanoFETs Chapter 10 Logic Gate Scaling

Current mechanisms Exam January 27, 2012

Effects of Antimony Near SiO 2 /SiC Interfaces

Stretching the Barriers An analysis of MOSFET Scaling. Presenters (in order) Zeinab Mousavi Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick Aseem Jain Jaspreet Wadhwa

MOS Transistor Theory

MOS Transistors. Prof. Krishna Saraswat. Department of Electrical Engineering Stanford University Stanford, CA

CMPEN 411 VLSI Digital Circuits. Lecture 03: MOS Transistor

Semiconductor Physical Electronics

TEPZZ 7676 ZA_T EP A1 (19) (11) EP A1 (12) EUROPEAN PATENT APPLICATION

EECS130 Integrated Circuit Devices

Lecture 04 Review of MOSFET

MOSFET: Introduction

Typical example of the FET: MEtal Semiconductor FET (MESFET)

Metallic: 2n 1. +n 2. =3q Armchair structure always metallic = 2

Eldad Bahat-Treidel (Autor) GaN-Based HEMTs for High Voltage Operation: Design, Technology and Characterization

MOS Transistor I-V Characteristics and Parasitics

Supplementary Figure S1. AFM images of GraNRs grown with standard growth process. Each of these pictures show GraNRs prepared independently,

(a) (b) Supplementary Figure 1. (a) (b) (a) Supplementary Figure 2. (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)

MOS CAPACITOR AND MOSFET

MEGAWATT SOLID-STATE ELECTRONICS

GaN-BASED HEMTs have a great potential for

EECS130 Integrated Circuit Devices

Spring Semester 2012 Final Exam

Correlation between Current Collapse Phenomena and Deep-Level Defects in AlGaN/GaN Hetero-Structures Probed by Deep-Level Optical Spectroscopy

Wide Bandgap Semiconductor Research at Mississippi State University

InAlN/GaN high-electron-mobility transistors (HEMTs)

Lecture 12: MOSFET Devices

Unipolar Vertical Transport in GaN/AlGaN/GaN Heterostructures

ECE 497 JS Lecture - 12 Device Technologies

MOS Transistor Theory MOSFET Symbols Current Characteristics of MOSFET. MOS Symbols and Characteristics. nmos Enhancement Transistor

THz operation of self-switching nano-diodes and nano-transistors

Characterization of the gate-voltage dependency of input capacitance in a SiC MOSFET

The Devices. Jan M. Rabaey

Nanoscale CMOS Design Issues

Operation and Modeling of. The MOS Transistor. Second Edition. Yannis Tsividis Columbia University. New York Oxford OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

The effect of light illumination in photoionization of deep traps in GaN MESFETs buffer layer using an ensemble Monte Carlo simulation

CVD-3 MFSIN-HU-1 SiN x Mixed Frequency Process

Energy position of the active near-interface traps in metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors on 4H SiC

Performance Analysis of. doped and undoped AlGaN/GaN HEMTs

Mechanism of current leakage in Ni Schottky diodes on cubic GaN and AlxGa1-xN epilayers

This article has been accepted and published on J-STAGE in advance of copyediting. Content is final as presented.

3D Simulation of SiC MESFET

Appendix 1: List of symbols

3190 IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 60, NO. 10, OCTOBER 2013

Low Frequency Noise in MoS 2 Negative Capacitance Field-effect Transistor

Extensive reading materials on reserve, including

Enhancing the Performance of Organic Thin-Film Transistor using a Buffer Layer

Graphene devices and integration: A primer on challenges

Schottky Rectifiers Zheng Yang (ERF 3017,

Transcription:

Center for High Performance Power Electronics Normally-Off GaN Field Effect Power Transistors: Device Design and Process Technology Development Dr. Wu Lu (614-292-3462, lu.173@osu.edu) Dr. Siddharth Rajan (614-247-7922, rajan.21@osu.edu) Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Sept 19 th, 2014

Leading Faculties Dr. Wu Lu Professor lu.173@osu.edu Semiconductor device physics and design Advanced semiconductor processing technologies Device characterization and modeling Energy storage devices Dr. Siddharth Rajan Associate Professor rajan.21@osu.edu Nano-scale semiconductor devices Molecular beam epitaxy III-nitride semiconductors. 2

Research Programs on Nitride Semiconductor Materials and Devices Crystal growth and epitaxy (Rajan, Myers) Process science and advanced device fabrication technologies (Lu, Rajan) Metal contacts Process-induced defects Nanoscale,e-beam lithography; deep UV; ICP RIE plasma etching High frequency, high power, low noise GaN HEMTs Material characterization (Ringel, Brillson, Arehart) Structural, electronic, optical, chemical, in-situ & ex-situ measurements Development of new techniques at nanometer resolution Interface physics (metal-ceramic, dielectric-semiconductor) Device modeling, testing and circuit design (Lu, Roblin, Wang) Small and large signal RF testing/modeling Pulsed IV, RF measurements; nonlinear mwave; thermal modeling 3

Normally-off GaN-based Power FETs Key requirements of solid-state power devices - Higher breakdown voltage - Lower on-resistance - Higher operation current - Normally-off channel - Higher switching speed Therefore, normally-off GaN-based FETs Two strategies for normally-off GaN-FETs 1 Design of new Ga-faced or N-faced heterostructures for normally-off channel 2 Development of key process technologies for GaN power transistors 4

Frontend Processing Technologies 5

Manufacturable Ohmic Contacts for GaN Power Transistors Plasma processing to generate a thin layer of n+ region to promote carrier tunneling 6

Requirements for Gate Recess 1. Controllability Slow etch rate High selectivity (some applications) 2. Minimal damage 3. Smooth surface morphology 4. Uniformity 7

Excellent Etch Rate Control, Selectivity, Smoothness 12 Etch depth (nm) 10 8 6 4 2 GaN cap thickness 4-5 nm/min 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 9 10 Etch time (min) [6] M. Schuette et al., J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B. 25 p. 1870 (2010). 8

Diode C-V Electron density (cm -3 ) 10 21 11.0 nm recessed non-recessed 10 20 10 19 10 18 10 17 Schottky interface V max = +3 V 10 16 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Depletion width (nm) 2DEG shifted 11 nm toward surface Cap layer precisely removed after 70% overetch n + -GaN cap fully depleted 9

-Pinchoff voltage (V) Diode C-V, I-V 2DEG density (10 12 cm -2 ) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 C-V extractions 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Plasma exposure time (min) Threshold voltage control 10 8 6 4 2 Current density (A/cm 2 ) 10 3 reference 6 min 18 min 10 2 10 1 10 0 10-1 10-2 10-3 Not etched Etched 10-4 10-5 10-6 -5-4 -3-2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 Applied bias (V) Reduced leakage current 10

V T & G m,max distribution vs R at 0 V and I D at 10 V Note that R at 0V and I D at 10 V were measured between source & drain after gate recess & before gate metallization Threshold voltage & G m,max vs Resistance at V DS = 0 V Threshold voltage & G m,max vs I D at V DS = 10 V 1.0 500 1.0 500 V T (V) I D (ma/mm) -1.0 10 2 10 3 10 4 10 5 10 6 500 400 300 200 100 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0-0.2-0.4-0.6-0.8 R ( ) at V DS = 0 V 160 120 80 40 Gm (ms/mm) I D (ma/mm) 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 400 300 200 100 0 Gm,max (ms/mm) V T (V) 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0-0.2-0.4-0.6 10-3 10-2 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 I D (A) at V DS 10 V Gm (ms/mm) I D (ma/mm) 250 200 150 100 50 400 300 200 100 0 Gm,max (ms/mm) 160 120 80 40 Gm (ms/mm) 0 0-2 -1 0 1 2 3 V GS (V) 0 0-2 -1 0 1 2 3 V GS (V) 0-1 0 1 2 V GS (V) 0 11

Why Gate dielectric is necessary in GaN Power FETs? Why MIS structures? - To reduce gate leakage current (various oxides, SiNx) - To increase a gate voltage swing - To improve thermal stability - To reduce trap density (~10 11 ev 1 cm 2 with Al 2 O 3 ) * Why Al oxides? - Large dielectric constant (8.6~ 10), large bandgap (~9 ev) - high breakdown field (5 ~ 60 MV/cm) - thermal & chemical stability ** * P. Kordos et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. (2009) Ref 1 ) Y. Q. Wu et al., App.. Phys. Lett. 90, 072105 (2007) 12

Al 2 O 3 /GaN Energy band line-up metal Al 2 O 3 GaN Flat band voltage Linear fit: V FB =0.863-0.51x10 6 t ox (cm) Flat band in GaN is not flat-band in oxide φ b = 3 ev φ s = 0.018 ev Conduction band offset ΔE c = 2.12 ev (matches theory and other measurements) Oxide field F ox = 0.51 MV/cm Esposto et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 99, 133503, 2011 13

Al 2 O 3 /GaN interface charges σ fix = σ metal + σ sp_gan metal Al 2 O 3 GaN Total fixed charge = + 1.83x10 13 cm -2 Total fixed charges (σ fix ) induce electrical field in the dielectric Increase leakage current Interface fixed charge is greater than just the polarization charge! Positive charge prevents normally off FETs by shifting threshold in the negative direction σ metal σ fix σ sp_gan 14

Remote Ionized Impurity Scattering Fixed charges S G Dielectric AlGaN D +++++++++++++++++++++++ d GaN Fixed charges (~ 10 13 cm -2 ) cause remote ionized impurity scattering Polarization charges do not act as scattering centers When charges are close to the 2DEG the effect is more severe 15

Remote Ionized Impurity Scattering Fixed charges S G Dielectric AlGaN D +++++++++++++++++++++++ d GaN Remote impurity scattering: Fixed charges (~ 10 13 cm -2 ) cause remote ionized impurity scattering Polarization charges do not act as scattering centers When charges are close to the 2DEG the effect is more severe Proportional to fixed charge density Increases exponentially as distance is decreased 16

Remote impurity scattering n 2D = 1 x 10 12 cm -2 n 2D = 5 x 10 12 cm -2 n 2D = 1 x 10 13 cm -2 n fix = 4 x 10 13 cm -2 The regime of the interface charge density we expect Interfacial charge scattering reduces electron mobility significantly Remote impurity scattering becomes dominant as 2DEG density < 5x10 12 cm -2 Fixed charge density > 5x10 12 cm -2 Distance is lower than 10 nm Hung et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 99, 162104 17

Interface charge effects on devices n fix = 4 x 10 13 cm -2 Interfacial charge scattering reduces electron mobility significantly Interface charge increases reverse gate leakage Interface charge prevents normally off operation It is important to reduce the positive charge density in oxide/iii-nitride interfaces Hung et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 99, 162104 18

Oxygen Plasma Treatment Recessed MISHEMT Capacitance ( F/cm 2 ) 0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00 O 2 Plasma (n fix = 1.6 x10 13 cm -2 ) (a) O 2 Plasma and PMA (n fix = 8x10 12 cm -2 ) -9-6 -3 0 V g (V) Mobility (cm 2 V -1 s -1 ) 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Theory (n fix = 8x10 12 cm -2 ) 400C PMA (b) No PMA 20 nm Al 2 O 3 Al 0.3 Ga 0.7 N AlN GaN 5x10 12 10 13 2DEG density (cm -2 ) 9nm 9 nm recesed AlGaN/AlN cap layer Both oxygen plasma and PMA were applied. Interface fixed charges were reduced to 8x10 12 cm -2 after O 2 plasma and PMA. Mobility rises after PMA, close to theory. 19

Oxygen plasma treatment Normally-off MISHEMT Current density (A/mm ) (a) S (c) 10-1 10-2 10-3 10-4 10-5 10-6 10-7 10-8 10-9 6 um 0.4 um 2 um 0.4 um G native oxide GaN I ds I gs Capacitance (uf/cm 2 ) 20 nm Al 2 O 3 Al 0.3 Ga 0.7 N 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 AlN D I d (ma/mm ) 0 1 2 3 4 V g (V) V~0.25V 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 I d (ma/mm ) 0 2 4 6 8 10 V g (V) 0 0-1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 V g (V) (d) V ds = 7 V (b) 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 Vg = 0V ~ 10V V = +2V over recessed 0 2 4 6 V d (V) 50 40 30 20 10 g m (ms/mm ) - Thin AlN left after recess etch - O 2 plasma + PMA treatments - 20 nm ALD Al 2 O 3 - Normally-off MISHEMT - V th = +1.5 V (at V ds = 10 ua/mm) - Saturation I ds >140 ma/mm - Maximum g m = 40 ms/mm Hung, Ting-Hsiang, et al. Applied Physics Letters 102.7 (2013): 072105. 20

Backend Processing Technologies 21

Deep Etching of Si Structures Cryo-Process F-based chemistry; High etch rate (2~3 um/min) A clean process; Aspect ratio is temperature dependent. 22

High Aspect Ratio Si trench and Via Etch Etch rate 2.2mm/min, 100mm etch depth, 20:1 aspect ratio, 90º+/- 0.25ºsidewall angle. Etch Rate 2µm/min 200µm etch depth 40:1 aspect ratio >75:1 selectivity to photoresist >200:1 selectivity to oxide 23

Backside SiC Via Etching SiC via hole etched by ICP-RIE F- or Cl- Based chemistries High etch rate Hard mask required 24

Deep Dry Etching of III-Nitrides Etch profile obtained in AlGaN/GaN double heterostructure layer by ICP-RIE. Etch profile obtained in AlGaN/GaN double heterostructure layer by CAIBE. 25

Summary Normally-off GaN HEMTs can be designed for high frequency power switching applications with several critical issues being taken care. GaN transistors have great potential for power electronics but significant developments are still required. 26

Center for High Performance Power Electronics Questions? Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering