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An AlN/Al0.85Ga0.15N high electron mobility transistor with a regrown ohmic contact

Device Research Conference - Conference Digest, DRC

Baca, Albert G.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Douglas, Erica A.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; King, Michael P.; Coltrin, Michael E.; Nordquist, Christopher D.; Fortune, Torben; Kaplar, Robert

The performance and efficiency of power devices depends on both high breakdown voltage and low on-state resistance. For semiconductor devices, the critical electric field (EC) affecting breakdown scales approximately as Eg25 [1], making the wide bandgap semiconductor materials logical candidates for high voltage power electronics devices. In particular, AlGaN alloys approaching AlN with its 6.2 eV bandgap have an estimated EC approaching 5x that of GaN. This factor makes AlN/AlGaN high election mobility transistors (HEMTs) extremely interesting as candidate power electronic devices. Until now, such devices have been hampered, ostensibly due to the difficulty of making Ohmic contacts to AlGaN alloys with high Al composition. With the use of an AlN barrier etch and regrowth procedure for Ohmic contact formation, we are now able to report on an AlN/AlGaN HEMT with 85% Al.

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An AlN/Al0.85Ga0.15N high electron mobility transistor

Applied Physics Letters

Baca, Albert G.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Douglas, Erica A.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; King, Michael P.; Coltrin, Michael E.; Fortune, Torben; Kaplar, Robert

An AlN barrier high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) based on the AlN/Al0.85Ga0.15N heterostructure was grown, fabricated, and electrically characterized, thereby extending the range of Al composition and bandgap for AlGaN channel HEMTs. An etch and regrowth procedure was implemented for source and drain contact formation. A breakdown voltage of 810 V was achieved without a gate insulator or field plate. Excellent gate leakage characteristics enabled a high Ion/Ioff current ratio greater than 107 and an excellent subthreshold slope of 75 mV/decade. A large Schottky barrier height of 1.74 eV contributed to these results. In conclusion, the room temperature voltage-dependent 3-terminal off-state drain current was adequately modeled with Frenkel-Poole emission.

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Al00.3Ga0.7N PN diode with breakdown voltage >1600 V

Electronics Letters

Allerman, A.A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Fischer, Arthur J.; Dickerson, Jeramy; Crawford, Mary H.; King, Michael P.; Moseley, Michael W.; Wierer, J.J.; Kaplar, Robert

Demonstration of Al00.3Ga0.7N PN diodes grown with breakdown voltages in excess of 1600 V is reported. The total epilayer thickness is 9.1 μm and was grown by metal-organic vapour-phase epitaxy on 1.3-mm-thick sapphire in order to achieve crack-free structures. A junction termination edge structure was employed to control the lateral electric fields. A current density of 3.5 kA/cm2 was achieved under DC forward bias and a reverse leakage current <3 nA was measured for voltages <1200 V. The differential on-resistance of 16 mΩ cm2 is limited by the lateral conductivity of the n-type contact layer required by the front-surface contact geometry of the device. An effective critical electric field of 5.9 MV/cm was determined from the epilayer properties and the reverse current–voltage characteristics. To our knowledge, this is the first aluminium gallium nitride (AlGaN)-based PN diode exhibiting a breakdown voltage in excess of 1 kV. Finally, we note that a Baliga figure of merit (Vbr2/Rspec,on) of 150 MW/cm2 found is the highest reported for an AlGaN PN diode and illustrates the potential of larger-bandgap AlGaN alloys for high-voltage devices.

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In-Operando Spatial Imaging of Edge Termination Electric Fields in GaN Vertical p-n Junction Diodes

IEEE Electron Device Letters

Leonard, Francois; Dickerson, Jeramy; King, Michael P.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Fischer, Arthur J.; Allerman, A.A.; Talin, Albert A.

Control of electric fields with edge terminations is critical to maximize the performance of high-power electronic devices. While a variety of edge termination designs have been proposed, the optimization of such designs is challenging due to many parameters that impact their effectiveness. While modeling has recently allowed new insight into the detailed workings of edge terminations, the experimental verification of the design effectiveness is usually done through indirect means, such as the impact on breakdown voltages. In this letter, we use scanning photocurrent microscopy to spatially map the electric fields in vertical GaN p-n junction diodes in operando. We reveal the complex behavior of seemingly simple edge termination designs, and show how the device breakdown voltage correlates with the electric field behavior. Modeling suggests that an incomplete compensation of the p-type layer in the edge termination creates a bilayer structure that leads to these effects, with variations that significantly impact the breakdown voltage.

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Enhanced light extraction in tunnel junction-enabled top emitting UV LEDs

Applied Physics Express

Zhang, Yuewei; Allerman, A.A.; Krishnamoorthy, Sriram; Akyol, Fatih; Moseley, Michael W.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Rajan, Siddharth

The efficiency of ultraviolet (UV) light-emitting diodes (LEDs) is critically limited by absorption losses in p-type and metal layers. In this work, surface-roughening-based light extraction structures were combined with tunneling-based top-layer contacts to achieve highly efficient top-side light extraction in UV LEDs. By using self-assembled Ni nanoclusters as an etch mask, the top surface-roughened LEDs were found to enhance the external quantum efficiency by over 40% for UV LEDs with a peak emission wavelength of 326 nm. The method described here can be used for fabricating highly efficient UV LEDs without the need for complex manufacturing techniques such as flip chip bonding.

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Ultra-Wide-Bandgap Semiconductors for Generation-After-Next Power Electronics

Kaplar, Robert; Allerman, A.A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Fischer, Arthur J.; Dickerson, Jeramy; King, Michael P.; Baca, Albert G.; Douglas, Erica A.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Neely, Jason C.; Flicker, Jack D.; Zutavern, Fred J.; Mauch, Daniel L.; Brocato, Robert W.; Rashkin, Lee J.; Delhotal, Jarod J.; Fang, Lu; Kizilyalli, Isik; Aktas, Ozgur

Abstract not provided.

Cubic Gallium Nitride on Micropatterned Si (001) for Longer Wavelength LEDs

Durniak, Mark T.; Chaudhuri, Anabil; Smith, Michael L.; Allerman, A.A.; Lee, S.C.; Brueck, S.R.J.; Wetzel, Christian

GaInN/GaN heterostructures of cubic phase have the potential to overcome the limitations of wurtzite structures commonly used for light emitting and laser diodes. Wurtzite GaInN suffers from large internal polarization fields, which force design compromises ( 0001 ) towards ultra-narrow quantum wells and reduce recombination volume and efficiency. Cubic GaInN microstripes grown at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute by metal organic vapor phase epitaxy on micropatterned Si , with {111} v-grooves oriented along Si ( 001 ) , offer a system free of internal polarization fields, wider quantum wells, and smaller <00$\bar1$> bandgap energy. We prepared 6 and 9 nm Ga x In 1-x N/GaN single quantum well structures with peak wavelength ranges from 520 to 570 nm with photons predominately polarized perpendicular to the grooves. We estimate a cubic InN composition range of 0 < x < 0.5 and an upper limit of the internal quantum efficiency of 50%. Stripe geometry and polarization may be suitable for mode confinement and reduced threshold stimulated emission.

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Vertical GaN power diodes with a bilayer edge termination

IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices

Dickerson, Jeramy; Allerman, A.A.; Bryant, Benjamin N.; Fischer, Arthur J.; King, Michael P.; Moseley, Michael W.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Kaplar, Robert; Kizilyalli, Isik C.; Aktas, Ozgur; Wierer Jr., Jonathan J.

Vertical GaN power diodes with a bilayer edge termination (ET) are demonstrated. The GaN p-n junction is formed on a low threading dislocation defect density (104 - 105 cm-2) GaN substrate, and has a 15-μm-thick n-type drift layer with a free carrier concentration of 5 × 1015 cm-3. The ET structure is formed by N implantation into the p+-GaN epilayer just outside the p-type contact to create compensating defects. The implant defect profile may be approximated by a bilayer structure consisting of a fully compensated layer near the surface, followed by a 90% compensated (p) layer near the n-type drift region. These devices exhibit avalanche breakdown as high as 2.6 kV at room temperature. Simulations show that the ET created by implantation is an effective way to laterally distribute the electric field over a large area. This increases the voltage at which impact ionization occurs and leads to the observed higher breakdown voltages.

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High voltage and high current density vertical GaN power diodes

Electronics Letters

Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Fischer, Arthur J.; King, Michael P.; Van Heukelom, Michael; Moseley, Lee J.; Kaplar, Robert; Wierer, J.J.; Crawford, Mary H.; Dickerson, Jeramy

We report on the realization of a GaN high voltage vertical p-n diode operating at > 3.9 kV breakdown with a specific on-resistance < 0.9 mΩ.cm2. Diodes achieved a forward current of 1 A for on-wafer, DC measurements, corresponding to a current density > 1.4 kA/cm2. An effective critical electric field of 3.9 MV/cm was estimated for the devices from analysis of the forward and reverse current-voltage characteristics. Furthermore this suggests that the fundamental limit to the GaN critical electric field is significantly greater than previously believed.

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Performance and Breakdown Characteristics of Irradiated Vertical Power GaN P-i-N Diodes

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

King, Michael P.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Dickerson, Jeramy; Vizkelethy, Gyorgy; Fleming, R.M.; Campbell, J.; Wampler, William R.; Kizilyalli, I.C.; Bour, D.P.; Aktas, O.; Nie, H.; Disney, D.; Wierer, J.; Allerman, A.A.; Moseley, Michael W.; Kaplar, Robert

Electrical performance and defect characterization of vertical GaN P-i-N diodes before and after irradiation with 2.5 MeV protons and neutrons is investigated. Devices exhibit increase in specific on-resistance following irradiation with protons and neutrons, indicating displacement damage introduces defects into the p-GaN and n- drift regions of the device that impact on-state device performance. The breakdown voltage of these devices, initially above 1700 V, is observed to decrease only slightly for particle fluence < {10{13}} hbox{cm}-2. The unipolar figure of merit for power devices indicates that while the on-resistance and breakdown voltage degrade with irradiation, vertical GaN P-i-Ns remain superior to the performance of the best available, unirradiated silicon devices and on-par with unirradiated modern SiC-based power devices.

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Results 201–225 of 363
Results 201–225 of 363