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AlGaN High Electron Mobility Transistor for Power Switches and High Temperature Logic

Klein, Brianna A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Nordquist, Christopher N.; Neely, Jason C.; Reza, Shahed R.; Douglas, Erica A.; Van Heukelom, Michael V.; Rice, Anthony R.; Patel, Victor J.; Matins, Benjamin M.; Fortune, Torben R.; Rosprim, Mary R.; Caravello, Lisa N.; Laros, James H.; Pipkin, Jennifer R.; Abate, Vincent M.; Kaplar, Robert K.

Abstract not provided.

Nanoantenna-Enhanced Resonant Detectors for Improved Infrared Detector Performance

Goldflam, Michael G.; Anderson, Evan M.; Fortune, Torben R.; Klem, John F.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Davids, Paul D.; Campione, Salvatore; Pung, Aaron J.; Webster, Preston T.; Weiner, Phillip; Finnegan, Patrick S.; Wendt, Joel; Wood, Michael G.; Haines, Chris; Coon, Wesley T.; Olesberg, Jonathon T.; Shaner, Eric A.; Kadlec, Clark N.; Laros, James H.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Kim, Jin K.; Peters, D.W.

Abstract not provided.

Monolithically fabricated tunable long-wave infrared detectors based on dynamic graphene metasurfaces

Applied Physics Letters

Goldflam, Michael G.; Ruiz, Isaac R.; Howell, S.W.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Anderson, Evan M.; Wendt, J.R.; Finnegan, Patrick S.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Coon, Wesley T.; Fortune, Torben R.; Shaner, Eric A.; Kadlec, Clark N.; Olesberg, Jonathon T.; Klem, John F.; Webster, Preston T.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Kim, Jin K.; Peters, D.W.; Laros, James H.

Here, the design, fabrication, and characterization of an actively tunable long-wave infrared detector, made possible through direct integration of a graphene-enabled metasurface with a conventional type-II superlattice infrared detector, are reported. This structure allows for post-fabrication tuning of the detector spectral response through voltage-induced modification of the carrier density within graphene and, therefore, its plasmonic response. These changes modify the transmittance through the metasurface, which is fabricated monolithically atop the detector, allowing for spectral control of light reaching the detector. Importantly, this structure provides a fabrication-controlled alignment of the metasurface filter to the detector pixel and is entirely solid-state. Using single pixel devices, relative changes in the spectral response exceeding 8% have been realized. These proof-of-concept devices present a path toward solid-state hyperspectral imaging with independent pixel-to-pixel spectral control through a voltage-actuated dynamic response.

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Understanding Superionic Conductivity in Lithium and Sodium Salts of Weakly Coordinating Closo-Hexahalocarbaborate Anions

Chemistry of Materials

Jorgensen, Mathias; Shea, Patrick T.; Tomich, Anton W.; Varley, Joel B.; Bercx, Marnik; Laros, James H.; Cerny, Radovan; Erny; Zhou, Wei; Udovic, Terrence J.; Lavallo, Vincent; Fortune, Torben R.; Wood, Brandon C.; Stavila, Vitalie S.

Solid-state ion conductors based on closo-polyborate anions combine high ionic conductivity with a rich array of tunable properties. Cation mobility in these systems is intimately related to the strength of the interaction with the neighboring anionic network and the energy for reorganizing the coordination polyhedra. Here, we explore such factors in solid electrolytes with two anions of the weakest coordinating ability, [HCB11H5Cl6]- and [HCB11H5Br6]-, and a total of 11 polymorphs are identified for their lithium and sodium salts. Our approach combines ab initio molecular dynamics, synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and AC impedance measurements to investigate their structures, phase-transition behavior, anion orientational mobilities, and ionic conductivities. We find that M(HCB11H5X6) (M = Li, Na, X = Cl, Br) compounds exhibit order-disorder polymorphic transitions between 203 and 305 °C and display Li and Na superionic conductivity in the disordered state. Through detailed analysis, we illustrate how cation disordering in these compounds originates from a competitive interplay among the lattice symmetry, the anion reorientational mobility, the geometric and electronic asymmetry of the anion, and the polarizability of the halogen atoms. These factors are compared to other closo-polyborate-based ion conductors to suggest guidelines for optimizing the cation-anion interaction for fast ion mobility. This study expands the known solid-state poly(carba)borate-based materials capable of liquid-like ionic conductivities, unravels the mechanisms responsible for fast ion transport, and provides insights into the development of practical superionic solid electrolytes.

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Enhancement-mode Al0.85Ga0.15N/Al0.7Ga0.3N high electron mobility transistor with fluorine treatment

Applied Physics Letters

Klein, Brianna A.; Douglas, Erica A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Abate, Vincent M.; Fortune, Torben R.; Baca, A.G.

Enhancement-mode Al0.7Ga0.3N-channel high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) were achieved through a combination of recessed etching and fluorine ion deposition to shift the threshold voltage (VTH) relative to depletion-mode devices by +5.6 V to VTH = +0.5 V. Accounting for the threshold voltage shift (ΔVTH), current densities of approximately 30 to 35 mA/mm and transconductance values of 13 mS/mm were achieved for both the control and enhancement mode devices at gate biases of 1 V and 6.6 V, respectively. Little hysteresis was observed for all devices, with voltage offsets of 20 mV at drain currents of 1.0 × 10-3mA/mm. Enhancement-mode devices exhibited slightly higher turn-on voltages (+0.38 V) for forward bias gate currents. Piecewise evaluation of a threshold voltage model indicated a ΔVTH of +3.3 V due to a gate recess etching of 12 nm and an additional +2.3 V shift due to fluorine ions near the AlGaN surface.

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Enhancement-mode AlGaN channel high electron mobility transistor enabled by p-AlGaN gate

Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology B: Nanotechnology and Microelectronics

Douglas, Erica A.; Klein, Brianna A.; Allerman, A.A.; Baca, A.G.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Fortune, Torben R.

This work exhibits the ability to shift the threshold voltage of an Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.3Ga0.7N high electron mobility transistor through the implementation of a 100 nm thick p-Al0.3Ga0.7N gate. A maximum threshold voltage of +0.3 V was achieved with a 3 μm gate length. In addition to achieving enhancement-mode operation, this work also shows the capability to obtain high saturated drain current (>50 mA/mm), no gate hysteresis, high ION,MAX/IOFF,MIN ratio of >109, and exceptionally low gate leakage current of 10-6 mA/mm even under high forward bias of Vgs = 8 V.

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Al0.85Ga0.15N/Al0.70Ga0.30N High Electron Mobility Transistors with Schottky Gates and Large On/Off Current Ratio over Temperature

ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology

Baca, A.G.; Klein, Brianna A.; Allerman, A.A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Douglas, Erica A.; Stephenson, Chad A.; Fortune, Torben R.; Kaplar, Robert K.

AlGaN-channel high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) are among a class of ultra wide-bandgap transistors that are promising candidates for RF and power applications. Long-channel AlxGa1-xN HEMTs with x = 0.7 in the channel have been built and evaluated across the -50°C to +200°C temperature range. These devices achieved room temperature drain current as high as 46 mA/mm and were absent of gate leakage until the gate diode forward bias turn-on at ~2.8 V, with a modest -2.2 V threshold voltage. A very large Ion/Ioff current ratio, of 8 × 109 was demonstrated. A near ideal subthreshold slope that is just 35% higher than the theoretical limit across the temperature range was characterized. The ohmic contact characteristics were rectifying from -50°C to +50°C and became nearly linear at temperatures above 100°C. An activation energy of 0.55 eV dictates the temperature dependence of off-state leakage.

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Planar Ohmic Contacts to Al 0.45 Ga 0.55 N/Al 0.3 Ga 0.7 N High Electron Mobility Transistors

ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology

Klein, Brianna A.; Baca, A.G.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Douglas, Erica A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Miller, Mary A.; Kotula, Paul G.; Fortune, Torben R.; Abate, Vincent M.

Here, we present a low resistance, straightforward planar ohmic contact for Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.3Ga0.7N high electron mobility transistors. Five metal stacks (a/Al/b/Au; a = Ti, Zr, V, Nb/Ti; b = Ni, Mo, V) were evaluated at three individual annealing temperatures (850, 900, and 950°C). The Ti/Al/Ni/Au achieved the lowest specific contact resistance at a 900°C anneal temperature. Transmission electron microscopy analysis revealed a metal-semiconductor interface of Ti-Al-Au for an ohmic (900°C anneal) and a Schottky (850°C anneal) Ti/Al/Ni/Au stack. HEMTs were fabricated using the optimized recipe with resulting contacts that had room-temperature specific contact resistances of ρc = 2.5 × 10-5 Ω cm², sheet resistances of RSH = 3.9 kΩ/$\blacksquare$, and maximum current densities of 75 mA/mm (at VGATE of 2 V). Electrical measurements from -50 to 200°C had decreasing specific contact resistance and increasing sheet resistance, with increasing temperature. These contacts enabled state-of-the-art performance of Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.3Ga0.7N HEMTs.

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Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.30Ga0.70N high electron mobility transistors with Schottky gates and small subthreshold slope factor

Device Research Conference - Conference Digest, DRC

Baca, A.G.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Allerman, A.A.; Klein, Brianna A.; Douglas, Erica A.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Fortune, Torben R.

Emerging ultrawide bandgap semiconductor materials are logical candidates for applications that exploit the large critical electric field (EC) associated with these devices. For semiconductor devices, EC scales approximately as Eg2 5 [1]. With a 25% larger bandgap and an approximately 73% larger EC than GaN, Al0.3Ga0.7N-channel high election mobility transistors (HEMTs) might be viable candidates for harsh environment electronics or short wavelength photo-transistors. In either case, transistor quality factors such as minimal off-state leakage currents and subthreshold slope factor are important metrics.

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Results 1–25 of 40
Results 1–25 of 40