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High temperature operation to 500 °C of AlGaN graded polarization-doped field-effect transistors
Author(s) -
Patrick H. Carey,
F. Ren,
Andrew Armstrong,
Brianna Klein,
Andrew A. Allerman,
E Douglas,
Albert G. Baca,
S. J. Pearton
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of vacuum science and technology b nanotechnology and microelectronics materials processing measurement and phenomena
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.429
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 2166-2754
pISSN - 2166-2746
DOI - 10.1116/1.5135590
Subject(s) - materials science , optoelectronics , schottky barrier , doping , atmospheric temperature range , schottky diode , field effect transistor , heterojunction , wide bandgap semiconductor , passivation , barrier layer , transistor , analytical chemistry (journal) , voltage , layer (electronics) , nanotechnology , electrical engineering , diode , chemistry , physics , chromatography , meteorology , engineering
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.

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