Title: GaNonDiamond Why'''
1GaN-on-Diamond Why... How Felix
Ejeckam November, 2006
2In trying to solve the heat-problem, weve
considered the following facts
- Heat is a well-known performance terminator in
transistor physics,
- Much of the heat comes from the active junction
(just a few microns thick), and
- Access to the active junction could enable
effective and efficient heat extraction.
3Weve developed a new GaN wafer !
- that places the FETs junction just 10s to 100s
of nms from a near-perfect thermal conductor
(diamond), and
- GaN
- Ideal for high-power High-Temperature
- Proven Materials System
- Proven Transistor Technology
- Using low-cost GaN-on-Silicon
- Enables devices
- With best-in-class performance ! (e.g. FETs,
LEDs, etc.) - Never before made ! e.g. high powered UV/Blue
LDs
- Atomic
- Attachment Technology
- Scalable to other materials e.g. InP-,
on-Diamond, etc. - Also scalable to 6, 8, 12, etc.
- that enables heat extraction via physical
conduction and heat-spreading !
- CVD DIAMOND
- Natures best thermal conductor
- Natures best electrical insulator
- Natures toughest material
- Available in low-cost
4And heres how we make GaN-on-Diamond wafers
GaN FET Epiwafer
5Today, we develop GaN-on-Diamond FET epi-wafers
for FET/HEMTs!
6Various thermal simulation models reveal the
promise of GaN-on-Diamond wafers
- FET Junction Temp vs. Substrate Thermal
Conductivity
- FET Power vs. Substrate Thermal Conductivity
7THERMAL MODEL STRUCTURE
Array of linear heat-generating devices on
GaN (length of heat sources is long in comparison
with the separation d and width of the sources)
TP
d
?T TPT0
GaN epilayers
T0 23C
y
substrate
z
8THERMAL MODEL STRUCTURE
0.5 µm
linear-heat-source separation D
0.2 µm
0.2 µm
Layer 1 GaN (1 µm) ? 1.3 W/Kcm
Layer 2 AlGaN buffer layer (1 µm) ? 0.8 W/Kcm
Substrate
y
z
9SUBSTRATE THICKNESS ASSUMPTIONS
10With Diamond, you could reduce the pitch to
10-mm, and still see the temperature drop 100C
compared to SiC!
Gate input power 10-W/mm Substrates bottom
temp 23C
11 and at 50-W/mm, with a 20-mm pitch, the temp
drop is gt500C compared to SiC!
at high-temp, other effects may set in
Gate input power 50-W/mm Substrates bottom
temp 23C
12At powers over 25 W/mm, diamond drops the GaN
junction temp by 100C
Gate-to-Gate Pitch 50mm Gate input power 10-W/mm
13 And, why not just solder GaN to diamond?
- because junction temperatures are highly
sensitive to a substrates thermal conductivity,
- Just a 25-mm thick solder b/w the GaN junction
and diamond could consume nearly all the thermal
benefits of diamond
- Case Study A 3-mm GaN buffer beneath the epi
would elevate the junction temperature by 42
14SOME TAKE-AWAYS
- Diamond could drop a GaN FETs junction
temperature by 20C per 0.1-W/mm of dissipate
power !
- Assuming a FET-to-FET spacing of 40mm, and
gate-power of 10-W/mm, diamond could drop the GaN
junction temperature by 135C compared to SiC !
- Diamond at (almost) any thickness offers a
dramatic improvement over SiC the thicker the
better !!
15EXPERIMENTAL VERIFICATION
- GaN-on-Diamond FET development is underway with
several partners, and .
- Meanwhile, some simple platinum resistors have
been fabricated on GaN-on-Diamond wafers to demo
diamond impact on temperature.
16A resistor-based experiment was devised to i)
generate FET-like power on a GaN-on-Diamond wafer
surface, and ii) measure surface temperature
changes associated with the power.
RESISTOR EXPERIMENT SETUP
DC power supply
Resistance meter (via Power)
GaN FET Epi layer (1-2mm)
Substrate (various)
Platinum lines to simulate heating resistor
Heat sinking chuck No adhesive is used for
substrate mounting
17Excellent quality platinum resistor lines were
fabricated atop the GaN-on-Diamond wafers.
PLATINUM RESISTORS ON GaN-on-Diamond
Platinum lines for heating
Platinum contact pads
GaN surface
18A 3X boost in substrates thermal conductivity
3X reduction in substrates thermal impedance
RESISTOR RESULTS
Substrate
Heat sinks
19Diamond drops the resistors thermal impedance by
58 while ALSO allowing a 3X boost in power
density !!
RESISTOR RESULTS
20Our diamond process affects little the GaN
epitaxy !!
PRELIMINARY FET RESULTS
21What does the early data tell us ?
- Diamond could drive down thermal impedance (C/W)
by gt58 (maybe more after optimization)
compared to SiC !
- AND Diamond could drive up a GaN FETs power
density 3-fold compared to SiC
- Poor mounting and packaging could limit the
benefits of diamond !
22The End
23Appendix
24And heres how we make GaN-on-Diamond wafers
25DEVICE STRUCTURE ASSUMPTIONS
- Length of each chip (L) 3mm
- Gate length (W) 150-microns
- Carrier beneath the substrates is assumed to be
an infinite and perfect thermal conductor - Chip Power Density presented here is defined as
Watts per Area (LW) given a devices (active
junction) maximum allowable operating temperature