Title: GaN based Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors
1GaN based Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors
- John Simon
- EE 666
- April 7, 2005
2OUTLINE
- Introduction
- Why GaN ?
- First GaN HBT
- Polarization Doping
- Collector up Structure
- Emitter up Structure
- Future Alternatives
- Conclusions
3INTRODUCTION
Heterojunctions allow us to dope the base heavily
reducing the base resistance and still
maintaining a large gain (ß).
Improved speeds can also be obtained with graded
base technology.
4Why GaN?
Break down Fields 150kV/cm Saturation
Velocities 3.5x107cm/sec
5HBT Requirements
- High Gain
- High Emitter Injection Efficiency (g), provided
by Heterojunction(s) - High Base Transport Factor (a1), requiring a
good quality p-type base region (in npn
structure), high minority lifetime in base,
proper base design. - High Breakdown Voltage
- Low doping in collector.
- Good RF Performance
- Low base resistance, given by high base
conductivity. - Good ohmic contacts to base.
6First GaN HBT
- First GaN HBT grown by MOCVD at UCSB in 1998.
- Current gain of only 3.
- High Acceptor Activation energies in GaN give
poor p-type lager. - Thick base (200nm) needed for low base
resistance. - Base doping of 4x1019cm-3 resulting in a hole
concentration of 1x1018cm-3
McCarthy L S, Kozodoy P, Rodwell M, DenBaars S
and Mishra U K 1999 First demonstration of an
AlGaN/GaN heterojunction bipolar transistor Proc.
Int. Symp. on Compound Semiconductors (Nara,
Japan)
7First GaN HBT
- Regrown Base was needed to make ohmic contacts to
the base. - Etch surface was shown to have rectifying effects
on contacts. - Nitrogen vacancies created during RIE have donor
like characteristics.
McCarthy L S, Aluminum Gallium Nitride / Gallium
Nitride Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors, PhD
Dissertation UCSB 2001.
8First GaN HBT
- Memory Effect present in all MOCVD grown samples.
- Emitter-Base junction placement is erratic.
- No memory effect in MBE grown samples and no
annealing of p-type layer is required.
H Xing, S Keller, Y-FWu, L McCarthy, I P
Smorchkova, D Buttari, R Coffie, D S Green, G
Parish, S Heikman, L Shen, N Zhang, J J Xu, B P
Keller, S P DenBaars and U K Mishra. J. Phys.
Condens. Matter 13 7139 (2001).
9Regrown Emitter Structure
- Regrown Emitter structure developed.
- Eliminates memory effects and etch damage of
base. - Base was made thinner (100nm) for improved base
transit time.
n Emitter
AlxNy
Mg Doped Base
n- GaN Subcollector
n GaN Subcollector
Sapphire Substrate
10Regrown Emitter Structure
Base Contact I-V
Abrupt Emitter-Base Junction
H Xing, S Keller, Y-FWu, L McCarthy, I P
Smorchkova, D Buttari,R Coffie, D S Green, G
Parish, S Heikman, L Shen, N Zhang, J J Xu, B P
Keller, S P DenBaars and U K Mishra. J. Phys.
Condens. Matter 13 7139 (2001).
11RF Performance
- Current gains as large as 10 have achieved with
this structure. - Early voltages as high as 400V are estimated.
- High Emitter-Collector leakage attributed to
donor like dislocations in GaN. - Dislocations are present in both HBT structures.
H Xing, S Keller, Y-FWu, L McCarthy, I P
Smorchkova, D Buttari, R Coffie, D S Green, G
Parish, S Heikman, L Shen, N Zhang, J J Xu, B P
Keller, S P DenBaars and U K Mishra. J. Phys.
Condens. Matter 13 7139 (2001).
12LEO HBT
- GaN HBTs were grown at UCSB via Lateral Epitaxy
Overgrowth (LEO). - Devices grown over windows exhibited a much
larger leakage current than devices grown on the
LEO regions. - Gain in both devices was comparable.
- Threading Dislocations do not contribute to
minority carrier recombination in the base.
H Xing, S Keller, Y-FWu, L McCarthy, I P
Smorchkova, D Buttari, R Coffie, D S Green, G
Parish, S Heikman, L Shen, N Zhang, J J Xu, B P
Keller, S P DenBaars and U K Mishra. J. Phys.
Condens. Matter 13 7139 (2001).
McCarthy L, Smorchkova Y, Fini P, Xing H,
Rodwell M, Speck J, DenBaars S and Mishra U 2000
BT on LEO GaN Proc. 58th DRC Device Research
Conf. (Denver, CO, 2000)
13Improved HBT
Common Emitter Operation as high as 330V.
Huili Xing, Prashant M. Chavarkar, Stacia Keller,
Steven P. DenBaars and Umesh K. Mishra. IEEE
ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 24, NO. 3, MARCH
2003.
14Polarization in Nitrides
- Polarization fields present in wurtzite structure
of nitrides allow for new novel devices. - Polarization charges are created by differences
in Polarization Fields.
Ga
N
In 0001 direction s n(P1-P2)
P
15Polarization in Nitrides
- Two types of Polarization in Nitrides
- Spontaneous Polarization
- Piezoelectric Polarization
- Gives us two degrees of freedom to determine the
polarization charge - Semiconductor Composition
- Layer thickness
Debdeep Jena, Polarization induced electron
populations in III-V nitride semiconductors
Transport, growth, and device applications. PhD
Dissertation UCSB (2003)
16Polarization in Nitrides
- Electrostatic attraction from polarization
charges creates regions of mobile charges.
?
sPOL
x
2-DEG
sMET
17GaN HEMT
- Polarization doping has been used in High
Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMT). - Polarization doping can increase the effective
AlGaN/Gate Barrier. - No need to introduce dopants.
- Higher gm at higher voltages.
P.M. Asbeck, E.T. Yu, S.S. Lau, W. Sun, X. Dang,
C. Shi. Solid-State Electronics 44 (2000) 211219
18Polarization Doping
- By grading the Metal composition we can create
3-D bulk doping.
x
AlxGa1-xN
Polarization Charges
Graded up
3-DEG
GaN
?
19Polarization Doping
- Same techniques can be used for p-type doping.
- Two configurations of HBTs result from this
- Emitter up Configuration
- Collector up Configuration
x
Polarization Charges
GaN
Graded down
3-DHG
AlxGa1-xN
?
20Collector up
- Using the Collector up configuration polarization
doping in base is produced. - Base will produce a dopant free p-type layer
improving the base conductivity.
21Collector up
- As Collector area scales down so does collector
current. - Extrinsic emitter base current becomes more
dominant. - Minority carriers injected into the base
contribute to base current. - Transistor gain is suppressed.
P.M. Asbeck, E.T. Yu, S.S. Lau, W. Sun, X. Dang,
C. Shi. Solid-State Electronics 44 (2000) 211219
22Collector up
P.M. Asbeck, E.T. Yu, S.S. Lau, W. Sun, X. Dang,
C. Shi. Solid-State Electronics 44 (2000) 211219
23Emitter Up
- Switch crystal orientation.
- N-face GaN gives opposite polarization charge
allowing p-type doping of the base. - Growth issues are present with N-face GaN
24Alternative InGaN
- Advantages
- Can keep Emitter up structure and still produce
the polarization doped p-type base. - InGaN smaller band gap, larger band offset.
- Disadvantages
- Spontaneous polarization is almost identical in
InN and GaN - Hard to produce polarization charges.
- Difficult to grow In rich InGaN.
- Higher base transit times.
25Conclusions
- GaN HBTs have tremendous potential for high
power applications. - p-type conductivity is the limiting factor for
all GaN base devices today. - Normally doped GaN HBTs have been demonstrated,
with operational voltages as high as 330V. - Polarization doping gives a promising solution to
the p-type conductivity problem. - Growth technique as well as device design must be
carefully chosen.