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23 October 2014

First application of low-cost deposition of titanium dioxide for GaN MOS-HEMT

Researchers in Taiwan have used ultrasonic spray pyrolysis deposition (USPD) “for the first time” to apply titanium dioxide (TiO2) high-k dielectric layers to aluminium gallium nitride (Al0.25Ga0.75N/GaN) metal-oxide-semiconductor high-electron-mobility transistors (MOS-HEMTs) [Bo-Yi Chou et al, IEEE Electron Device Letters, published online 17 September 2014].

The team – from National Cheng Kung University, Feng Chia University, and Industrial Technology Research Institute – sees USPD as an economical deposition method. In particular, the non-vacuum process environment and high deposition rate make USPD suitable for low-cost large-area deposition and other mass-production scenarios.

USPD has previously been used to create aluminium oxide dielectric layers for GaN MOS-HEMTs. TiO2 has a higher dielectric constant of 86-173, compared with ~10 for aluminium oxide.

The epitaxial structure was grown using low-pressure metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (LP-MOCVD) on silicon (Figure 1). The MOS-HEMT fabrication involved mesa etching for electrical isolation, titanium/aluminium/gold deposition and annealing for ohmic source-drain contacts, 20nm TiO2 USPD for gate insulation, exposure of the source-drain electrodes, and nickel/gold deposition for the gate electrode. A reference Schottky-gate device was produced without TiO2 dielectric.

Figure 1

Figure 1: (a) Schematic diagram of AlGaN/GaN MOS-HEMT, (b) transmission electron microscope photo of MOS-gate structure, and (c) electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis (ESCA) intensities.

The gate length and width were 1μm and 100μm, respectively. The gate-source and gate-drain spacings were both 2μm.

Hall measurements before and after TiO2 USPD gave carrier densities of 2.08x1013/cm2 and 2.41x1013/cm2, respectively. The mobility slightly decreased, respectively, from 883cm2/V-s to 872cm2/V-s. The product of carrier density and mobility was increased from 1.84x1016/v-s to 2.1x1016/V-s, leading to expectations of increased on-current with TiO2 gate insulation/passivation.

Capacitance versus voltage (CV) measurement gave an oxide capacitance of 190pF and a dielectric constant (k) of 53.6, lower than the range quoted above. The composition of the USPD ‘TiO2’ was estimated as a Ti/O ratio of 0.47, which is slightly off the 0.5 for exact TiO2. The equivalent oxide thickness (EOT) of the 20nm TiO2 layer was estimated at 1.45nm.

Figure 2

Figure 2: (a) Common-source IDS-VDS curves, (b) transfer gm/IDS, (c) two-terminal off-state IGD-VGD, and (d) BVDS characteristics at 300K.

Electrical performance between the devices was compared, generally showing improved performance of the MOS-HEMT over the Schottky HEMT (Figure 2, Table 1). The maximum drain current (IDS) of the MOS-HEMT was 650mA/mm. The peak transconductance (gm,max) was 107mS/mm. The reference Schottky HEMT had corresponding performance values of 511mA/mm and 110mS/mm. The increased gate-channel separation in the MOS-HEMT device only slightly decreased the peak transconductance due to use of TiO2 as a high-k dielectric with its 1.45nm EOT.

Table 1: Comparison of MOS-HEMT and Schottky HEMT.

  MOS-HEMT Schottky HEMT
Maximum drain current 650mA/mm 511mA/mm
Maximum drain current at 0V gate 384mA/mm 342mA/mm
Peak transconductance 107mS/mm 110mS/mm
Gate voltage swing 2.7V 1.7V
Two-terminal gate-drain breakdown voltage (BVGD) -155V -105V
On voltage 3.8V 1.8V
On-state breakdown (BVDS) 139V 94V
On/off current ratio 4.5x105 3.5x102

The gate voltage swing (GVS) linearity for transconductance within 90% of the peak value was 2.7V for the MOS-HEMT, compared with 1.7V for the Schottky HEMT.

The threshold voltage of the MOS-HEMT was negative (normally-on, depletion-mode) at -3.9V. At zero gate potential the maximum drain current (IDSS0) was 384mA/mm for the MOS-HEMT and 342mA/mm for the Schottky HEMT.

Table 2. Comparisons with other TiO2-dielectric MOS-HEMTs.

Oxidation technique USPD Liquid phase deposition Molecular beam epitaxy Evaporation
Gate length 1μm 1μm 0.7μm 0.5μm
Dielectric constant, k 53.6 24.4 70 80
ΔIDSS0 12.3% -7.8% -6% -67%
Δgm,max -2.7% -1% -20.9% -50%
gm, max (110mA/mm) (99mA/mm) (140mA/mm) (60mA/mm)
GVS (V) 2.7V 2.2V 2V 2.4V
IGD @ VGD -50V 1x10-4mA/mm 1x10-4mA/mm 8x10-3mA/mm  

The researchers also compared their devices with those produced using different TiO2 deposition techniques (Table 2), commenting that USPD gave “the best improvement [over Schottky-based devices] of IDS at VGS = 0V (ΔIDSS0) of 12.3%, the highest GVS linearity of 2.7V, enhanced gm,max, and superior low IGD leakage.”

Tags: GaN AlGaN MOS-HEMT

Visit: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=6901258

The author Mike Cooke is a freelance technology journalist who has worked in the semiconductor and advanced technology sectors since 1997.

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