Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Auburn Univ., AL, USA
Abstract :
The silicon-germanium heterojunction bipolar transistor (SiGe HBT) is the first practical bandgap-engineered device to be realized in silicon. SiGe HBT technology combines transistor performance competitive with III-V technologies with the processing maturity, integration levels, yield, and hence, cost commonly associated with conventional Si fabrication. In the ten-and-one-half years since the first demonstration of a functional transistor, SiGe HBT technology has emerged from the research laboratory, entered manufacturing on 200-mm wafers, and is poised to enter the commercial RF and microwave market. State-of-the-art SiGe HBT´s can deliver: (1) fT in excess of 50 GHz; (2) fmax in excess of 70 GHz; (3) minimum noise figure below 0.7 dB at 2.0 GHz; (4) 1/f noise corner frequencies below 500 Hz; (5) cryogenic operation; (6) excellent radiation hardness; (7) competitive power amplifiers; and (8) reliability comparable to Si. A host of record-setting digital, analog, RF, and microwave circuits have been demonstrated in the past several years using SiGe HBT´s, and recent work on passives and transmission lines on Si suggest a migratory path to Si-based monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMIC´s) is possible. The combination of SiGe HBT´s with advanced Si CMOS to form an SiGe BiCMOS technology represents a unique opportunity for Si-based RF system-on-a-chip solutions. This paper reviews state-of-the-art SiGe HBT technology and assesses its potential for current and future RF and microwave systems
Keywords :
BiCMOS integrated circuits; Ge-Si alloys; UHF integrated circuits; bipolar MMIC; heterojunction bipolar transistors; integrated circuit noise; integrated circuit reliability; integrated circuit technology; radiation hardening (electronics); reviews; semiconductor materials; 0.7 dB; 2 to 70 GHz; MMIC; RFIC; Si; Si-based RF circuit applications; Si-based microwave circuit application; SiGe; SiGe BiCMOS technology; SiGe HBT technology; UHF IC; bandgap-engineered device; cryogenic operation; heterojunction bipolar transistor; noise performance; radiation hardness; reliability; CMOS technology; Germanium silicon alloys; Heterojunction bipolar transistors; Integrated circuit technology; Microwave devices; Microwave technology; Microwave transistors; Noise figure; Radio frequency; Silicon germanium;