Title :
Design and Simulation of 5–20-kV GaN Enhancement-Mode Vertical Superjunction HEMT
Author :
Zhongda Li ; Chow, T.P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr., Comput., & Syst. Eng., Rensselaer Polytech. Inst., Troy, NY, USA
Abstract :
The systematic design process using numerical simulations of the novel gallium nitride (GaN) enhancement-mode vertical superjunction high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) with breakdown voltage (BV) in the range of 5-20 kV is presented. The GaN superjunction pillar structure in the drift region of the vertical HEMT is first optimized using a simpler GaN superjunction diode structure, and the optimum half-pillar charge dosage is obtained to be 8×1012 cm-2, which is consistent with the value estimated from the Gauss´s Law. The GaN vertical superjunction HEMT is then simulated and optimized, and the Ron,sp-BV tradeoff curves in the range of 5-20 kV are obtained by varying the epi thickness. The Ron,sp-BV tradeoff is found to improve with smaller pillar width as in silicon superjunction MOSFETs, and the best Ron,sp of 4.2 mΩ-cm2 with BV of 12.4 kV is projected with half-pillar width of 3 μm. The robustness of the superjunction HEMT is also examined using structure with half-pillar width of 8 μm, and compared with the GaN vertical HEMT with conventional drift layer and same dimensions. The simulated on-state BV of the GaN vertical superjunction HEMT shows a 4.5% drop from the off-state BV and is only slightly higher than the 1.7% drop of the conventional GaN vertical HEMT.
Keywords :
III-V semiconductors; MOSFET; electric breakdown; gallium compounds; high electron mobility transistors; silicon; wide band gap semiconductors; GaN; breakdown voltage; drift layer; drift region; enhancement-mode vertical superjunction HEMT; silicon superjunction MOSFET; superjunction diode structure; superjunction pillar structure; systematic design process; voltage 5 kV to 20 kV; Enhancement-mode; gallium nitride (GaN); high electron mobility transistor (HEMT); superjunction;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TED.2013.2266544