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A Planar Distributed Channel AlGaN/GaN HEMT Technology | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

A Planar Distributed Channel AlGaN/GaN HEMT Technology


Abstract:

This brief presents AlGaN/GaN high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) devices with improved thermal and dc current-voltage (I-V) performance using a novel method of obta...Show More

Abstract:

This brief presents AlGaN/GaN high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) devices with improved thermal and dc current-voltage (I-V) performance using a novel method of obtaining a distributed channel device, i.e., the total semiconductor area between the ohmic contacts comprise conducting and nonconducting regions. A novel oxygen (O2) plasma treatment technique is used to realize the inactive or nonconducting regions. Multifinger devices with 1-mm gate periphery exhibit extremely low gate leakage currents below 0.2 μA/mm at a gate voltage of -20 V and an increase in the saturated output current by 14% at 20-V drain voltage. Moreover, performed dc I-V measurements at various ambient temperatures show that the proposed method not only increases the saturated output currents by over 10% for 1 × 100 μm2 gate devices but also significantly reduces their knee walkout voltage from 6 to 3 V at 300 K. These results show that this device design approach can exploit further the potential of the GaN material system for transistor applications.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices ( Volume: 66, Issue: 5, May 2019)
Page(s): 2454 - 2458
Date of Publication: 03 April 2019

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I. Introduction

Today’s state-of-the-art technology for efficient high-power radio frequency (RF) applications is based on gallium nitride (GaN) high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) due to the superior properties of GaN: high electron mobility, high dielectric strength, high current density, and ability to work at high temperatures. However, the current GaN HEMT technology is thermally limited by device self-heating constraining the achievable saturated drain current densities, output powers, and degrading device reliability. For instance, for an increase in the channel temperature from room temperature to 187 °C, the transconductance (), cutoff frequencies (, and the saturation current () fall by around 35% due to the reduced saturated electron velocity and mobility in the channel at the higher temperature [1]. For improved thermal management of AlGaN/GaN HEMTs, high thermal conductivity silicon carbide (SiC) substrates are widely used in devices for high power density RF applications [2], while diamond substrates, with the highest thermal conductivity of , have been actively researched over a number of years now [3], [4]. Additional methods include packaging [5], [6], liquid cooling [7]–[11], and high thermal conductivity material incorporation in the device [12]. To date, however, thermal management through heat removal through substrate alone has proven to be inadequate for GaN technology, and so to advance the technology we need to think about ways to generate less heat in the first place.

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