학술논문

Positive VTH Shift in Schottky p-GaN Gate Power HEMTs: Dependence on Temperature, Bias and Gate Leakage
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics IEEE Trans. Power Electron. Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on. 39(6):7045-7051 Jun, 2024
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Aerospace
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
General Topics for Engineers
Nuclear Engineering
Signal Processing and Analysis
Transportation
Logic gates
Threshold voltage
Stress
Temperature measurement
Transient analysis
Voltage measurement
Wide band gap semiconductors
AlGaN barrier
electron trapping
positive bias threshold instability (PBTI)
power gallium nitride (GaN) HEMTs
threshold voltage shift
Language
ISSN
0885-8993
1941-0107
Abstract
In this article, we present an extensive analysis of the positive threshold voltage instability in Schottky p-GaN gate enhancement-mode devices, investigated by a custom setup allowing an extended observation window, from the microsecond to hundreds of seconds. We show that a matrix of experiments can be specifically designed to investigate the voltage, temperature and leakage dependence of the threshold voltage instability induced by a positive gate bias, and to identify them. The original results indicate that the observed positive threshold voltage shift can be ascribed to the trapping of electrons at defects located in the AlGaN barrier. Remarkably, the trapping rate is strongly dependent on temperature at low bias, while it is not temperature-dependent at high bias, indicating the existence of both temperature and leakage-assisted trapping processes. This result was confirmed by investigating the correlation between dc leakage measurements and the time constant of threshold voltage transients. On the other hand, the recovery process is found to be thermally activated, with an activation energy of 0.26 eV: the trapped electrons are thermally emitted into the conduction band and are pushed toward the channel by the intrinsic electric field.