IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society (Jan 2020)

Reverse Leakage Analysis for As-Grown and Regrown Vertical GaN-on-GaN Schottky Barrier Diodes

  • Kai Fu,
  • Houqiang Fu,
  • Xuanqi Huang,
  • Tsung-Han Yang,
  • Chi-Yin Cheng,
  • Prudhvi Ram Peri,
  • Hong Chen,
  • Jossue Montes,
  • Chen Yang,
  • Jingan Zhou,
  • Xuguang Deng,
  • Xin Qi,
  • David J. Smith,
  • Stephen M. Goodnick,
  • Yuji Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JEDS.2020.2963902
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 74 – 83

Abstract

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Vertical GaN-on-GaN Schottky barrier diodes based on as-grown and regrown samples were fabricated to investigate the effects of the etch-then-regrow process on device performance. The surface roughness increased slightly after dry etching and decreased after regrowth. According to X-ray diffraction results, the etch-then-regrow process caused a slight increase of defect density due to increased edge dislocations. Schottky parameters extracted from forward current-voltage curves, such as turn-on voltages of 0.74 V and 0.72 V, ideality factors of 1.07 and 1.10, and barrier heights of 1.07 eV and 1.05 eV, were obtained for diodes based on the regrown and as-grown samples, respectively. The breakdown voltage of the regrown sample was much lower than the as-grown sample. The regrowth interface can be regarded as a n-doping GaN layer due to the high interface charge density after the etch-then-regrown process. This equivalent ${n}$ -doping GaN layer reduced the effective thickness of the UID-GaN under the Schottky contact thus causing lower breakdown voltage for the regrown sample. Poole-Frenkel emission and trap-assisted tunneling processes were responsible for the leakage of both as-grown and regrown samples according to the temperature dependence of the reverse currents.

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