scholarly journals Comparison of high voltage and high temperature performances of wide bandgap semiconductors for vertical power devices

2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Raynaud ◽  
Dominique Tournier ◽  
Hervé Morel ◽  
Dominique Planson
2011 ◽  
Vol 324 ◽  
pp. 46-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominique Tournier ◽  
Pierre Brosselard ◽  
Christophe Raynaud ◽  
Mihai Lazar ◽  
Herve Morel ◽  
...  

Progress in semiconductor technologies have been so consequent these last years that theoretical limits of silicon, speci cally in the eld of high power, high voltage and high temperature have been achieved. At the same time, research on other semiconductors, and es- pecially wide bandgap semiconductors have allowed to fabricate various power devices reliable and performant enough to design high eciency level converters in order to match applications requirements. Among these wide bandgap materials, SiC is the most advanced from a techno- logical point of view: Schottky diodes are already commercially available since 2001, JFET and MOSFET will be versy soon. SiC-based switches Inverter eciency bene ts have been quite established. Considering GaN alternative technology, its driving force was mostly blue led for optical drive or lighting. Although the GaN developments mainly focused for the last decade on optoelectronics and radio frequency, their properties were recently explored to design devices suitable for high power and high eciency applications. As inferred from various studies, due to their superior material properties, diamond and GaN should be even better than SiC, silicon (or SOI) being already closed to its theoretical limits. Even if the diamond maturity is still far away from GaN and SiC, laboratory results are encouraging speci cally for very high voltage devices. Apart from packaging considerations, SiC, GaN and Diamond o ers a great margin of progress. The new power devices o er high voltage and low on-resistance that enable important reduction in energy consumption in nal applications. Applications for wide bandgap materials are the direction of high voltage but also high temperature. As for silicon technology, WBG-ICs are under development to take full bene ts of power and drive integration for high temperature applications.


2000 ◽  
Vol 622 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.P. Chow

ABSTRACTThe present status of development of SiC and GaN devices for high-voltage power electronics applications is reviewed. Device structures that are particularly applicable to these two wide bandgap semiconductors are considered and compared to those commonly used in silicon. The simulated and experimental performance of two-terminal rectifiers and three- terminal transistors and thyristors are compared. The effects of material parameters (mobility, ionization coefficients, lifetimes) and defects on device characteristics are pointed out. Similarities and differences between electronic and photonic device development in these semiconductors are discussed.


2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 907-914 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.L. Hudgins ◽  
G.S. Simin ◽  
E. Santi ◽  
M.A. Khan

2018 ◽  
Vol 924 ◽  
pp. 799-804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric P. Carlson ◽  
Daniel W. Cunningham ◽  
Yan Zhi Xu ◽  
Isik C. Kizilyalli

Wide-bandgap power semiconductor devices offer enormous energy efficiency gains in a wide range of potential applications. As silicon-based semiconductors are fast approaching their performance limits for high power requirements, wide-bandgap semiconductors such as gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC) with their superior electrical properties are likely candidates to replace silicon in the near future. Along with higher blocking voltages wide-bandgap semiconductors offer breakthrough relative circuit performance enabling low losses, high switching frequencies, and high temperature operation. ARPA-E’s SWITCHES program, started in 2014, set out to catalyze the development of vertical GaN devices using innovations in materials and device architectures to achieve three key aggressive targets: 1200V breakdown voltage (BV), 100A single-die diode and transistor current, and a packaged device cost of no more than ȼ10/A. The program is drawing to a close by the end of 2017 and while no individual project has yet to achieve all the targets of the program, they have made tremendous advances and technical breakthroughs in vertical device architecture and materials development. GaN crystals have been grown by the ammonothermal technique and 2-inch GaN wafers have been fabricated from them. Near theoretical, high-voltage (1700-4000V) and high current (up to 400A pulsed) vertical GaN diodes have been demonstrated along with innovative vertical GaN transistor structures capable of high voltage (800-1500V) and low RON (0.36-2.6 mΩ-cm2). The challenge of selective area doping, needed in order to move to higher voltage transistor devices has been identified. Furthermore, a roadmap has been developed that will allow high voltage/current vertical GaN devices to reach ȼ5/A to ȼ7/A, realizing functional cost parity with high voltage silicon power transistors.


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