Performance and Reliability Impacts of Extended Epitaxial Defects on 4H-SiC Power Devices

2018 ◽  
Vol 924 ◽  
pp. 137-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward van Brunt ◽  
Albert Burk ◽  
Daniel J. Lichtenwalner ◽  
Robert Leonard ◽  
Shadi Sabri ◽  
...  

This work explores the effects of extended epitaxial defects on 4H-SiC power devices. Advanced defect mapping techniques were used on large quantities of power device wafers, and data was aggregated to correlate device electrical characteristics to defect content. 1200 V class Junction Barrier Schottky (JBS) diodes and MOSFETs were examined in this manner; higher voltage 3.3 kV class devices were examined as well. 3C inclusions and triangular defects, as well as heavily decorated substrate scratches, were found to be device killing defects. Other defects were found to have negligible impacts on device yield, even in the case of extremely high threading dislocation content. Defect impacts on device reliability was explored on MOS-gate structures, as well as long-term device blocking tests on both MOSFETs and JBS diodes. Devices that passed on-wafer electrical parametric tests were found to operate reliably in these tests, regardless of defect content.

2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernt J. Leira ◽  
Dag Myrhaug

The paper provides long-term bivariate distributions of wave power with wave height, and wave power with wave period. This is relevant for assessments of wave power devices and their potential for converting energy from waves. The results can be applied to compare systematically the wave power potential for individual waves at different locations based on short-term statistical description of the individual waves and the long-term statistical information of the wave climate. Furthermore, it allows for assessment of the efficiency of a given wave power device for each location.


2007 ◽  
Vol 556-557 ◽  
pp. 851-856 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald Soelkner ◽  
Winfried Kaindl ◽  
Michael Treu ◽  
Dethard Peters

Cosmic radiation has been identified as a decisive factor for power device reliability. Energetic neutrons create ionizing recoils within the semiconductor substrate which may lead to device burnout. While this failure mode has gained widespread acceptance for power devices based on silicon the question whether a similar mechanism could also lead to failure of SiC devices was left to be debated. Radiation hardness intrinsic to the SiC material was generally assumed but as experimental data was scarce reliability problems due to radiation-induced device failure could not be ruled out. Recent accelerated testing results now show that cosmic radiation will indeed affect the reliability of SiC power devices, as it is the case for its silicon counterpart, but the problem can be contained very effectively by device design.


2015 ◽  
Vol 242 ◽  
pp. 421-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavel Hazdra ◽  
Stanislav Popelka ◽  
Vít Záhlava ◽  
Jan Vobecký

The effect of neutron, electron and ion irradiation on electrical characteristics of unipolar 1700V SiC power devices (JBS diodes, JFETs and MESFETs) was investigated. DLTS investigation showed that above mentioned projectiles introduce similar deep acceptor levels (electron traps) in the SiC bandgap which compensate nitrogen shallow donors and cause majority carrier (electron) removal. The key degradation effect occurring in irradiated devices is the increase of the ON-state resistance which is caused by compensation of the low doped n-type epilayer and simultaneous lowering of electron mobility. In the case of SiC power switches (JFET, MOSFET), these effects are accompanied by the shift of the threshold voltage. Radiation defects introduced in SiC power devices is unstable and some defects anneal out already at operation temperatures (below 175°C). However, this does not have significant effect on device characteristics.


2011 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
Alexander Feldman ◽  
Jonathan M Kalman ◽  
◽  

Focal atrial tachycardia (AT) is a relatively uncommon cause of supraventricular tachycardia, but when present is frequently difficult to treat medically. Atrial tachycardias tend to originate from anatomically determined atrial sites. The P-wave morphology on surface electrocardiogram (ECG) together with more sophisticated contemporary mapping techniques facilitates precise localisation and ablation of these ectopic foci. Catheter ablation of focal AT is associated with high long-term success and may be viewed as a primary treatment strategy in symptomatic patients.


2018 ◽  
Vol 924 ◽  
pp. 854-857
Author(s):  
Ming Hung Weng ◽  
Muhammad I. Idris ◽  
S. Wright ◽  
David T. Clark ◽  
R.A.R. Young ◽  
...  

A high-temperature silicon carbide power module using CMOS gate drive technology and discrete power devices is presented. The power module was aged at 200V and 300 °C for 3,000 hours in a long-term reliability test. After the initial increase, the variation in the rise time of the module is 27% (49.63ns@1,000h compared to 63.1ns@3,000h), whilst the fall time increases by 54.3% (62.92ns@1,000h compared to 97.1ns@3,000h). The unique assembly enables the integrated circuits of CMOS logic with passive circuit elements capable of operation at temperatures of 300°C and beyond.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Rossi ◽  
Lorenzo Gay ◽  
Marco Conti Nibali ◽  
Tommaso Sciortino ◽  
Federico Ambrogi ◽  
...  

ObjectiveGiant insular tumors are commonly not amenable to complete resection and are associated with a high postoperative morbidity rate. Transcortical approach and brain mapping techniques allow to identify peri-insular functional networks and, with neurophysiological monitoring, to reduce vascular-associated insults. Cognitive functions to be mapped are still under debate, and the analysis of the functional risk of surgery is currently limited to neurological examination. This work aimed to investigate the neurosurgical outcome (extent of resection, EOR) and functional impact of giant insular gliomas resection, focusing on neuropsychological and Quality of Life (QoL) outcomes.MethodsIn our retrospective analysis, we included all patients admitted in a five-year period with a radiological diagnosis of giant insular glioma. A transcortical approach was adopted in all cases. Resections were pursued up to functional boundaries defined intraoperatively by brain mapping techniques. We examined clinical, radiological, and intra-operative factors possibly affecting EOR and postoperative neurological, neuropsychological, and Quality of Life (QoL) outcomes.ResultsWe finally enrolled 95 patients in the analysis. Mean EOR was 92.3%. A Gross Total Resection (GTR) was obtained in 70 cases (73.7%). Five patients reported permanent morbidity (aphasia in 3, 3.2%, and superior quadrantanopia in 2, 2.1%). Suboptimal EOR associated with poor seizures control postoperatively. Extensive intraoperative mapping (inclusive of cognitive, visual, and haptic functions) decreased long-term neurological, neuropsychological, and QoL morbidity and increased EOR. Tumor infiltration of deep perforators (vessels arising either medial to lenticulostriate arteries through the anterior perforated substance or from the anterior choroidal artery) associated with a higher chance of postoperative ischemia in consonant areas, with the persistence of new-onset motor deficits 1-month post-op, and with minor EOR. Ischemic insults in eloquent sites represented the leading factor for long-term neurological and neuropsychological morbidity.ConclusionIn giant insular gliomas, the use of a transcortical approach with extensive brain mapping under awake anesthesia ensures broad insular exposure and extension of the surgical resection preserving patients’ functional integrity. The relation between tumor mass and deep perforators predicts perioperative ischemic insults, the most relevant risk factor for long-term and permanent postoperative morbidity.


1997 ◽  
Vol 483 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. P. Chow ◽  
N. Ramungul ◽  
M. Ghezzo

AbstractThe present status of high-voltage power semiconductor switching devices is reviewed. The choice and design of device structures are presented. The simulated performance of the key devices in 4H-SiC is described. The progress in high-voltage power device experimental demonstration is described. The material and process technology issues that need to be addressed for device commercialization are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (1) ◽  
pp. 000078-000084
Author(s):  
Hao Zhuang ◽  
Robert Bauer ◽  
Markus Dinkel

Abstract In the power semiconductor industry, there is continuous development towards higher maximum current capability of devices while device dimensions shrink. This leads to an increase in current density which the devices have to handle, and raises the question if electromigration (EM) is a critical issue here. Generally, an EM failure can be described by the Black’s equation with temperature and current density as the main influencing factors. Normally, the current that the power packages need to handle lies in the range of 100 A. However, it should be noted that power devices exhibit asymmetric sizes of drain and source contacts. This may lead to higher current density at the source leads (area ratio drain/source: ~8x for QFN 5×6). Nevertheless, the source lead area is still much larger than that of the flip chip bumps (i.e., 28 times larger compared to a 100 μm micro-bump). This typically enhances the safety of the power device with respect to EM. However, with regard to future development towards higher maximum current capability, we intended to investigate further on the EM of power devices. In the present work, we focused on the PQFN 5×6 package to study the EM behavior of a power device soldered on a Printed Circuit Board (PCB). We employed the highest current (120 A) and temperature (150 °C) that the stress test system could handle to study EM in accelerated mode. First fails occurred after ~1200 h, which was much earlier than expected from previous flip-chip investigations. In addition, we found separation gaps in the solder joint between drain contact and PCB, which experienced the lowest current density in the whole test. Contradictorily, we observed only minor solder degradation at the source interface, regardless of the higher current density there. Nevertheless, the separating metal interfaces still correlated well with the current direction. Thermal simulations revealed that due to the self-heating of the device by the high current applied, both the drain and source leads were exposed to much higher temperatures (Tmax = 168 °C) than the PCB board which was kept under temperature control at 150 °C. This temperature difference resulted in a thermal gradient between the device and PCB which, in turn, triggered thermal migration (TM) in addition to EM. As TM for the drain contact occurred in the same direction as EM, it enhanced the degradation effect and therefore led to a shorter time-to-failure at the drain. In contrast to this, such an enhanced effect did not occur at the source side. As a result, we observed higher solder degradation at the drain side, which we did confirm by switching the current direction in the test. To minimize the TM effect, a special EM test vehicle, which used a Cu plate instead of the MOSFET chip, was designed and fabricated. Thermal simulation verified that the device operated at similar temperatures as the PCB board. Using this setup, it was possible to study EM in an accelerated mode and, thus, investigate the pure EM behavior of the power device.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
pp. 000262-000267
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Duffy ◽  
Lin Xin ◽  
Jean Liu ◽  
Bruno Tolla

One step chip attach (OSCA) materials are dispensable polymeric materials for flip chip assembly, which are designed to flux metallic interconnections and subsequently turn into an underfill upon curing. OSCA materials enable a drastic simplification of the assembly process by combining the reflow (fluxing/soldering), defluxing and capillary underfilling steps used in traditional processing into a single step. One key challenge for the design of OSCA materials is timing the cure kinetics with fluxing activity and solder reflow during processing. A second key challenge is to factor a process-friendly rheological design into the formulation. The OSCA material rheology must allow for high filler loading levels, seamless integration with standard dispensing equipment, flow control during and after dispense (avoid keep out zones), flow during die placement (elimination of voids), after placement (fillet formation) and during reflow. The final key requirements for a functional device are defect-free interconnections combined with optimal thermo-mechanical and water resistant properties of the final underfill to guarantee the long-term reliability of the assembly in various environmental conditions. This paper presents the properties of materials designed by Kester for use in mass reflow processing (OSCA-R). The rheological design principles behind a seamless integration into customer-friendly processes will be presented In addition results illustrating the timing of cure kinetics with fluxing and soldering events during processing will be discussed. Preliminary device reliability results will also be presented for several types of test vehicles including; Si-Si and Si-FR4.


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