Flack 2016
Flack 2016
6, 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11664-016-4435-3
2016 The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society
1.—Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Texas Tech University, 1012 Boston
Avenue, Lubbock, TX 79409, USA. 2.—e-mail: tyler.flack@ttu.edu
2673
2674 Flack, Pushpakaran, and Bayne
considered. Finally, a brief discussion of prototypes 4H-SiC. In addition, GaN exhibits critical electric
currently employing GaN devices is given. field strength of about 11 times greater than Si and
only slightly smaller than 4H-SiC. GaN is not,
MATERIAL PROPERTIES COMPARISON: however, without disadvantages as a material for
Si, SiC AND GaN use in power devices, specifically thermal conduc-
tivity. As illustrated in Table I, GaN’s thermal
Properties of semiconductor materials relevant to
conductivity is less than both 4H-SiC (roughly four
power devices include bandgap (Eg), critical field
times lower) and Si.
strength (Ec), carrier mobility (l), and thermal
conductivity.2 The bandgap of a material determi-
nes the carriers generated in the depletion region of BULK GaN FABRICATION
a semiconductor device; a larger bandgap correlates
to lower intrinsic carrier concentration, thus, lower Due to inherently beneficial material properties,
levels of leakage current during blocking condi- as detailed in the previous section, it is reasonable
tions.3 Critical field strength directly impacts the to see why there is so much focus on GaN as a
on-state resistance of the drift region in a vertical prospect for the manufacture of wide bandgap
power device: the larger the critical field strength, power switching devices. There is, however, a
the smaller the drift region thickness, and hence, disparity between theoretical material properties
the lower the on-state resistance; leading to a and realizable device properties for GaN. Specifi-
reduction in conduction losses.4 The relationships cally for the fabrication of GaN power devices, the
of critical field strength of a material to the on-state lack of bulk-quality GaN for native device growth is
resistance of a vertical unipolar power device and a a big issue. Additionally, GaN fabrication suffers
lateral high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) typical fabrication issues (i.e. economics of available
device are shown in Eqs. 1 and 2, respectively.5,6 processes, packaging concerns, etc.) In order to
address these concerns, research is continuously
4 BV ongoing to produce affordable, high-quality bulk
Ron ðverticalÞ ¼ ð1Þ GaN for fabrication of devices9,10 as well as the
es l E3c
resulting vertical device profiles.11,12 Additionally,
research into GaN devices fabricated on non-native
BV2
Ron ðHEMTÞ ¼ ð2Þ substrate materials (i.e. Si and SiC) is being con-
q l Qs E2c ducted.13–17 Research conducted on high-quality
bulk GaN is necessary for the realization of vertical
A standard method of summarizing the efficacy of power structures (i.e. power PIN diodes, vertical
a material as a power switching device is to use MOSFETs, etc.) Vertical unipolar power device
baliga’s figure-of-merit (BFOM) given by Eqs. 3 and structures (e.g. power MOSFETs) are desirable for
4 for vertical devices and lateral high-electron their ease of control and high voltage capabilities
mobility transistors, respectively.6 These equations (without sacrificing current capabilities)18 Vertical
indicate how fundamental material properties influ- GaN p-n diodes were tested for avalanche capabil-
ence the resistance of a power switching device.5 ities in Ref. 12, and a general overview of research
into GaN p-n devices based on extremely low defect
BFOM ðverticalÞ ¼ es l E3c ð3Þ (104–106 cm2) GaN native substrates has been
discussed in Ref. 11.
BFOMðHEMTÞ ¼ q l Qs E2c ð4Þ For the fabrication of high-quality GaN to be used
as substrate material epitaxial growth processes are
where es is the dielectric constant of the semicon- used. This is due to traditional methods of crystal
ductor material, l is the mobility of free carriers growth (e.g. Czochralski growth) are not viable for
(electrons in the case of a unipolar vertical device), nitride materials.14 Common examples of these
Qs is the sheet carrier density (in HEMT structures) processes are ammonothermal growth, liquid phase
and Ec is the critical electric field of a given epitaxy (LPE) (or solution growth) and hydride
semiconductor material. Thermal conductivity is vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE).9,19–23 Each of these
paramount when designing power devices, as it is processes has inherent advantages and disadvan-
the ability of a material to dissipate generated heat; tages associated with growth rates, dislocation
materials with high thermal conductivity require densities and repeatability.
minimal external heat sinking, thus lowering sys- HVPE is an epitaxial growth process which
tem cost. Material properties of Si, 4H-SiC and GaN utilizes a halide vapor and a hydride as group III
are provided in Table I.7,8 and group V precursors, respectively.24 Halides
Table I illustrates GaN’s inherent benefits when exhibit large surface migration and good thermal
compared with Si (traditional power devices) and stability which, paired with pure seed materials
4H-SiC (currently the wide bandgap material of allow the HVPE process to produce high growth
choice for power devices). GaN exhibits a bandgap rates relative to LPE and ammonothermal growth
roughly three times that of Si and 1.1 times that of techniques. HVPE is currently a dominant force in
GaN Technology for Power Electronic Applications: A Review 2675
commercialized GaN bulk materials. Boasting high (10 lm/h). It is imperative that the inherent
growth rates (£300 lm/h), control of impurities scalability of this process be exploited to combat
(doping), high volume output, relatively large wafer these very low growth rates.
size and high purity of resulting substrates are the
primary advantages of this process.23 GaN sub- DEVICE FABRICATION
strates produced using HVPE are not without their
Several thin film growth techniques are currently
limitations, specifically material uniformity is not
used for the heteroepitaxial growth of GaN on non-
quite up to par with some of the competing growth
native substrates; namely HVPE, molecular beam
mechanisms. Additionally, HVPE GaN substrates
epitaxy (MBE) and metalorganic chemical vapor
suffer from high strain resulting in bowing and
deposition (MOCVD); MOCVD is currently the most
cracking at the interface of GaN and the non-native
widely implemented method.27 These techniques
substrate material used for growth due to mis-
were used, at first, to grow thin-films of GaN
matches in their thermal expansion coefficients.
directly onto non-native substrate materials (e.g.
Recent research advances in GaN-on-sapphire and
sapphire or SiC), typically resulting in large
GaN-on-Si processing to reduce cracking have been
amounts of defects extending through the thin-film
able to reduce some of the limitations due to bowing
material and rough surfaces. However, circa 1986,
and cracking. Results of this experimentation on
Amono et al. published results of a great technical
thick GaN films to be used as freestanding substrate
innovation in GaN device fabrication using the
material using the HVPE process, presented in,19
MOCVD technique to grow GaN epitaxially on a
yield a 600-lm-thick (crack-free) GaN film with
sapphire substrate. Through the use of an alu-
dislocation densities lower than 1 9 106 cm2. In
minum nitride (AlN) buffer layer, the GaN surface
this research, two commercial 2-in. (c.5-cm) sap-
manifested in a much smoother form, substantially
phire substrate were processed simultaneously. The
increasing both the optical and electrical properties
first sapphire substrate was processed using a laser-
of thin-film GaN layers grown.28 Important to note
induced stress process, detailed in Refs. 25 and 26,
is the required high source-drain activation tem-
while the second substrate was processed without
perature of 1100–1200C,29 which requires special
using the laser process.
attention to desired gate-oxide materials for use in
The ammonothermal growth process is quite
MOSFET structures.
similar to other processes used to produce other
materials, such as quartz, at very high volumes
LATERAL DEVICE STRUCTURES
with great quality.23 The process uses a solvent
comprised of supercritical ammonia with added GaN-based power semiconductors are largely
mineralizers to grow GaN via recrystallization at lateral structures, such as HEMTs shown in
seed crystals.23 Ammonothermal growth has the Fig. 1. This structure is a heterostructure which
benefit of being a true-bulk process, meaning the utilizes the inherently polarized nature of GaN to
process does not require a non-native starting develop a 2-degree electron gas layer to achieve high
substrate.22 Other benefits of the ammonothermal electron mobility.30,31
process include the potentially huge scalability and GaN HEMTs have numerous operational benefits,
reduction of manufacturing cost.23 Detriments to including high-frequency operation in power appli-
the ammonothermal process include very slow cations, large breakdown fields and good transport
growth rates (72 times slower than HVPE), small properties.32 GaN HEMT structures are not without
resulting wafer size and greater complexity of deficiencies, one of which is that, in order for this
growth chemistry. Research in the production of structure to obtain suitably high breakdown volt-
large-size substrate quality GaN wafers, via the ages, a large amount of space must be left between
ammonothermal process, have yielded 1-in. (c.2.5- the gate and drain of the device. This causes the
cm) GaN wafers with defect densities of 5 9 103 current density ratings of HEMT devices to be
cm2.22 It is important to note even in these inherently low, thereby increasing the cost to
promising results, growth rates are still very low current density ratio.30 Additionally, HEMT
2676 Flack, Pushpakaran, and Bayne
Fig. 1. Generic AlGaN/GaN HEMT structure30 2015 IEEE. Rep- off operation. Important to note is that this device
rinted, with permission, from Ref. 30. structure is not without setbacks, namely high-
temperature operation is expected to be severely
limited due to the inclusion of a Si device.
Fig. 6. HFET with buried p-type GaN buffer layers38 2015 Else-
vier. Reprinted, with permission, from Ref. 38.
operation between the two JFET device structures the resistance of the device during the on-state. As
has to do with the channel structures. In the for the lateral channel structure, the amount the
vertical channel structure, the width and thickness gate contact overlaps the p-type layer controls the
of the current aperture are used to control the amount of modulation of electrons transported
amount of leakage current in the off-state as well as through the channel. Thus, this metric is used to
control the amount of leakage current in the off-
state of the device.
The performance of devices discussed in this
review are summarized in Table II, additionally
this table provides a comparison of these two
devices with available power devices (both GaN
and SiC).39,42 In addition this research used these
two structures to investigate the impact of mobility
on breakdown voltage and RON, it is shown that as
mobility goes down breakdown voltage increases;
the same is true for RON, as mobility decreased RON
increased.
Fig. 12. Sine wave power output from a GaN-based inverter motor
drive operating at 100-kHz switching frequency47 2013
Transphorm. Reprinted, with permission.
Fig. 10. 4-kW three-phase inverter evaluation kit developed46
2013 Transphorm. Reprinted, with permission.
half-bridges. The inverter operates at a switching
frequency of 100 kHz which is beneficial in reducing
The converter was designed for an output bus harmonics and increasing overall operational effi-
voltage of 400 V. The converter was able to main- ciency. Figure 10 shows the three-phase motor drive
tain an efficiency of over 98% in the entire range of evaluation unit.46
output load varying from 700 W to 2 kW. An The high frequency operation helps in reducing
efficiency of over 99% was obtained for power output the size of energy storage elements thereby result-
in the range 2–4 kW. At an output power of 5 kW, ing in a compact filter design. The GaN inverter
the converter was able to achieve an efficiency of motor drive was compared to an equivalent system
98.5%. The complete hardware unit had a mass of designed using state-of-the-art silicon IGBT. The
approximately 487 g which corresponds to a gravi- sinusoidal output waveforms obtained from both the
metric power density of approximately 10 kW/kg. systems have been compared in Figs. 11 and 12.47
The high system efficiency translates to lower losses The spike-free pure sine wave output from the
thereby requiring only passive air cooling.43–45 GaN-based inverter significantly improved the
motor efficiency. The efficiency of the GaN-based
4-kW Three-Phase Inverter Evaluation Kit inverter including filer loss was higher than the
The 4-kW three-phase inverter was developed by silicon IGBT-based system (w/o filter loss) as shown
Transphorm to evaluate the performance advan- in Fig. 13. An overall increase in the system effi-
tages of GaN semiconductor in motor drive applica- ciency (including motor efficiency) was observed in
tions. The three-phase inverter is formed by six the GaN-based inverter drive as shown in
GaN HEMTs in a module configured as three 600-V Fig. 14.47,48
2680 Flack, Pushpakaran, and Bayne
Fig. 13. Comparison of efficiency and power loss with respect to the
power output of a GaN-based inverter and a Si IGBT-based in-
verter48 2014 Transphorm. Reprinted, with permission. Fig. 16. Comparison of system efficiency with respect to the power
output of GaN-based PFC circuit to silicon power MOSFET-based
version 50 2014 Transphorm. Reprinted, with permission.
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