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Illinois team advances GaN-on-Silicon scalability

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Collaboration with Veeco and IBM optimises buffer layers to create faster HEMTs


A team of University of Illinois researchers, working with industry partners Veeco and IBM, has advanced GaN-on-silicon transistor technology by optimising the composition of the semiconductor buffer layers.

The team created a HEMT structure on a 200 mm silicon substrate with a process that they say will scale to larger industry-standard wafer sizes.

Although silicon is less expensive than substrates such as sapphire and SiC, it has a problem with lattice mismatch - in other words, the space between silicon atoms doesn't match up with the atomic structure of the GaN grown on top.

"When you grow the GaN on top, there's a lot of strain between the layers, so we grew buffer layers [between the silicon and GaN] to help change the lattice constant into the proper size," explained ECE undergraduate lead researcher Josh Perozek, lead author of the group's paper in the Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics.

Without these buffer layers, cracks or other defects will form in the GaN material, which would prevent the transistor from operating properly. Specifically, these defects - threading dislocations or holes where atoms should be - ruin the properties of the 2-dimensional electron gas channel in the device. This channel is critical to the HEMTs ability to conduct current and function at high frequencies.

"The single most important thing for these GaN [HEMT] devices is to have high 2D electron gas concentration," says Can Bayram, Electrical and Computer Engineering assistant professor, about the accumulation of electrons in a channel at the interface between the silicon and the various GaN-based layers above it. "The problem is you have to control the strain balance among all those layers-from substrate all the way up to the channel-so as to maximise the density of the of the conducting electrons in order to get the fastest transistor with the highest possible power density."

After studying three different buffer layer configurations, Bayram's team discovered that thicker buffer layers made of graded AlGaN reduce threading dislocation, and stacking those layers reduces stress. With this type of configuration, the team achieved an electron mobility of 1,800 cm2/V-sec.

"The less strain there is on the GaN layer, the higher the mobility will be, which ultimately corresponds to higher transistor operating frequencies," said Hsuan-Ping Lee, an ECE graduate student researcher leading the scaling of these devices for 5G applications.

According to Bayram, the next step for his team is to fabricate fully functional high-frequency GaN HEMTs on a silicon platform for use in the 5G wireless data networks.

The team, in collaboration with Veeco and IBM, conducted their research at the Micro + Nanotechnology Lab with support from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

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