Loading...
News Article

Na‑flux method improves GaN device performance

News
Toyoda Gosei paper shows that power devices using its GaN substrate technology show better power regulation capacity and yield ratio

Toyoda Gosei has shown how a technology to enhance GaN substrates can improve device performance compared to commercially-available substrates in both power regulation capacity and yield ratio. The findings were published in Physica Status Solidi (RRL) – Rapid Research Letters.

The result has come out of a Japanese Ministry of the Environment project looking at the wider application of GaN power devices, for which Toyoda Gosei is providing technology to obtain ideal GaN crystals using the Na‑flux method (a liquid phase epitaxy technique where sodium acts as the solvent to facilitate crystal formation).

Currently, 4 inch diameter GaN substrates fabricated by HVPE are commercially available, and it has been reported that 6 inch GaN crystals can be obtained using HVPE, while 7 inch GaN substrates can be obtained by tiling 2 inch GaN substrates. For thick film growth, thicknesses greater than 5mm have also been reported using the HVPE method.

The simultaneous growth of large quantities of GaN crystals achieved using the ammonothermal method can also reduce fabrication costs. Among these methods, the Na-flux method has attracted attention as a means of obtaining large-diameter, low-dislocation, and low-curvature GaN crystals.

Most reports related to the Na-flux method have dealt with the crystal quality; few have characterised GaN devices. This paper looks at both the structural quality of the latest GaN crystals grown using the method, and for the first time, the characteristics of a vertical transistor fabricated this way (see graphs above).

The vertical transistor produced on the Na-flux-based HVPE-GaN substrate exhibited normally off operation with a gate-voltage threshold of over 2 V and a maximum drain current of 3.3 A during the on-state operation, indicating the first vertical GaN transistor operation on a GaN substrate produced through the Na-flux method.

A breakdown voltage of over 600 V was confirmed based on the off-state characteristics, and a low leakage current was realised. The team also found that the on-resistance variation could be reduced by suppressing the effective carrier density variation using a GaN substrate with small off-angle variations.

In addition, the reverse I–V characteristics of the parasitic PN junction diode structures exhibited suppression of the number of devices with a large leakage current compared to the commercially available GaN substrate. According to the researchers, these results indicate the importance of low bowing and threading dislocation density (TDD) in GaN crystals.

Finally, the researchers demonstrated a circular GaN substrate with 161 mm diameter, surpassing 6 inches, grown by the Na-flux method, which is the largest GaN substrate except for those made through the tiling technique.

Reference

‘Characteristics of Vertical Transistors on a GaN Substrate Fabricated via Na-Flux Method and Enlargement of the Substrate Surpassing 6 Inches’ by Yusuke Mori, et al. 2024; physica status solidi (RRL) – Rapid Research Letters, Volume 18, Issue 11.

Na‑flux method improves GaN device performance
X-Rite introduces booth for LED-based colour evaluation
Quantum Science signs QD technology deal
Penn State makes breakthrough in photonic switching
Rohm develops 1kW class IR laser diode
US ITC says Innoscience infringed EPC GaN patent
Aledia's microLED line is ready to roll
China adds more US firms to export control List
Imec shows outdoor stability of perovskite modules
Chiplets set to transform electronics, says IDTechEx
Riber secures production system order in Europe
FBH to present novel lasers at Photonics West
US DOE awards $179m for fundamental chip research
Polar Light Tech makes microLED breakthrough
Precursor modulation enhances DUV LED efficiency
US Government to probe Chinese chip trade practices
EPC Space achieves JANS MIL-PRF-19500 certification
HKUST team develops DUV microLED chips for lithography
Porotech partners with Foxconn on microLEDs
Scientists make laser-based artificial neuron
NS Nanotech shows benefit of far-UVC in ambulances
Power Integrations' switcher targets 800V applications
PlayNitride selects Veeco MOCVD system
Bosch gets $225m CHIPs funding for US SiC fab
More CHIPS funding for GlobalWafers
VueReal to show microLED design kits at CES
Cree LED and Daktronics sign LED agreement
Fraunhofer IAF to expand III-V chiplet capabilities
Quantum Science claims QD leadership
Vertical GaN diode offers superior surge current capability
X-FAB launches next-generation SiC platform
VueReal to show microLED tech at CES
×
Search the news archive

To close this popup you can press escape or click the close icon.
Logo
x
Logo
×
Register - Step 1

You may choose to subscribe to the Compound Semiconductor Magazine, the Compound Semiconductor Newsletter, or both. You may also request additional information if required, before submitting your application.


Please subscribe me to:

 

You chose the industry type of "Other"

Please enter the industry that you work in:
Please enter the industry that you work in: