Abstract

We will shortly review the basic physics of charge-carrier trapping and emission from trapping states within the bandgap of a semiconductor in order to show that high-temperature capacitance–voltage measurements are necessary for GaAs metal–oxide–semiconductor characterization. The midgap trapping states in GaAs have characteristic emission times on the order of , which makes them extremely complicated to measure at room temperature. Higher substrate temperatures speed up these emission times, which makes measurements of the midgap traps possible with standard measurements. characterizations of , , , and interfaces show the existence of four interface state peaks, independent of the gate oxide deposited: a hole trap peak close to the valence band, a hole trap peak close to midgap energies, an electron trap peak close to midgap energies, and an electron trap peak close to the conduction band.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call