Abstract

The degradation of industry-supplied GaN high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) subjected to accelerated life testing (ALT) is directly related to increases in concentrations of two defects with trap energies of EC-0.57 and EC-0.75eV. Pulsed I-V measurements and constant drain current deep level transient spectroscopy were employed to evaluate the quantitative impact of each trap. The trap concentration increases were only observed in devices that showed a 1dB drop in output power and not the result of the ALT itself indicating that these traps and primarily the EC-0.57eV trap are responsible for the output power degradation. Increases from the EC-0.57eV level were responsible for 80% of the increased knee walkout while the EC-0.75eV contributed only 20%. These traps are located in the drain access region, likely in the GaN buffer, and cause increased knee walkout after the application of drain voltage.

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