Abstract

The impacts of eliminating access regions (AR) on DC and thermal performance of GaN-based MIS-HEMT have been studied using a device of 4 µm gate length. Nominal absence of ARs was achieved by a metal-organic chemical vapor deposition-regrown heavily n-doped GaN contact region extended to the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) channel (with sheet resistance as low as 14 Ω/ ◻ and ohmic contact resistance of 0.20 Ω⋅ mm) and 22-nm-thick AlN/Al2O3/HfO2 insulator layers acting as both gate dielectrics and sidewall spacers. As a result, a low knee voltage (2.5 V @ VGS = +2 V) comparable to deeply-scaled devices was attained, revealing the dominant role of ARs in knee voltages. High linearity at lower supply voltages (gate voltage swing of 7.3 V @ VDS = 5 V) and a faster GVS saturation trend with V DS increasing were observed, benefiting from the improved utility of applied lateral voltage. Moreover, a much lower thermal resistance compared to that of the conventional MIS-HEMT structure (146 vs. 202 K W−1) was extracted by a static-pulsed I-V measurement method. Simplified TCAD simulations were conducted to explain the underlying mechanisms, demonstrating that the enhanced surface heat flow covered by the gate metal as well as the more uniform electric field along the 2DEG channel accounts for the better capability of heat management in the device free of ARs. Our results indicate the size of DC and thermal performance enhancements obtained by eliminating ARs in a GaN-based MIS-HEMT structure.

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