Abstract

Vertical GaN power devices have emerged to become promising candidates for next-generation high power applications due to superior material properties such as high breakdown voltage, low on-resistance, and high mobility compared to devices based on Si and SiC. GaN-based p-n junction switching devices enable higher voltage power with significantly higher efficiencies with added advantages of systems with reduced size and weight. A technological limitation of GaN, however, has been the inability to achieve high p-type doping in a planar, vertical device. Here, we will focus on recent developments to achieve high p-type efficiency though ion implantation, novel high temperature annealing schemes, and the importance of defects and morphology in native substrates and epitaxial layers.Mg-implanted homoepitaxial GaN annealed at temperatures at or above 1400 °C eliminates the formation of inversion domains and leads to improved dopant activation efficiency. Extended defects in the form of inversion domains contain electrically inactive Mg after post-implantation annealing at temperatures as high as 1300 °C (one GPa N2 overpressure), which results in a low dopant activation efficiency. While residual defects, such as dislocation loops, still exist after annealing at and above 1400 °C, chemical analysis at multiple dislocation loops shows no sign of Mg segregation. Meanwhile, an overall decreasing trend in the dislocation loop size and density is observed after annealing at the higher temperatures and longer times. Earlier work addressing electrical measurements of these types of samples showed that annealing at ~1400 °C leads to a dopant activation efficiency that is an order of magnitude higher than that observed at 1300 °C. This work complements the earlier work by identifying the microscopic defects (inversion domains) which incorporate Mg, and points to the benefits, in terms of defect density and p-type dopant activation, of using higher temperature (1400 °C) annealing cycles to activate Mg in GaN.

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