Abstract
Localized epitaxy of gallium nitride (GaN) on silicon (Si) wafers is an efficient way to relax elastically the tensile stress generated in the GaN layer after growth, allowing epitaxy of thick layers for the fabrication of vertical power devices operating at high voltage. In this study, a 4.7 μm‐thick GaN layer is grown by metal–organic vapor phase epitaxy on 200 mm‐diameter Si wafers for the fabrication of quasi‐vertical Schottky and p‐n diodes. The uniformity of the doping concentration in the layer is mapped spatially by scanning spreading resistance microscopy, while scanning capacitance microscopy illustrates the differently doped regions in the p‐n diode. The net doping concentration is extracted by capacitance–voltage (C–V) measurements and it is found to be about 3 × 1016 cm−3. On a 140 μm‐diameter quasi‐vertical p‐n diode, destructive breakdown occurs at 402 V, with no periphery protection on the device, demonstrating that localized epitaxy of GaN on Si has great potential for vertical high‐power devices.
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