Abstract
In this work, low frequency noise in β-Ga2O3 nanowire-based (NW) electronic devices is analyzed, which exhibits different behaviors as the device size scales down. The noise spectrum for the narrower NW (∼80 nm) is closer to 1/f characteristics, whereas it starts to show evident 1/f2 components as the NW size gets thicker (∼200 nm), giving clear signs of distinctive features for the bunch of traps at the NW interface or in the bulk. Our results show that 1/f noise in these NW electronic devices seems predominantly originated from an aggregated effect of the intricate trap states close to the β-Ga2O3 NW surface or interface with a wide range distribution, while finite groups of active deep traps play a critical role in contributing 1/f2components via generation-recombination or random telegraph signal processes. Notably, as the bias voltage increases, the 1/f2 components in the noise spectra get more overwhelming and would shift toward lower frequencies, suggesting that electric ionization effects would screen the shallow traps close to the surface or interface based on the Poole–Frenkel model. The Hooge's constants extracted from the 1/f noise component for these β-Ga2O3 NW-based devices fall in the range of 0.008–0.019, which are comparable to those of the best reported devices based on other wide bandgap semiconductor with nanoscale structures, including GaN, ZnO, and SnO2. This work may give hints of revealing the sophisticated dynamic behaviors of traps in the surface/volume β-Ga2O3 materials and electronic devices in the nanoscale by low frequency noises.
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