Abstract

Nonvolatile memory using intersubband transitions and quantum-well electron accumulation in GaN/AlN resonant tunneling diodes (RTDs) is a promising candidate for high-speed nonvolatile memory operating on a picosecond timescale. This memory has been fabricated on sapphire(0001) substrates to date because of the high affinity between the nitride materials and the substrate. However, the fabrication of this memory on Si(111) substrates is attractive to realize hybrid integration with Si devices and nonvolatile memory and three-dimensional integration such as chip-on-wafer and wafer-on-wafer. In this study, GaN/AlN RTDs are fabricated on a Si(111) substrate using metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy. The large strain caused by the differences in the thermal expansion coefficients and lattice constants between the Si(111) substrate and nitride materials are suppressed by a growth technique based on the insertion of low-temperature-grown AlGaN and thin AlN layers. The GaN/AlN RTDs fabricated on Si(111) substrates show clear GaN/AlN heterointerfaces and a high ON/OFF ratio of >220, which are equivalent to those for devices fabricated on sapphire(0001) substrates. However, the nonvolatile memory characteristics fluctuate by repeated write/erase memory operations. Evaluation of the ON/OFF switching time and endurance characteristics indicates that the instability of the nonvolatile memory characteristics is caused by electron leakage through deep levels in the quantum-well structure. Possible methods for suppressing this are discussed with an aim of realizing high-speed and high-endurance nonvolatile memory.

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