Abstract

A surface passivation technique has been developed for AlGaN/AlN/GaN high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) by simple thermal evaporation of silicon monoxide (SiO) at room temperature. Detailed device characteristics were studied and compared with the most commonly used SiNx passivation grown by plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition at elevated temperatures. Both passivation techniques lead to a similar enhancement in the on-state drain current and transconductance as compared with the unpassivated HEMTs. However, we discovered that the gate leakage current in the SiO passivated devices was more than two orders of magnitude lower than the devices passivated by SiNx. Furthermore, while the SiNx passivated HEMTs exhibited a two orders of magnitude increase in off-state drain current, SiO passivation substantially reduced it, resulting in an overall improvement by a factor of 1429. The extent of the device surface damage caused by passivation was also investigated by characterizing other parameters. The subthreshold slope of the SiO passivated HEMTs was 95 mV dec−1, nearly 5 times better than the SiNx passivated devices. The extracted interface trap density was 1.16 × 1012 cm−2 eV−1, about ten times lower than that in the SiNx passivated HEMTs. Moreover, SiO passivation was found to enhance the gate Schottky barrier height by 60 meV whereas SiNx passivation reduced it, which could partially explain the differences in the gate leakage current. Finally, SiO passivation enabled twice high breakdown voltage than SiNx passivation. The relevant physical mechanisms were discussed.

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