Abstract

The quality of the N-doped 4H-SiC homoepitaxial layers grown via hot-wall horizontal chemical vapor deposition (CVD) was evaluated at various C/Si ratios (1.0–1.2) and growth temperatures (1570–1630 °C). The microstructure and morphology of the epilayers were studied through a comparative analysis of the AFM patterns under different growth conditions. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy revealed the quality of the 4H-SiC epilayers and the amount of N-doping. It was found that an increase in the C/Si ratio enabled obtaining a quite smooth epitaxial layer surface. Moreover, only the 4H-SiC crystal type was distinguished in the epilayers. In addition, the epitaxial quality was gradually improved, and the amount of defect-related C-C bonds significantly dropped from 38.7% to 17.4% as the N doping content decreased from 35.3% to 28.0%. An increase in the growth temperature made the epitaxial layer surface smoother (the corresponding RMS value was ~0.186 nm). According to the Raman spectroscopy data, the 4H-SiC forbidden mode E1(TO) in the epilayers was curbed at a higher C/Si ratio and growth temperature, obtaining a significant enhancement in epitaxial quality. At the same time, more N dopants were inserted into the epilayers with increasing temperature, which was opposite to increasing the C/Si ratio. This work definitively shows that the increase in the C/Si ratio and growth temperature can directly enhance the quality of the 4H-SiC epilayers and pave the way for their large-scale fabrication in high-power semiconductor devices.

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