3.1. Impact of Al Mole Fraction of Emitter on the Forward Performances of GaN HBTs
The Al mole fraction in AlGaN emitters typically ranges from 5% to 20% as reported in AlGaN/GaN HBTs [
7,
8,
9,
23,
24]. However, it is widely recognized that the crystal mass quality in Al
xGaN deteriorates as the Al mole fraction increases, as deep-level increments and deep donor formations become conspicuous [
25]. Therefore, considering practical implications, the Al content of the emitter is reduced with the aim of enhancing the performance and consistency of the HBT. Hence, there is significant interest in establishing a minimum threshold for the Al component in HBTs. The following section provides empirical findings regarding the influence of emitter Al content on current gain in AlGaN/GaN HBTs.
As shown in
Figure 2a,
β initially increases as the Al composition increases, attains its maximum value at approximately 7% Al composition, and subsequently decreases. This trend aligns with the behavior of
IC in
Figure 2b, whereas
IB continues to decrease with increasing
x. The phenomenon can be explained by the energy band structure of the AlGaN/GaN HBT, as shown in
Figure 2c.
As shown in
Figure 2c, the energy band diagram and current composition of the HBT are demonstrated.
InE and
IpE are the electron diffusion currents injected from the emitter region to the base region and hole diffusion currents injected into the emitter from the base, respectively.
IB,scr and
IB,bulk are denoted as the complex currents in the space charge region of the emitter junction and the complex currents of the body in the base region, respectively, along with
IB,bulk, collectively constitute the base region current
IB. Thus, the DC current gain can be expressed as follows:
The rise in the energy band offset
qΔ
EV of the BE junction leads to a decrease in the backward injection current
IB,p from the base into the emitter. Consequently, the I
B decreases with the increase in
x, leading to a gradual increase in
β, as shown in
Figure 2b. As
x continues to increase,
β starts to decrease due to the creation of a potential well Δ
E at the interface between emitter and base as shown in
Figure 2c, which collects the injected electrons and increases the complex losses, thus decreasing
IE,n/
IB,p, and hence
β. And Δ
E increases with
x so that
β and I
C reach a maximum value at
x = 7% and then decreases gradually. At an
x value of 7%, the maximum
β value is observed to be 157.
Figure 2d shows the output curve of the modeled HBT at
IB from 20 μA to 100 μA, which shows a better fit of the simulation results to the measurements in [
7]. It is worth noting that in the simulated curves, due to the Early effect,
IC rises slowly with increasing
VCE when
VCE reaches
Vknee [
9]. However, in the test curve, at larger
IB (at 60/80/100 μA),
IC decreases with increasing
VCE due to the self-heating effect. The inset shows the maximum saturation current as a function of the Al fraction, again showing an increasing and then decreasing trend.
The current gain of the HBT is inversely proportional to the width of the base region; a narrower base helps to reduce the
IB,bulk and hence increase the
β. However, the electric field needs to drop to 0 in a base of sufficient thickness to prevent the base from penetrating, and hence the base thickness cannot fall below a certain minimum value. As shown in
Figure 3a, the current gain gradually decreases to almost 0 as the thickness of the base increases, and in order to obtain a current gain of not less than 150, the thickness of the base should not be higher than 0.07 μm. In addition,
β can likewise be increased by improving the quality of the base material and thus the minority carrier lifetime of the base, as shown in the following equation:
where
τe is the minority carrier lifetime in base,
τB is the base transport time,
xB and
xE are the thicknesses of the base and emitter, respectively,
NB and
NE are the respective carrier concentrations,
DpE and
DnB are the diffusion coefficients of holes and electrons in the emitter and base, respectively [
26].
Figure 3b demonstrates the impact of the minority carrier lifetime on the current gain. It is observed that the current gain exhibits an upward trend as the minority carrier lifetime increases; however, the rate of growth slows down at minority carrier lifetimes greater than 2 ns. According to the data in the figure, for the AlGaN/GaN HBT to obtain a current gain greater than 150, the minority carrier lifetime should be no less than 1 ns.
3.2. Forward (and Impact of Device Structure on It) and Reverse Blocking Performances of GaN HBTs
Heterogeneous substrate GaN technology (Si-based, Sapphire-based) is a technique for growing epitaxial layers of GaN on inexpensive substrates. GaN
p-i-
n diodes (PND) and Schottky barrier diodes (SBDs) are highly competitive in the marketplace due to the gradual maturation of heterogeneous growth techniques and the ability to meet performance requirements at low costs, achieving breakdown voltages over 1 kV and low on-resistance [
12,
27], and GaN-on-Si transverse power devices up to 650 V have been successfully commercialized [
28]. Vertical GaN power devices grown on homogeneous substrates (GaN-on-GaN) are preferred because of their lower thermal and lattice mismatch. GaN vertical power devices have a significant advantage in achieving high power density, thermal management, and low surface trap sensitivity because the electric field (E-field) is far from the device surface. The
BV can be increased by increasing the thickness of the voltage-blocking layer, while the
RON increases only slightly due to external phenomena such as conductivity modulation. The peak electric field of vertical devices is far inside the GaN layer, and avalanche breakdown is present, thus improving device reliability and eliminating the need to overdesign devices [
29,
30].
The available literature describes two configurations of AlGaN/GaN structures. The available literature describes two configurations of AlGaN/GaN structures. The first configuration is known as the quasi-vertical heterojunction bipolar transistor (QV-HBT), where the collector and emitter base are positioned on the same side, resulting in a quasi-vertical arrangement. The second configuration is referred to as the fully vertical heterojunction bipolar transistor (FV-HBT), where the collector and emitter base are located on opposite sides, forming a completely perpendicular structure.
Figure 4a shows the cross-section of the collector current density of the two structured HBTs in the turn-on state, when the
IB and the applied collector voltage
VCE are 100 μA and 10 V, and the maximum saturation current of the qV-HBT in this state is 13.2 mA, while that of the FV-HBT is 61.8 mA, as shown in
Figure 4b. It is evident that a significant portion of the base and collector regions under the base metal exhibit negligible current flow. The collector area experiences a lack of current flow, rendering it an unutilized region. The comparison between FV-HBT and QV-HBT reveals that the primary region of current conduction is directly below the emitter area of FV-HBT, which has a more uniform current distribution compared to QV-HBT, while the QV-HBT device has transverse current conduction due to the fact that the emitter area and the collector area are located on the same side The current of the emitter area is therefore concentrated in the emitter electrode close to the side of the collector area. In the figure below, the direction of current flow in the turn-on state is shown with the emitter region as the endpoint. It can be seen by the direction of the current flow.
Intercepting the current distribution in the center area of the emitter and collector regions, respectively, to obtain the lateral distribution of the current in each layer is shown in
Figure 4c. From the figure, it can be seen that in the vicinity of the emitter electrode (at
x = ±2.0 μm), the
IE and
IC of the FV-HBT (1.11 × 10
6 A/cm
2, 3.82 × 10
5 A/cm
2) are significantly higher than those of the QV-HBT (4.33 × 10
5 A/cm
2, 1.29 × 10
5 A/cm
2), and there is still a higher current density in the center region of the emitter area, which demonstrates its whole emitter area conduction current advantage. The current distribution graph in
Figure 4c shows that the
IC decreases from 3.82 × 10
5 A/cm
2 to 1.03 × 10
5 A/cm
2 from the edge of the electrode to the central region in the FV-HBT. In contrast, the
IC of the QV-HBT decreases from 1.29 × 10
5/cm
2 to almost zero (3.01 × 10
3). For the quasi-vertical structured HBTs, the calculation of their specific conduction resistances,
RON,sp, or the current densities cannot be conducted simply using the area of the emitting area or the area of the collector area to calculate. In addition, HBTs are potential power electronic devices due to their high current density, strong avalanche breakdown capability, and low specific on-resistance, where the breakdown voltage can be increased by increasing the thickness of the drift region, and scaling high on-current can be achieved by increasing the lateral size of the device. However, many current reports on GaN-based HBTs are based on sapphire substrates, and the heterogeneous growth of GaN not only makes it challenging to obtain a larger thickness of the drift region but also fails to give full play to its potential for scaling current.
Figure 5a shows the breakdown characteristic curve of the same HBT structure reported in [
7]. An avalanche breakdown voltage of 165 V (@
ICEO = 4 nA) was obtained, which agrees well with the experimental data, and the inset shows the distribution curve of the electric field strength along the cross-section. As shown in
Figure 5b–d, the electric field distribution, current distribution, and impact ionization distribution inside the HBT when the breakdown voltage is reached are simulated based on the HBT structure in [
7]. As shown in
Figure 5b, when the emitter is grounded, and the collector is connected to a high voltage, the voltage mainly falls on the low-doped collector, and avalanche breakdown is an impact ionization (I.I.) and multiplication process, which usually occurs at the p-n junction [
31]. Since the current conduction path of HBT avalanche breakdown is collected from the emitter through the base and the collector directly below the emitter and finally converges to the collector, there is almost no lateral current diffusion in the collector, as shown in
Figure 5c. Hence, the I.I. mainly occurs at the BC junction directly underneath the emitter, as shown in
Figure 5d, and the I.I. generated electrons are pushed towards the collector, while a large number of electrons are extracted from the emitter to recombine with the I.I. generated holes.
GaN devices are often etched to form a beveled angle during preparation, with measured beveled angles between 40° and 90° (depending on the type of mask used for etching) [
32,
33], and this phenomenon is also present in the base-collector (BC) mesa of GaN HBTs. The reduction in the BC mesa beveled angle also results in a lower breakdown voltage, which will be discussed in
Section 3.3.
3.3. Impact of Epitaxial Layer Design and BC Mesa Bevel on the Blocking Performances Characteristics of GaN HBTs
As mentioned before, GaN-based HBTs have great potential as power electronic devices. Many reports have demonstrated the high current density and low on-resistance of HBTs; however, more verification has yet to be conducted for the high-voltage performance of GaN HBTs, and only a breakdown voltage of 330 V has been achieved [
5].With the enhancement of GaN epitaxial technology, the HBTs with thicker drift layers contribute to the avalanche higher breakdown, so device simulation for GaN HBT devices with high breakdown voltage is vital.
Figure 6a shows the breakdown voltages of two types of HBTs (FV-HBT and QV-HBT, solid lines and points, respectively) at a collector concentration of 2 × 10
16 cm
−3 and a collector thickness of 0.5/1.0/2.0/3.0/4.0/6.0. From
Figure 6a, it can be seen that the QV-HBT has the same avalanche breakdown voltage as the FV-HBT under the ideal conditions of a perfectly vertical BC mesa, and the breakdown voltages that can be achieved are 180/332/594/826/1012/1272 V, so that a breakdown voltage of 1.2 kV level can be achieved with a collector of 6 μm. The inset shows the electric field distribution of the base and collector when the breakdown occurs, and it can be seen by the inset that the different thicknesses of the collector mentioned above are Punch-through (PT) conditions. The thickness of the collector over 6 μm at this concentration will not significantly increase the breakdown voltage.
Figure 6b demonstrates the breakdown voltage as a function of doping concentration for different thicknesses of the collector. Since decreasing the doping concentration can slow down the rate of the electric field strength decreasing in the space charge region, the BV increases with decreasing doping concentration and gradually reaches saturation when it is reduced to a certain concentration. The larger the thickness of the collector is, the lower the concentration that reaches saturation is. This is because decreasing the collector concentration can change from the Non-Punch-through (NPT) state to the PT state, and when the carrier concentration is small enough, continuing to decrease the carrier concentration will not yield as much as increasing the collector thickness to increase the breakdown voltage.
Figure 7a demonstrates the breakdown voltage for different base doping concentrations under the same collector condition (6 μm, 2 × 10
16 cm
−3).
Figure 7a shows the effect of
p-GaN doping concentration on the breakdown characteristics of the collector region for different background doping concentrations. It can be seen from
Figure 7a that the doping concentration of the
p-GaN has a significant effect on the breakdown characteristics of the HBTs, and it is essential to point out that the doping concentration is the concentration of magnesium dopant. As the
p-GaN doping concentration decreases, the
BV of the HBT first remains constant and then starts to decrease after reaching a certain concentration (2.7 × 10
18 cm
−3 for collector doping is 2 × 10
16 cm
−3) and eventually falls below 100 V. This is due to the base punch-through effect; when the reverse voltage on the collector junction increases, the collector depletion layer expands to both sides, and the
WB decreases accordingly. When the collector junction reverse bias reaches a certain value
Vpt, although the collector junction has not yet avalanche breakdown, the single
WB has already decreased to 0, and at this time, the base becomes a depletion region completely, and the base region depletion layer can be solved by the base depletion layer formula for the
Vpt, as the following equation:
where
Vbi is the built-in potential, and
Vpt can be solved using the width of the depletion region on the base side equal to
WB, and the following equation neglects
Vbi,
When
VCE =
VPT,
VCE continues to increase to make the BE junction open, and there will be a large number of emitter carriers injected into the punch-through base and then reach the collector, making
ICEO increase dramatically, at this time according to the definition of the
BVCEO:
When the carrier concentration is low, base penetration occurs, and a higher reverse voltage can be borne on the collector as the doped Na increases, and thus the HBT has a higher breakdown voltage, as shown in inset (I) in
Figure 7a. Furthermore, when Na is high enough, since the BC junction has already reached the peak electric field, continuing to increase Na will not cause the breakdown voltage to continue to increase, as shown in inset (II). When the
p-GaN doping concentration is 2.8 × 10
18 cm
−3, the peak
BV of the HBT with a drift doping concentration of 2 × 10
16 cm
−3 is 1234 V. When the
p-doping concentration is further increased, the
BV value remains unchanged. Nevertheless, it is worth noting that a significant increase in the doping concentration of the base has the adverse effect of diminishing the carrier lifetime within the base region, consequently leading to a reduction in the current gain. Consequently, the doping concentration of the base in the range of (2.8–3.0) × 10
18 cm
−3 is the optimum doping concentration for obtaining a 1.2 kV HBT.
Since the sidewalls of GaN power devices exhibit sloped surfaces when performing mesa etching or device isolation, it will be a positive bevel if more material is removed in the lightly doped region, and it will be a negative bevel if more material is removed in the heavily doped region. For positive bevel, there is an area difference between the
p-type material left behind and the
n-type material. The depletion region on the lightly doped side has to be expanded inwardly to achieve the charge equilibrium, thus obtaining a surface E-field strength that is even lower than that of a planar junction with the same dopant. In the negative bevel edge termination, on the other hand, the lightly doped material leaves a large portion of it behind. This allows the depletion layer to reduce its area to balance the reduced charge in the heavily doped region, and yields a surface E-field strength higher than that of an identically doped planar junction. Consequently, the positive bevel configuration is preferable for terminating the single high-voltage junction within high-voltage power rectifiers [
34,
35].
In the case of GaN, it is commonly observed that activating the p-type layer, which is buried beneath the n-type layer, poses challenges. As a result, the p-type layer is typically positioned on the top surface. This arrangement allows for the removal of the heavily doped p-type material during the top etching process, resulting in the formation of a negative bevel edge termination. However, this configuration leads to a reduction in the achievable breakdown voltage of the device.
Figure 7b demonstrates the images of breakdown voltage and maximum electric field strength variations at different BC mesa beveled angles for QV-HBT, for example. In the case of 1.2 kV HBT, the mesa beveled angles decrease from 90° to 40°, the breakdown voltage decreases from 1270 V to 420 V, and the peak field strength increases from 2.79 MV/cm to 4.69 MV/cm. The 2D electric field distributions of the simulated HBTs with different beveled angles
θ of the slopes are shown in
Figure 8a–f. In order to better show the trend and where the peak electric field occurs, the pictures show only a part of the device.
Figure 8a and
Figure 9a demonstrate that the electric field is uniformly distributed in the HBT at a beveled angle of 90°, and the I.I. occurs predominantly in the region directly below the emitter. Observation of
Figure 8b and
Figure 9b shows that when the beveled angle is less than 90°, the peak electric field appears at the edge of the BC mesa due to the bending of the space charge region. A second current path other than the region directly below the emitter appears along the sidewall surface of the HBT due to the contraction of the depletion layer, i.e., the current follows the outer surface of the BC mesa, flows transversely through the base and finally into the emitter, and I.I. starts to appear under the effect of the peak electric field at the edge of the BC mesa surface. It can be seen from
Figure 8c–f and
Figure 9c–f that the curvature of the space charge region increases significantly with decreasing
θ, and its width decreases gradually. The width of the undepleted region with relatively higher concentration increases gradually, and the edge region of the mesa surface is larger than the center region, so the current in the second pathway increases gradually. The two currents are connected in parallel to form the leakage current (
ICEO) of the HBT, and as
θ decreases, the peak of I.I. is transferred from the pn junction underneath the emitter (90°) to the pn junction at the edge of the BC mesa top (70°). The breakdown voltage decreases gradually in the process, which further decreases the depletion layer’s width.
Simulation of a mesa surface with an angle between 70° and 80° (not shown in the figure) shows that the critical angle for the transfer of the maximum I.I from the central region to the mesa surface is 79°. As a result, when the BC mesa beveled angle generated during etching is lower than this angle, avalanche breakdown occurs at the mesa edge thus breaking down prematurely.
It is worth noting that in GaN power PNDs, when the inclination of the inclined plane is below a certain value, the location of the peak field strength gradually moves from the surface into the body, so continuing to reduce the inclination of the inclined plane will result in a lower peak field strength than the planar peak field strength, thus acting as an edge termination. This increases the breakdown voltage of the device, and in SiC BJT power devices, there are many reports on the use of multistep etch bases to form junction termination extensions (JTEs) to achieve higher breakdown voltages. However, in GaN, the process is more challenging to implement due to the severe damage and difficulty in recovering the p-GaN material after etching. Therefore, this paper will not do an in-depth related study.
For FV-HBT,
Figure 10 illustrates the trend of electric field with decreasing beveled angle, which is similar to
Figure 8, for angles less than 90°, a concentration of electric field appears at the edge of the BC mesa.
Figure 11 demonstrates the trend of I.I. with decreasing beveled angle, the position of the maximum value of I.I. is at the center of the emitter electrode when θ is 90° (as shown in
Figure 11a), and as θ decreases, the maximum value of I.I. moves closer to the edge of the emitter electrode and shifts to the edge of the emitter electrode at 70°, and finally when θ decreases to 60° (as shown in
Figure 11d), the position of the maximum value of I.I. shifts to the surface of the BC mesa. Simulation of a mesa surface with an angle between 60° and 70° (not shown in the figure) yielded a critical angle of 69° for the occurrence of I.I. transfer from the central region to the mesa surface. As a result, the second current path of the FV-HBT dominates at 69°, and it is less prone to premature breakdown than the QV-HBT.
According to the simulation, a breakdown voltage of 1270 V can be achieved with a doping concentration of 2 × 10
16 cm
−3 at the collector and a thickness of 6 μm, and the output curves and Gummel plots of FV-HBT with forward conduction are plotted based on this parameter for the two structures, both QV-HBT and FV-HBT (as shown in
Figure 12). It is found that the highest saturation currents of 4.52 mA and 4.69 mA can be obtained at an
IB of 100 μA with specific on-resistance
Ron,sp of 1.02 mΩ·cm
2 and 0.88 mΩ·cm
2, respectively. The FV-HBT shows a 13.7% improvement with respect to the QV-HBT due to having a more homogeneous current conduction path. The maximum DC gains of 66 and 73 can be achieved at
VBE = 4.4 V and 4.9 V, respectively. For low-voltage HBTs, QV-HBTs are a good choice due to cost, as well as fabrication difficulty, but FV-HBTs are a better choice for high voltage and high power realization due to their more uniform current distribution, as well as the advantages of high current, high gain, and relatively less susceptibility to surface breakdown. The above simulation data provides design ideas for the fabrication of GaN-based HBTs with 1.2 kV and higher breakdown voltages.
In this paper, detailed and comprehensive modelling and calculation of 1.2 kV high-voltage GaN HBT is carried out for the first time, and it is concluded that the optimum Al fraction in AlGaN emitter is 7%, which is conducive to achieving higher current gain and improving power density. Secondly, the forward and reverse electrical characteristics of HBTs with different substrate types as well as different critical breakdown inclinations are investigated, which provides a theoretical foundation for the design and the fabrication of GaN HBT power electronic devices. In addition, we introduce the relationship between different base/collector designs and GaN HBT breakdown, which is of great importance for the application of GaN HBTs in 1.2 kV, 3.0 kV, and higher voltage scenarios.