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Bias instability is a critical issue for metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs). This study demonstrates suppression of the positive bias instability of the threshold voltage (Vth) in a GaN MOSFET by insertion of a thin crystalline AlN interlayer (AlN-IL) formed by plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition. The gate stacks were composed of an AlSiO/AlN/p-type GaN structure having a high channel mobility of greater than 170 cm2 V−1 s−1. When the AlN-IL was inserted, the Vth shift under an oxide electric field of 3.9 MV cm−1 was strongly suppressed from 0.72 V to less than 0.12 V. This suppression was attributed to an increase in the effective barrier height associated with oxide traps in the AlSiO for inversion channel electrons as a result of the insertion of the polarized AlN-IL. The key to this approach is adequate control of the AlN-IL thickness. The insertion of a 0.8-nm-thick AlN-IL led to a low interface state density (Dit) and a minimized positive bias instability, whereas an AlN-IL thicker than 2.3 nm led to an increase in both Dit and a Vth shift. The effective barrier height should increase with increasing AlN thickness; however, an increase in a Vth shift instead occurred. This indicates that defects that capture electrons are additionally introduced when the thickness of the AlN-IL on GaN layers exceeds the critical thickness. The results clearly suggest that Vth instability can be minimized by controlling the thickness of a thin AlN-IL deposited at an AlSiO/p-type GaN interface and simultaneously providing high channel mobility.
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Hiroko Iguchi
Toyota Motor Corporation (Switzerland)
Tetsuo Narita
Toyota Motor Corporation (Switzerland)
Kenji Ito
Toyota Central Research and Development Laboratories (Japan)
Applied Physics Letters
Toyota Central Research and Development Laboratories (Japan)
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Iguchi et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e61090b6db6435875a3a22 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0214698