DocumentCode :
1399908
Title :
Degradation mechanism in carbon-doped GaAs minority-carrier injection devices [HBTs]
Author :
Fushimi, Hiroshi ; Wada, Kazumi
Author_Institution :
NTT Syst. Electron. Labs., Kanagawa, Japan
Volume :
44
Issue :
11
fYear :
1997
fDate :
11/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1996
Lastpage :
2001
Abstract :
Degradation behavior and mechanism of GaAs-based devices under minority-carrier injection has been studied by measuring the increase in the leakage current and the luminescence lifetime of minority carriers. It is found that hydrogen unintentionally incorporated in GaAs-based devices induces degradation under minority-carrier injection, i.e., increase in injection leakage current at low bias voltage. “Isolated” hydrogen donors (H+) induce rapid degradation, and even carbon-hydrogen (C-H) complexes which are believed to be electrically neutral induce slow degradation. Degradation is induced by the decomposition of the C-H complexes, enhanced by minority-carrier injection producing electrically active isolated hydrogen donors (H+). The kinetics of the leakage current increase are well explained by the decomposition kinetics of the C-H complexes. Under minority-carrier injection, H+ changes to hydrogen acceptors (H- ) by capturing two electrons. Hydrogen donors (H+) and hydrogen acceptors (H-) combine and become a molecular hydrogen which Is thought to form {111} platelets. This decomposition mechanism are not due to recombination-enhanced defect reaction (REDR) but is related to charge state effects by two-electron capturing. We infer that the degradation mechanism is closely related to the leakage through the {111} platelets
Keywords :
III-V semiconductors; carbon; electron capture; gallium arsenide; heterojunction bipolar transistors; leakage currents; minority carriers; photoluminescence; semiconductor device reliability; GaAs:C; HBTs; decomposition kinetics; degradation behavior; electrically active isolated donors; injection leakage current; luminescence lifetime; minority-carrier injection devices; platelets; two-electron capturing; Current measurement; Degradation; Electrons; Gallium arsenide; Hydrogen; Kinetic theory; Leakage current; Low voltage; Luminescence; Spontaneous emission;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9383
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/16.641371
Filename :
641371
Link To Document :
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