Title :
Investigation of Al2O3 and TiO2 as gate insulators for 4H-SiC pulsed power devices
Author :
shui, Q. ; Mazzola, M.S. ; Gu, Xingfa ; Myles, C.W. ; Gundersen, M.A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng.-Electrophys., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract :
Achieving high quality and high electric breakdown of oxide on 4H-SiC substrates is still a major research challenge. 500 Å Al2O3 and TiO2 were deposited on 4H-SiC by high vacuum and low-temperature e-beam evaporation. AFM (atomic force microscopy) results show that a surface mean height of 4-7 Å of Al2O3 was found on Si substrate and 74 Å of Al2O3 was found on SiC substrate. MIS capacitors were fabricated using one mask to evaluate the quality of these gate materials. C-V measurements at 10 kHz show that Al2O3 and TiO2 have dielectric constants of more than 9 and 20, respectively. The leakage current of an Al2O3 MIS capacitor is about 10-9 A on a capacitor area of 150 μm × 150μm at a gate voltage of ±10 V. An Al2O3 MIS capacitor has a lower leakage current than a TiO2 MIS capacitor due to its large band gap offsets. Its breakdown electric field strength is more than 8 MV/cm. This research indicates that e-beam deposited Al2O3 may be a promising dielectric material for the pulsed power SiC devices.
Keywords :
MIS capacitors; aluminium compounds; atomic force microscopy; dielectric materials; electric breakdown; electron beam deposition; hydrogen compounds; insulators; leakage currents; permittivity; pulsed power switches; silicon; silicon compounds; substrates; titanium compounds; vacuum deposition; -10 to 10 V; 10 kHz; AFM; Al2O3; C-V measurement; H-SiC; MIS capacitor; Si; Si substrate; SiC; TiO2; atomic force microscopy; band gap offset; dielectric constant; dielectric material; e-beam evaporation; electric field strength; gate insulator; leakage current; oxide electric breakdown; pulsed power SiC device; vacuum deposition; Atomic force microscopy; Atomic layer deposition; Capacitance-voltage characteristics; Capacitors; Dielectric materials; Dielectric substrates; Electric breakdown; Leakage current; Silicon carbide; Vacuum breakdown;
Conference_Titel :
Power Modulator Symposium, 2004 and 2004 High-Voltage Workshop. Conference Record of the Twenty-Sixth International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8586-1
DOI :
10.1109/MODSYM.2004.1433623