The present invention relates generally to high-voltage fast-avalanche diodes, such as a silicon-avalanche shaper or sharpener (SAS).
The silicon-avalanche shaper or sharpener (SAS) is a fast closing semiconductor switch. For positive voltages, it operates in the negative, cathode to anode, direction. It receives a high-voltage pulse at its cathode, and, when turned on, the current through the device rises rapidly. Typical input voltages are in the order of a few kilovolts, with a rise-time of the order of nanosecond. The device turn on time is in the order of 100 ps. A similar operation is obtained with devices known as fast-ionization dynistors (FIDs), deep-layer dynistors (DLDs), delayed breakdown devices (DBDs), etc.
The current state-of-the-art knowledge shows that in order to get fast pulses, the device active region (e.g., the n in a p+-n-n+ structure) has to be thin, about 100 to 300 microns. Therefore in order to obtain a fast operation one has to use a thin active region. The tradeoff of a thin region is the lowering of the device voltage.
Fast high-voltage diodes such as the drift-step-recovery diode (DSRD) and the silicon-avalanche shaper (SAS) have been developed [references 1-4 and references therein].
Fast avalanche diodes can be used for various applications such as plasma discharge experiments [5] and for ultra-wideband pulse generation [6, 7]. The diode structure is typically p+-n-n+, where the n region is some 100 to 300 microns, ND=1014 cm−3 [7-9]. For a given diode, the switching characteristics, such as rise-time, voltage, and residual voltage, depend mostly on the applied voltage and its rise-time [2, 7-11].
In [12], an impact ionization model shows that when a 8 kV/0.8 ns ramp is applied to a 100 micron p+-n-n+ structure, it results in a super-fast turn on from 8 kV to 10V in 15 ps, e.g 500 kV/ns.
In [13], a ramp of 180 kV/400 ps was applied to a stack of 44 series connected p+-p-n-n+ diodes, having a p-n junction depth of 180 microns. The load voltage was 150 kV with a 100-ps rise time.
In [14], a 2.5 kV/1 ns pulse was applied to a 100 micron p+-n-n+ structure, resulting in a 1 kV/100 ps voltage ramp applied to the load (e.g. 10 kV/ns). The experimental results were supported by a numerical simulation, showing electron concentration and the electric field along the structure at various times.
In all of the experimental papers, the input voltage per diode was between 2 and 4 kilo-volts in 0.4 to 1 ns, and the load voltage ramp was between 10 and 36 kV/ns. The active structure in these papers was less than 200 microns, thus deep diffusion of some tens of microns was required in order to achieve the desired active region.
The present invention provides a high-voltage fast-avalanche diode, such as an SAS with a thick active region, above 300 microns, which can operate in the 100-ps range and obtain a higher voltage than the thin substrate. The condition for such operation is a high quality substrate with a high-resistivity, such as a float-zone wafer. Further advantages of the invention is that the manufacturing of such devices becomes substantially easier since it is easy to handle thick wafers without the risk of breaking, and there is no need for deep, 10-s of micron, diffusion in order to narrow the active region.
The invention provides a 7.9-kV, 100-ps rise-time silicon-avalanche shaper (SAS) diode. A high-voltage vertical p+-n0-n+ structure was designed using Synopsys-TCAD. The substrate is a 525-μm float-zone, N-type Si wafer, ND=1012 cm−3. The p+-n0 junction is fabricated using boron spin-on-dopant (SOD), whereas the n0-n+ junction is fabricated using phosphorus SOD on the other side of the wafer. An electrostatic voltage of 3 kV was demonstrated without breakdown. The results are supported by a numerical simulation.
Reference is now made to
The SAS diode may be prepared by the following process, in accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention:
First Implant, of the p+ Layer:
A diode with a junction cross section of 4 mm2 may be thus prepared. Its leakage current is measured at a reverse voltage of 3 kV. A 72 μA current is measured without a breakdown. When two diodes are connected in series the leakage current is reduced by a factor of 2.
In order to test it dynamically, the inventors connected its cathode to the ground via a 1 pF peaking capacitor, and also to a 6-kV, 1-ns pulsed-power generator (measured on a 50-Ω load) via a 200 pF DC-block capacitor and a 20 nH coil, as shown in
Table 1 shows a comparison of this invention to two other state-of-the-art sharpening devices from the literature (first column). The second column shows the width of the active region. It is noted that the width in this invention is substantially wider, which enables working with a thick wafer, and alleviates the need for deep diffusion. Therefore it simplifies the process and reduces the cost.
The third and fourth columns describe the input and output pulse, respectively, in terms of peak voltage and rise-time. The fifth column describes the maximum rise-rate of the load voltage. The sixth column refers to the number of diodes used, in case of a high-voltage stack [13], thus, the seventh column calculates the rise-rate per diode. The eighth column shows a figure of merit for the sharpening quality, in terms of output rise-rate to input voltage and its rise-time.
It is seen that in this invention the voltage rise rate (single diode) and the quality of sharpening is higher than the prior art.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/059900 | 10/21/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2021/123943 | 6/24/2021 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4127932 | Hartman | Dec 1978 | A |
4660008 | Henry | Apr 1987 | A |
20030006456 | Takahashi | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20140339398 | Mazzillo | Nov 2014 | A1 |
20190109242 | Ramu et al. | Apr 2019 | A1 |
20200020681 | Boles | Jan 2020 | A1 |
Entry |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230040734 A1 | Feb 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62948944 | Dec 2019 | US |