This invention relates to a radio frequency (RF) power transistor, and more particularly to an RF power transistor including a hybrid electrode and a continuous two dimensional electron gas (2DEG) channel.
Conventional GaN-based high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) are known to have a wide bandgap (3.4 eV) and a high electron saturation velocity (2.5×107 cm2/s), and are suitable for high frequency power amplifier applications.
Therefore, an object of the present invention is to provide an RF power transistor that can overcome the aforesaid drawback associated with the prior art.
According to this invention, there is provided an RF power transistor that comprises: a semiconductor heterostructure that includes an undoped barrier layer and an active layer and that is formed with a continuous two dimensional electron gas channel disposed at one side of the active layer which is adjacent to the barrier layer, the electron gas channel having an ohmic source-aligned region, an ohmic drain-aligned region, and a Schottky-aligned region that is disposed between the ohmic source-aligned and drain-aligned regions; a gate electrode that is formed on the semiconductor heterostructure and that is disposed over the barrier layer; and source and drain electrodes formed on the barrier layer. One of the source and drain electrodes includes an ohmic contact and a Schottky contact that extends from the ohmic contact toward the gate electrode along one side of the barrier layer which is distal from the active layer. The other one of the source and drain electrodes includes an ohmic contact. The Schottky contact is disposed between the ohmic contacts of the source and drain electrodes. The ohmic contacts of the source and drain electrodes are aligned with the ohmic source-aligned and drain-aligned regions, respectively. The electron gas channel is normally on and extends continuously from the ohmic source-aligned region to the ohmic drain-aligned region. The Schottky contact overlaps and is capacitively coupled to the Schottky-aligned region of the electron gas channel.
In drawings which illustrate embodiments of the invention,
Before the present invention is described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying embodiments, it should be noted herein that like elements are denoted by the same reference numerals throughout the disclosure.
The RF power transistor is a GaN-based high electron mobility transistor (HEMT), and includes: a substrate 20; a buffer layer 21 formed on the substrate 20; a III-N-type semiconductor heterostructure 22 that is formed on the buffer layer 21, that includes an undoped barrier layer 221 and an active layer 222, and that is formed with a continuous two dimensional electron gas (2DEG) channel 223 disposed at one side of the active layer 222 which is adjacent to the barrier layer 221, the 2DEG channel 223 having an ohmic source-aligned region 223a, an ohmic drain-aligned region 223b, and a first Schottky-aligned region 223c that is disposed between the ohmic source-aligned and drain-aligned regions 223a, 223b; a gate electrode 23 that is formed on the semiconductor heterostructure 22 and that is disposed over the barrier layer 221; source and drain electrodes 24, 25 formed on the barrier layer 221; and a protection layer 26 formed on the source and drain electrodes 24, 25, the gate electrode 23 and the barrier 221. The substrate 20, the buffer layer 21, and the semiconductor heterostructure 22 are stacked one above another along a stacking direction.
The source electrode 24 includes an ohmic contact 241 and a first Schottky contact 242 that extends from the ohmic contact 241 toward the gate electrode 23 along one side of the barrier layer 221 which is distal from the active layer 222. The drain electrode 25 includes an ohmic contact 251. The first Schottky contact 242 is disposed between the ohmic contacts 241, 251 of the source and drain electrodes 24, 25. The ohmic contacts 241, 251 of the source and drain electrodes 24, 25 are aligned with the ohmic source-aligned and drain-aligned regions 223a, 223b of the 2DEG channel 223, respectively, along the stacking direction. The 2DEG channel 223 is normally on, and extends continuously from an end of the ohmic source-aligned region 223a, which is distal from the ohmic drain-aligned region 223b, to an end of the ohmic drain-aligned region 223b, which is distal from the ohmic source-aligned region 223a. The first Schottky contact 242 overlaps the first Schottky-aligned region 223c of the 2DEG channel 223 along the stacking direction, and is capacitively coupled to the first Schottky-aligned region 223c of the 2DEG channel 223.
The ohmic contacts 241, 251 of the source and drain electrodes 24, 25 are spaced apart from each other by a distance (source-to-drain distance, LSD). Preferably, the gate electrode 23 is spaced apart from the first Schottky contact 242 by a distance (source-to-gate distance, LGS) that is less than 0.5 μm, and is further spaced apart from the ohmic contact 251 of the drain electrode 25 by a distance (drain-to-gate distance, LGD) that is less than 0.5 p.m. The first Schottky contact 242 is spaced apart from the ohmic contact 251 of the drain electrode 25 by a distance (effective source-to-drain distance, Leff-SD) that is less than LSD and that is preferably less than 1 p.m.
Preferably, the substrate 20 is made from a material selected from the group consisting of silicon, silicon carbide, sapphire, and GaN.
Preferably, the buffer layer 21 is made from a material, such as AlN and GaN.
Preferably, the active layer 222 is made from a material that has a small bandgap, such as GaN.
Preferably, the barrier layer 221 is made from a material that has a large bandgap, such as AlGaN. The bandgap of the barrier layer 221 is larger than that of the active layer 222. In addition, the barrier layer 221 may be optionally capped by a capping layer (not shown) of GaN, which protects the barrier layer 221 from oxidation.
Preferably, the ohmic contact 241, 251 of each of the source and drain electrodes 24, 25 is a metal stack, such as a four-layer (Ti/Al/Ni/Au or Ti/Al/Ti/Au) metal stack, and is formed using physical vapor deposition techniques, such as e-gun evaporation, followed by annealing under 850° C. In this embodiment, the metal stack of each of the ohmic contacts 241, 251 has a structure of Ti (30 nm)/Al (180 nm)/Ni (40 nm)/Au (50 nm).
Preferably, the first Schottky contact 242 is a metal stack, such as a two-layer (Ni/Au or Pt/Au) metal stack, and is formed using physical vapor deposition techniques. In this embodiment, the metal stack of the first Schottky contact 242 has a structure of Ni (30 nm)/Au (270 nm).
Preferably, the protective layer 26 is made from a material, such as Si3N4, Al2O3, and AlN.
Preferably, the gate electrode 23 is spaced apart from the second Schottky contact 252 by a distance (drain-to-gate distance, LGD) that is less than 0.5 μm.
Preferably, the first Schottky contact 242 is spaced apart from the second Schottky contact 252 by a distance (effective source-to-drain distance, Leff-SD) that is less than 1 μm.
Preferably, the RF power transistor in each of the embodiments has a cut-off frequency greater than 33 GHz.
The RF power transistor of the present invention may have a structure that differs from the aforesaid embodiments. For instance, the gate electrode 23 and the first and second Schottky contacts 242, 252 may be formed in different steps with different metallic materials that have different work functions. In addition, a dielectric layer of a dielectric material (not shown), such as Si3N4, SiO2, Al2O3, or TiO2, may be formed on the barrier layer 221 before the formation of the source and drain electrodes 24, 25, so that the gate electrode 23 and the first and second Schottky contacts 242, 252 may be formed on and contact the dielectric layer instead of being formed on and contacting the barrier layer 221 as mentioned in the previously described embodiments.
Sample devices of the aforesaid conventional RF power transistor of
A two-port S-parameter measurement was conducted for obtaining S-parameters (S11, S21, S21 and S22) of Devices A, B and C using an Agilent E8361C PNA Microwave Network Analyzer under a fixed DC bias voltage (VGS=−2.5V, VDS=10V) and a frequency range from 1 GHz to 50 GHz. One of the ports (port 1) is associated with the gate electrode while the other port (port 2) is associated with the drain electrode.
A Small-Signal Model (not shown) representing an equivalent circuit including the RF power transistor was established based on the measured S-parameters from 1 GHz to 50 GHz for obtaining the RF transconductances at the high frequency range. Table 1 shows the RF transconductances of the three devices, in which the RF gm was extracted from the Small-Signal Model at the fixed DC bias voltage (VGS=−2.5V and VDS=10V).
where S11, S21, S21 and S22 are S-parameters.
Table 1 summarizes the performance tests for Devices A, B and C.
As shown in Table 1, Device A has a DC transconductance (DC gm, under VGS=−2.5V) of 12.6 mS and an RF transconductance (RF gm, under VGS=−2.5V) of 6.0 mS, which represents a reduction of 52.4% of the transconductance from DC to RF. Device B has a DC transconductance of 10.7 mS (under VGS=−2.5V) and an RF transconductance of 8.5 mS (under VGS=−2.5V), which represents a reduction of 20.6% of the transconductance. Device C has a DC transconductance of 11.1 mS (under VGS=−2.5V) and an RF transconductance of 8.5 mS (under VGS=−2.5V), which represents a reduction of 23.4% of the transconductance. The results show that Devices B and C having hybrid electrode(s) can effectively suppress the DC-to-RF dispersion and exhibit a higher RF transconductance under high frequency operation as compared to Device A.
The cut-off frequency (f1) (at the current gain=1 or 0 dB) of each device can be determined or extracted from
While the present invention has been described in connection with what are considered the most practical embodiments, it is understood that this invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments but is intended to cover various arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the broadest interpretation and equivalent arrangements.