This invention relates generally to the field of optical and electronic technology and more particularly to application of Schottky contacts on ZnO and MgxZn1-xO films to be used on various semiconductor devices such as Schottky type UV photodetectors, Schottky diodes and Metal Semiconductor Field Effect Transistors (MESFETs) and more.
Recently, there has been an increasing interest in high quality ZnO films due to the electrical and optical properties of ZnO. These properties include wide and direct energy bandgap (Eg˜3.3 eV at room temperature) and large photoresponse, a high free exciton bounding energy, availability of a native substrate, ability to be wet chemical-processed, ability to be grown below the temperature of 400° C., as well as having high resistance to radiation damage. In the past, an optically addressed high contrast UV light modulator was made on ZnO grown on an (01{overscore (1)}2) R-plane sapphire substrate. ZnO films are particularly promising for UV photodetectors due to their wide and direct band gap and large photoresponse. It has been shown that with high quality epitaxial ZnO film, such detectors can achieve high speed operation. Recently, a ZnO p-n diode fabricated using excimer-laser doping has been reported, which makes ZnO promising in other broad device applications, such as Light-Emitting Diodes (LED) and lasers.
In the past, several different metals have been used as a contact metal on ZnO films. For example, epitaxial ZnO film based metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) device structures have been fabricated using aluminum as the ohmic contact metal (see Ying Liu, C. R. Gorla, S. Liang, N. Emanetoglu, Y. Lu, “J. Electron. Mater.”, 29, 69 (2000)). The device showed fast photoresponse time (˜1 μs) due to high material quality of the ZnO epilayer. However, Schottky type photodetectors are more attractive due to their high speed and low noise performance. An important characteristic of the Schottky diode is its barrier height or turn-on voltage, sometimes called its knee voltage. Schottky barrier heights were first reported by C. A. Mead (see C. A. Mead, “Phys. Lett.”, 18, 218 (1965)), for various metals' contacts on vacuum cleaved n-ZnO surfaces. It has been reported that silver (Ag) has a comparatively high Schottky barrier height (˜0.62 eV) on the cleaved ZnO surface. R. C. Neville and C. A. Mead (see R. C. Neville and C. A. Mead, “J. Appl. Phys.”, 41, 3795 (1970)) further investigated the surface barrier systems consisting of gold and palladium on chemically prepared bulk ZnO. In 1986, H. Fabricius et al. (see H. Fabricius, T. Skeltnep, and P. Bisgaard, “Appl. Opt.” 25, 2764 (1986)), made Schottky barrier type UV photodiodes using gold (Au) as the contact metal on sputtered ZnO thin films. These diodes suffered from severe recombination due to the poor crystalline quality of the film. These photodiodes exhibited slow operating speed and low quantum efficiency due to a large amount of recombination centers in the polycrystalline ZnO layers. Currently, it is believed that no Schottky type of photodetector has been fabricated on ZnO epitaxial films. There is a need for a metal-ZnO Schottky contact which does not suffer from the deficiencies of the prior contacts and which exhibits the advantages mentioned above for broad device applications. It is believed that no Schottky type of photodetector has been fabricated on ZnO epitaxial films prior to this invention.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a fundamental semiconductor device structure and process technology having ZnO and MgxZn1-xO films epitaxially grown on an (01{overscore (1)}2) R-plane sapphire substrate and a Schottky diode fabricated with silver as a metal contact on the surface of ZnO and MgxZn1-xO films.
FIG. 1(a) is a cross-section field-emission scanning electron microscope image showing a smooth ZnO film on (01{overscore (1)}2) R-sapphire used in the present invention.
FIG. 1(b) shows an x-ray scan of a ZnO film on (01{overscore (1)}2) R-sapphire used in the present invention.
FIG. 3(a) shows a cross-section view of a ZnO Schottky diode of the present invention.
FIG. 3(b) shows current voltage (I-V) characteristics of an Ag—ZnO Schottky diode of the present invention.
FIG. 3(c) shows capacitance-voltage (C-V) characteristics of an Ag—ZnO Schottky diode of the present invention.
FIG. 4(a) shows a ZnO metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) structure of a semiconductor Schottky diode ultraviolet photodetector.
FIG. 4(b) shows current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of ZnO diodes of the present invention with a circular pattern.
FIG. 5(a) shows a ZnO interdigital (IDT) metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) structure of a semiconductor ultraviolet photodetector.
FIG. 5(b) shows current voltage (I-V) characteristics of a ZnO Schottky photodetector of the present invention with an Interdigital (IDT) structure.
Referring to FIG. 1(a), in an embodiment of the present invention there is shown a cross-section field-emission scanning electron microscope image of a ZnO epitaxial film (10) grown on an (01{overscore (1)}2) R-plane sapphire substrate, i.e., Aluminum Oxide (Al2O3) (12). The surface morphology as shown is flat and uniform. ZnO epitaxial films (10) are grown on (01{overscore (1)}2) sapphire substrates by metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). Diethyl Zinc (DEZn) and O2 are used as precursor materials for the growth and are introduced into the reactor by two separate injectors to reduce gas phase reaction. DEZn flow rate is preferably in the range of 50 to 100 sccm (seconds per cubic centimeters) at a bubbler temperature of 5° C. to 10° C., and O2 flow rate is preferably 1000-2000 sccm. Useful growth temperatures preferably range from 380° C. to 420° C. Typical growth rates are in the range of 1-2 μm/hr and desirably between 1.2-1.5 μm/hr.
An example of a useful means for MOCVD is described in the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/905,191 filed Jul. 13, 2001. For example, the MOCVD system is used with a rotating disc reactor chamber. ZnO epitaxial films are grown using DEZn as the zinc precursor and oxygen as the oxidizer. The gas phase reaction between DEZn and oxygen can occur at room temperature and results in particulate formation, which degrades ZnO film properties, including surface morphology and crystallinity. In order to minimize the gas phase reaction, the MOCVD reactor is designed to have a flow-top configuration with high argon push flow. DEZn and oxygen are introduced into the reactor separately. The substrate is rotated at a high speed for improving the thickness uniformity. A 5000-6000 A thick ZnO epilayer was grown with a carrier concentration of about 1016 cm−3.
FIG. 1(b) is an X-ray scan of a ZnO film (10) of the present invention on R-plane sapphire (01{overscore (1)}2). The full-width at half maximum (FWHM) of the ZnO films are shown to be approximately 0.25°, as obtained from double crystal rocking curve measurements. The epitaxial relationships between ZnO (10) and R-plane sapphire (12) were determined to be (11{overscore (2)}0) ZnO parallel to (01{overscore (1)}2) Al2O3, and (0001) ZnO parallel to (0{overscore (1)}11) Al2O3. It is noted that (11{overscore (2)}0) oriented ZnO films are epitaxially grown on (01{overscore (1)}2) Al2O3 substrates with an atomically sharp interface. The primary crystal axis, i.e., the c-axis (0001) of ZnO lies in the surface plane (11{overscore (2)}0) of the ZnO films. This orientation offers several advantages. First, the lattice mismatch along the c-axis is 1.53%, while the mismatch along the direction perpendicular to the c-axis is 18.3%. Therefore, the overall lattice mismatch is small and much less than that of (0001) ZnO on C-plane sapphire. Second, this material system possesses in-plane anisotropy, which can be used in realizing novel electrical, optical and piezoelectric devices.
Referring to
The choice of the metal scheme is also the critical issue for Schottky contact. In the case of ZnO, metals such as Al, which react strongly with chalcogenides (O in ZnO), are expected to produce the most dissociated cations (Zn in ZnO), thus leading to low n-type barrier heights. In comparison, relatively less reactive metals, such as Ag, form higher barriers.
In the present invention, Ag (200 nm) and Al (200 nm) were deposited via electron beam evaporation to form Schottky and ohmic contacts, respectively. The semiconductor Schottky diodes may preferably have circular patterns, where the inner circle is the Schottky contact with a diameter of desirably about 150 μm, and the outside ring is the ohmic contact having a diameter desirably of about 320 μm. The gaps between Schottky and ohmic contacts vary from about 2 μm to about 16 μm. Silver Schottky contact patterns are fabricated using standard photolithography lift-off technique, while the Al ohmic contact patterns are formed using photolithography followed by wet chemical etching. For the Schottky contact, a thick Au layer was finally deposited on the top of the Ag layer, to act as an oxide-resistant layer. It is well known that in fabrication of Schottky contacts, the surface states, contaminants and defects of the semiconductor surface layer affect the barrier height and leakage current.
Referring to FIG. 3(a), there is shown a cross-section view of a Schottky semiconductor diode with silver, Ag (30), used as a Schottky contact metal, and Al (32), used as an ohmic contact metal deposited on the ZnO film (10). The results of Schottky contacts fabricated on ZnO film (10) using Ag (30) as the contact metal are discussed herein. The barrier height is evaluated using I-V and C-V measurements. All the measurements were conducted in a dark chamber with a vacuum of 5×10−3 Torr. The room temperature current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of a Ag/ZnO Schottky diode with an electrode gap of 8 μm are shown in FIG. 3(b). Solid dots represent the forward characteristics, while the circles represent the reverse characteristics. It can be seen that there is a linear relationship over four decades at the central part of the forward bias. The curve bending for voltages V>0.5 V is due to series resistance, whereas the non-linearity at small forward bias is due to shunt resistance. The reverse biased characteristics show the leakage current is around 0.1 nA at 1 V reverse bias. The Schottky barrier height is determined to be about 0.89 eV by current-voltage-temperature (I-V-T) measurements, and the ideality factor (η) is found to be approximately 1.33 via the following equations. For thermionic emission and V>>3 kT/q, the general diode equation is:
where I is the current, I0 is the saturation current, V is the voltage, η is the ideality factor, R the series resistance, K the Boltzmann's constant, and T the absolute temperature. The saturation current, I0, is given by:
where A* is the effective Richardson constant, S the Schottky contact area, and ΦB the barrier height. If the effective Richardson constant, A*, is known, such as in case of GaAs and Si, the barrier height, ΦB, can be deduced from Eq. (2). However, for ZnO, to the best of our knowledge, an experimental value of A* has not been reported. Thus the barrier height ΦB can only be calculated using an estimated value of A*. In this work, the barrier height is estimated to be 0.83 eV using the effective Richardson constant A*=32 Acm−2K−2 (A*=4πqm*k2h−3, where m*˜0.27 m017).
The capacitance-voltage (C-V) characteristics of a Ag—ZnO Schottky diode with an electrode gap of 8 μm in a circular pattern are shown in FIG. 3(c). The C-V measurements were performed at a frequency of 100 KHZ and 1 MHZ. The Schottky barrier height is determined to be about 0.92 eV. In order to eliminate the effect of undetermined value of A*, activation energy measurements (i.e., I-V-T) were used to obtain the barrier height. In this study, the saturation currents, 10 were measured at various temperatures (265K-340K), and ΦB and A* were determined via a plot of In (I0/ST2) vs 1/T. Based on Eq. (2), ΦB=0.69 eV, and A*=0.15 Acm−2K−2 were obtained using a linear fitting. The ideality factor decreases slightly as temperature increases (η=1.29˜1.37 as T=340˜265K). The measured value of A* is much smaller than the theoretical value. Such a discrepancy was also observed on Au/GaN Schottky diodes, where it was attributed to the electrons tunneling through a barrier. The barrier height at room temperature is re-evaluated to be 0.69 eV using the experimentally deduced Richardson constant A*=0.15 Acm−2K−2 in Eq. (2), which agrees with the ΦB obtained from the Richardson plot. For non-ideal Schottky diodes, a more meaningful barrier height is the flat band barrier height ΦB:
where η is the ideality factor, NC the effective density of states in the conduction band, and ND the donor concentration. At room temperature, theoretical value of NC is calculated to be 3.5×1018 cm−3 for ZnO. The flat band barrier height is then determined to be 0.89 eV using Eq. (3).
The capacitance-voltage C-V measurements were performed at 100 kHz and 1 MHz. The Schottky barrier height is determined from:
where the permittivity, ε for ZnO is 9.0ε0, S is the Schottky contact area, and Vbi the built-in potential. The barrier height is obtained from:
Shown in
Further, experiments are performed with UV photodetectors designed and fabricated using circular and interdigital (IDT) metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) structures. Aluminum (Al) and silver (Ag) are used to form ohmic and Schottky contacts, respectively. The Ag—ZnO—Al circular structures are used for Schottky diode studies, while the Ag—ZnO—Ag structures served as Schottky type MSM photodetectors. The thickness of Ag layer is preferably 2000 Å. For the Schottky contact, a 500 Å thick Au layer was finally deposited on the top of the Ag layer, to act as an oxide-resistant layer.
Photoresponse measurements were performed using an Oriel optical system. A Xe-arc lamp and monochromator combination provided the light source. The photoresponse speed of the detector was also measured. The optical excitation source was the 337.1 nm line of a N2 pulse laser, with a pulse width of 2 ns at a repetition rate of 40 Hz. Neutral density filters were used to control the optical power on the detector. Optical energy on the detector was about 10 nJ per pulse. The signal from a 50Ω (ohms)-load resistor was reported by a digital scope with a time resolution better than about Ins. The bias voltage was about 9V.
FIG. 4(a) shows a metal-semiconductor-metal structure (MSM) of semiconductor Schottky diode UV Photodetector. Note that the semiconductor is (11{overscore (2)}0) ZnO 10 grown on (01{overscore (1)}2) R-plane sapphire. The ZnO MSM structure has a circular pattern 40, where the inner circle is a Schottky contact formed by Ag 30 and the outer ring is an ohmic contact formed by Al 32. The ZnO film 10 lies between the Al 32 and Ag 30. This gap of ZnO 10 between Al 32 and Ag 30 is the electrode gap, which varies from the range of 2 μm to 15 μm and is preferably 10 μm.
Shown in FIG. 4(b) are the current voltage (I-V) characteristics of ZnO MSM of the Schottky diode UV photodetector shown in FIG. 4(a), including both Schottky and ohmic types with an electrode gap of 10 μm. For comparison, Al—ZnO—Al structures are fabricated as the MSM photoconductive detectors. E-beam evaporation was utilized for the metal deposition. The linear I-V relation from the Al—ZnO—Al structure clearly indicates the ohmic behavior of the Al on n-type ZnO contact. On the other hand, the rectified I-V relation from the Ag—ZnO—Al confirms Schottky junction formation between Ag and n-type ZnO. The Schottky barrier height was determined to be about 0.84 eV and the ideality factor, η was found to be approximately 1.5. At a reverse bias of I-V relation, the leakage current of the Ag—ZnO—Al was approximately 0.1 ηA which is about 5 orders of magnitude smaller than that of the Al—ZnO—Al device, which was approximately 10 μA.
FIG. 5(a) shows a ZnO interdigital (IDT) metal-semiconductor-metal structure of a semiconductor UV photodetector. Note that the semiconductor is (11{overscore (2)}0) ZnO 10 grown on (01{overscore (1)}2) R-plane sapphire. Ag, 30 is the metal deposited on ZnO 10 to form the Schottky contact, thereby forming the Ag—ZnO—Ag MSM IDT structure.
The Ag—ZnO—Ag MSM structure with IDT configuration such as shown in FIG. 5(a) was used to evaluate the performance of the UV Schottky detector. FIG. 5(b) shows the dark and photo-illuminated I-V characteristics of the UV Schottky detector shown in FIG. 5(a). The wavelength and power of the illuminated light are 368 nm and 0.1 μW, respectively. The leakage current of the photodetector is about 1 nA at a bias of 5V. The breakdown starts at about 8V. The early and soft breakdown is mainly due to non-uniform field distribution, especially at the corners of the finger electrodes in the IDT configuration. The low-frequency photoresponsivity is about 1.5 A/W, which corresponds to a gain of 2.5. The photoconductive effect which occurs at the high field contributes to the large gain of 2.5, i.e., >1.
The spectra-photoresponse of the Ag—ZnO—Ag Schottky photodetector with an IDT structure is shown in FIG. 6. This figure shows that the responsivity drops more than 3 orders of magnitude from 370 to 390 nm. The sharp cut-off at wavelength of ˜370 nm agrees with the ZnO energy band gap of 3.35 eV. The responsivity decreased at the shorter wavelength range due to the decrease of the penetrating depth of the light, resulting in an increase of the surface recombination.
Finally,
It is clear that the present invention demonstrates fabrication of Schottky diodes on ZnO epitaxial films grown on R-plane sapphire substrate using Ag as a Schottky contact metal. The Schottky barrier height was determined to be 0.85-0.90 eV measured using the I-V-T and C-V methods. Similarly, several experiments were performed with Schottky type UV photodetectors based on ZnO epitaxial films grown on R-plane sapphire substrate Al2O3. Ag was used to form Schottky contact on n-type ZnO. A low frequency photoresponsivity of 1.5 A/W at a bias of 5V was obtained. The leakage current of the device at 5V bias was in the order of 1 nA. The photoresponse of the detector showed a fast component with a rise time of 12 ns, and a fall time of 50 ns.
Although the invention is described herein with reference to ZnO film, it is to be noted that MgxZn1-xO films can be utilized to produce similar results. The direct band-gap of ZnO can be tuned from 3.3 eV to 4.0 eV by alloying ZnO with MgO to form the ternary compound, MgxZn1-xO in the Mg composition range of 0 to 0.34. In comparison, the MgxZn1-xO epitaxial films have shorter wavelength range than the ZnO epitaxial films. (11{overscore (2)}0) MgxZn1-xO epitaxial films are grown on (01{overscore (1)}2) sapphire substrates (R-plane) with different Mg contents. Schottky type photodetectors were fabricated with silver as Schottky metal contacts on surface plane of MgxZn1-xO films. The transmission measurements show that the cut-off wavelength varied with the amount of incorporation of Mg content. These photodetectors showed higher speed and lower leakage current compared to their photoconductive counterparts.
While the invention has been described in related to the preferred embodiments with several examples, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made without deviating from the fundamental nature and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims priority to Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/344,337 filed on Jan. 4, 2002 and entitled “Surface Acoustic Wave Sensor”.
This invention was made with Government support under Grant Nos. NSFECS-0088549 and NSFCCR-0103096, awarded by the National Science Foundation. Therefore, the United States Government has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4623426 | Peters | Nov 1986 | A |
6184564 | Gould | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6366389 | Wraback et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1 172 858 | Jan 2002 | EP |
03241777 | Oct 1991 | JP |
WO0059039 | Oct 2000 | WO |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030129813 A1 | Jul 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60344337 | Jan 2002 | US |