Authors: Sei Hyung Ryu, Craig Capell, Charlotte Jonas, Michael J. O'Loughlin, Lin Cheng, Khiem Lam, Albert A. Burk, Jim Richmond, Jack Clayton, Allen Hefner, David Grider, Anant Agarwal, John W. Palmour
Abstract: The latest developments in ultra high voltage 4H-SiC IGBTs are presented. A 4H-SiC P-IGBT, with a chip size of 8.4 mm x 8.4 mm and an active area of 0.32 cm2, which is double the active area of the previously reported devices [1], exhibited a blocking voltage of 15 kV, while showing a room temperature differential specific on-resistance of 41 mΩ-cm2 with a gate bias of -20 V. A 4H-SiC N-IGBT with the same area showed a blocking voltage of 17 kV, and demonstrated a room temperature differential specific on-resistance of 25.6 mΩ-cm2 with a gate bias of 20 V. Field-Stop buffer layer design was used to control the charge injection from the backside. A comparison between N- and P- IGBTs, and the effects of different buffer designs, are presented.
954
Authors: Lin Cheng, Sei Hyung Ryu, Anant K. Agarwal, Michael J. O'Loughlin, Albert A. Burk, Jim Richmond, Aivars J. Lelis, Charles Scozzie, John W. Palmour
Abstract: We have investigated the thermal behavior of our recently developed 1200 V, 200 A 4H-SiC power DMOSFETs operating from 20°C up to 300°C. Compared to the first generation SiC DMOSFET that was commercially released early this year, this 4H-SiC power DMOSFET shows a ~ 50% reduction in the total specific on-resistance at room temperature. Temperature dependence of the key parameters of this MOSFET, such as on-resistance, threshold voltage, and the MOS channel mobility, are reported in this paper. The MOSFET showed normally-off characteristics throughout the entire experimental temperature range. Different temperature dependence of the total on-resistance in different temperature regimes has been observed.
1065
Authors: Sarit Dhar, Ayayi Claude Ahyi, John R. Williams, Sei Hyung Ryu, Anant K. Agarwal
Abstract: Hall measurements on NO annealed 4H-SiC MOS gated Hall bars are reported in the temperature range 77 K- 423 K. The results indicate higher carrier concentration and lower trapping at increased temperatures, with a clear strong inversion regime at all temperatures. In stark contrast to Si, the Hall mobility increases with temperature for 77 K-373K, above which the mobility decreases slightly. The maximum experimental mobility was found to be ~50 cm2 V-1 s-1 which is only about 10% of the 4H-SiC bulk mobility indicating that while NO annealing drastically improves trapping, it does not improve the mobility significantly. Supporting modeling results strongly suggest the presence of a disordered SiC channel region.
713
Authors: Sei Hyung Ryu, Lin Cheng, Sarit Dhar, Craig Capell, Charlotte Jonas, Jack Clayton, Matt Donofrio, Michael J. O'Loughlin, Albert A. Burk, Anant K. Agarwal, John W. Palmour
Abstract: We present our latest developments in ultra high voltage 4H-SiC IGBTs. A 6.7 mm x 6.7 mm 4H-SiC N-IGBT with an active area of 0.16 cm2 showed a blocking voltage of 12.5 kV, and demonstrated a room temperature differential specific on-resistance of 5.3 mΩ-cm2 with a gate bias of 20 V. A 4H-SiC P-IGBT exhibited a record high blocking voltage of 15 kV, while showing a differential specific on-resistance of 24 mΩ-cm2. A comparison between P- and N- IGBTs in 4H-SiC is provided in this paper.
1135
Authors: Sei Hyung Ryu, Lin Cheng, Sarit Dhar, Craig Capell, Charlotte Jonas, Robert Callanan, Michael J. O'Loughlin, Albert A. Burk, Aivars J. Lelis, Charles J. Scozzie, Anant K. Agarwal, John W. Palmour
Abstract: We present our recent developments in 4H-SiC power DMOSFETs. 4H-SiC DMOSFETs with a room temperature specific on-resistance of 3.7 mΩ-cm2 with a gate bias of 20 V, and an avalanche voltage of 1550 V with gate shorted to source, was demonstrated. A threshold voltage of 3.5 V was extracted from the power DMOSFET, and a subthreshold swing of 200 mV/dec was measured. The device was successfully scaled to an active area of 0.4 cm2, and the resulting device showed a drain current of 377 A at a forward voltage drop of 3.8 V at 25oC.
1059
Authors: Karl D. Hobart, Eugene A. Imhoff, Fritz J. Kub, A.R. Hefner, T.H. Duong, J.M. Ortiz-Rodriguez, Sei Hyung Ryu, David Grider, Scott Leslie, J. Sherbondy, B. Ray
Abstract: The performance of Junction Barrier Schottky (JBS) diodes developed for medium voltage hard-switched Naval power conversion is reported. Nominally 60 A, 4.5kV rated JBS freewheeling diodes were paired with similarly rated Si IGBTs and evaluated for temperature dependent static and dynamic characteristics as well as HTRB and surge capability. The SiC JBS/Si IGBT pair was also directly compared to Si PiN diode/Si IGBT with similar ratings. Compared to Si, the SiC freewheeling diode produced over twenty times lower reverse recovery charge leading to approximately a factor-of-four-reduction in turn-on loss. Alternatively, for equivalent total switching loss, the SiC JBS/Si IGBT hybrid configuration allows for at least a 50% increase in specific switched power density. Reliability testing showed the devices to be robust with zero failures.
941
Authors: Liang Chun Yu, Kin P. Cheung, John S. Suehle, Jason P. Campbell, Kuang Sheng, Aivars J. Lelis, Sei Hyung Ryu
Abstract: SiC MOSFET, as power device, can be expected to operate with high drain and high gate voltages, possibly leading to hot-carrier effect. However, hot-carrier degradation in a SiC MOSFET is difficult to detect because the as fabricated devices contain high level of defects. We report, for the first time, evidence of hot-carrier effect in 4H-SiC MOSFET. The result suggests that hot hole from impact ionization trapped in the oxide is the cause of the channel hot-carrier effect.
813
Authors: Brett A. Hull, Charlotte Jonas, Sei Hyung Ryu, Mrinal K. Das, Michael J. O'Loughlin, Fatima Husna, Robert Callanan, Jim Richmond, Anant K. Agarwal, John W. Palmour, Charles Scozzie
Abstract: Large area (8 mm x 7 mm) 1200 V 4H-SiC DMOSFETs with a specific on-resistance as low as 9 m•cm2 (at VGS = 20 V) able to conduct 60 A at a power dissipation of 200 W/cm2 are presented. On-resistance is fairly stable with temperature, increasing from 11.5 m•cm2 (at VGS = 15 V) at 25°C to 14 m•cm2 at 150°C. The DMOSFETs exhibit avalanche breakdown at 1600 V with the gate shorted to the source, although sub-breakdown leakage currents up to 50 A are observed at 1200 V and 200°C due to the threshold voltage lowering with temperature. When switched with a clamped inductive load circuit from 65 A conducting to 750 V blocking, the turn-on and turn-off energies at 150°C were less than 4.5 mJ.
749
Authors: Sei Hyung Ryu, Sarit Dhar, Sarah K. Haney, Anant K. Agarwal, Aivars J. Lelis, Bruce Geil, Charles Scozzie
Abstract: In this paper, we present the effects of MOS channel processing on the threshold voltage and the MOS field effect mobility of 4H-SiC MOSFETs. By increasing the p-well doping concentration by two orders of magnitude, the threshold voltage could be shifted positive from 0V to 5 V when a thermal oxide layer with NO post oxidation anneal was used as the gate dielectric layer. However, a severe degradation of MOS field effect mobility, decreasing from 37 cm2/Vs to 5 cm2/Vs, was also observed. Using a different processing technique, which uses a deposited oxide layer with an NO anneal, a threshold voltage of 7.5 V and a MOS field effect mobility of 15 cm2/Vs could be achieved. A 10 kV, 1 A power DMOSFET was demonstrated with this technique. A DMOSFET turn-off voltage of 5.25 V was measured at room temperature, which shifted to 3.0 V at 250oC, providing acceptable noise margins throughout the operating temperature range.
743
Authors: Sei Hyung Ryu, Fatima Husna, Sarah K. Haney, Qing Chun Jon Zhang, Robert E. Stahlbush, Anant K. Agarwal
Abstract: This paper presents the effect of recombination-induced stacking faults on the drift based
forward conduction and leakage currents of high voltage 4H-SiC power devices. To show the effects,
IV characteristics of a 4H-SiC 10 kV DMOSFET and a 4H-SiC 4 kV BJT have been evaluated before
and after the induction of stacking faults in the drift epilayer. For both devices, significant increases in
forward voltage drops, as well as marked increases in leakage currents have been observed. The
results suggest that injection of minority carriers in majority carrier devices should be avoided at all
times.
1127