Analysis and Design of Robust Power Double Implanted Mosfet on 6H Silicon Carbide Wafers
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Abstract
Silicon Carbide is a wide energy gap semiconductor that possesses a combination of
parameters that make it ideal for various applications in electronic industry. Its physical
properties such as high electric field strength, high saturation drift velocity and high
thermal conductivity has placed SiC at the center of renewed focus of semiconductor
material and device research amongst other wide energy gap semiconductors. SiC has
tremendous advantages because of rapidly maturing technology for making single crystal
substrates. In addition, the ability to form a layer of thermal SiO2 on SiC in a similar way
to provide the fabrication of Silicon Carbide MOS-based electronic devices. Thus, given
the superiority and success of MOS-based devices in applications like high
power/temperature electronics and storage devices (nonvolatile memories), SiC is
perceived to be the semiconductor of choice with potential to revolutionize the way the
electronic systems are designed.
In view of current study of power switching devices, the large efforts are
concentrated on unipolar devices. These include Field Effect Transistors (FETs) that exist
in many types, JFET, MOSFET and MESFET. In low power electronic applications that
require high switching speed, the Si MOSFETs have become the dominant technology for
many reasons. The relatively low breakdown field in Si and the resistance of drift region
that increases rapidly with increasing blocking voltage generally limit the use of Si
MOSFETs to 500V and below. The advantages of SiC material properties, in particular
breakdown field, makes SiC MOSFETs a very promising candidate for high power
switching devices. The specific on-resistance of a SiC power device is expected to be
100-200 times lower than a rated silicon device. Its much lower thermal minority carrier generation implies lower leakage currents and device operation at higher temperatures,
arising from self heating due to power dissipation is more tolerable. Moreover, the
thermal conductivity of SiC is three times higher than Si and even higher than copper at
room temperature.
Due to excellent physical and electrical properties such as high breakdown electric
field, wide bandgap, high thermal conductivity and high electron saturation velocity,
silicon carbide offers great potential for development of high temperature, high power
and high voltage devices. Significant progress in SiC power MOSFETs have been
demonstrated with the fasbrication of UMOS,DIMOSFET, triple implanted vertical
MOSFET and accumulation –mode MOSFET (ACCUFETs).
Power MOSFET requires excellent electrical characteristics. Due to these
characteristics, it would be desirable to utilize power MOSFETs for high voltage/power
electronic applications. However, the blocking capability of a MOSFET is based on the
ratings of the reverse body of the diode of the drift region. The blocking voltage is
determined in part by the distance from source to drain. High blocking capability implies
high resistance because of geometry, so there is a trade off between low drift region
resistance values and device voltage capability.
The research work carried out here on 6H-Silicon Carbide Double Implanted
Power MOSFET has been an attempt to understand the performance of the device with
respect to power dissipation and breakdown voltage for various types of doping profiles
in the drift region of the device. The doping profiles used are primarily uniformly doped
with field dependant and independent mobility, linearly graded, Gaussian and
Complementary Error Function distribution. Although a lot of work has been has been described in the literature over the last two decades, no specific work has been reported in
which the graded profiles have been used in the drift region of 6H-SiC DIMOSFET for
this type of analysis. The ultimate aim for making this study is to provide a graded profile
in the drift region of the MOSFET with lower doping at the top of the device to a higher
doping near the drain. This type of profile will help in increasing the breakdown voltage
while at the same time will reduce the series parasitic resistance at the lower end of the
device and thereby reduce the overall specific on-resistance. In this work, we have
succeeded in establishing that the power dissipation is minimum in the linearly graded
profile evaluated at a current density of 1000 A/cm2, whereas breakdown voltage is
maximum of 20kV in the Complementary Error Function profile.
Description
Doctor of Philosphy
