SnO/β-Ga2O3 vertical pn heterojunction diodes

Abstract

Vertical pn heterojunction diodes were prepared by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy of unintentionally-doped p-type SnO layers with hole concentrations ranging from p=1018 to 1019cm-3 on unintentionally-doped n-type β-Ga2O3(-201) substrates with an electron concentration of n=2.0×1017cm-3. The SnO layers consist of (001)-oriented grains without in-plane expitaxial relation to the substrate. After subsequent contact processing and mesa etching (which drastically reduced the reverse current spreading in the SnO layer and associated high leakage) electrical characterization by current-voltage and capacitance-voltage measurement was performed. The results reveal a type-I band alignment and junction transport by thermionic emission in forward bias. A rectification of 2×108 at 1V, an ideality factor of 1.16, differential specific on-resistance of 3.9m2, and built-in voltage of 0.96V were determined. The pn-junction isolation prevented parallel conduction in the highly-conductive Ga2O3 substrate (sheet resistance RS≈3) during van-der-Pauw Hall measurements of the SnO layer on top (RS≈150k, p≈2.5×1018cm-3, Hall mobility ≈1cm2/Vs). The measured maximum reverse breakdown voltage of the diodes was 66V, corresponding to a peak breakdown field 2.2MV/cm in the Ga2O3-depletion region. Higher breakdown voltages that are required in high-voltage devices could be achieved by reducing the donor concentration in the β-Ga2O3 to increase the depletion width as well as improving the contact geometry to reduce field crowding.

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