III-V HETEROJUNCTION BIPOLAR TRANSISTORS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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III-V HETEROJUNCTION BIPOLAR TRANSISTORS

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SBCT of BM-HBT was estimated to be 22% that of conventional HBT, CBC 30% of conventional HBT ... of emitter size and CBC. Schematic cross-section of device ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: III-V HETEROJUNCTION BIPOLAR TRANSISTORS


1
III-V HETEROJUNCTION BIPOLAR TRANSISTORS
  • Yan Yan
  • Department of Electrical Engineering
  • University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN
    46556-5637
  • April 27, 2004

2
III-IV BIPOLAR TRANSISTOR TECHNOLOGY
  • Characteristic Parameters
  • Current gain
  • Cutoff frequency / Speed
  • Parasitic capacitances
  • Methods to improve performances
  • Device design
  • Choice of material systems

3
GaInAs/InP Buried Metal HBT- REDUCTION OF
BASE-COLLECTOR CAPACITANCE
  • Buried Tungsten wires of the same area as the
    emitter metal was used to reduce CBCext
  • SBCT of BM-HBT was estimated to be 22 that of
    conventional HBT, CBC 30 of conventional HBT
  • fT 86 GHz, fMAX gt 135 GHz of device with an
    emitter area of 0.5 x 2.5 µm2
  • fT 82 GHz, fMAX gt 200 GHz of device with an
    emitter area of 0.3 x 1.5 µm2

Schematic view of fabricated BM-HBT
4
Layer structure for the buried metal - HBT
5
I V Characteristics
  • Current gain about 70 at the
  • collector voltage of 4V
  • S-parameters were measured
  • from 50 MHz to 30 GHz using
  • an HP8722 network analyzer
  • Extrapolations of fT and fMAX were
  • carried out from the -20dB/decade
  • regions of current gain (h212)
  • and Masons unilateral gain (U),
  • respectively
  • the values of fT and fMAX reached
  • peak points (fT 33.5 GHz, fMAX
  • 47.3 GHz) at IC 4mA and VC
  • 6V

Common-emitter collector I-V characteristics of
BM-HBT with an emitter area of 2x10 µm2
6
SEM image of BM-HBT
SEM image of the fabricated BM-HBT with
an Emitter width of 0.3 µm after formation of the
Dummy mesa. Good alignment between the Wires and
the emitter is observed.
A SEM view of a cross section cut by a focuse Ion
beam. Measured collector thickness was 290 nm.
7
AlGaAs-GaInP Composite Emitter in GaInP/GaAs
HBT- Improved Emitter Transit Time
  • Emitter Transit Time

8
Composite Graded Emitter vs. Conventional Emitter
  • Self-aligned HBTs are grown by CBE
  • (chemical beam epitaxy)
  • Increase in fT from 44 GHz to 62 GHz
  • CBE 3 times lower for composite emitter
  • HBT without significant IC variation
  • Common limitation in high speed
  • performance of HBTs large CBE (limited
  • mobile carrier transport thus charges
  • accumulation in the emitter)
  • Composite graded AlGaAs layer forms
  • an electron launcher at the interface
  • with the GaInP layer, which injects the
  • electrons at a higher kinetic energy
  • toward the remaining part of the emitter,
  • It leads to lower free carrier
  • concentration (Qe) and smaller CBE

Energy band diagram of GaInP/GaAs (a)Composite
emitter (b)conventional design HBT
9
Comparison of eletric field and electron density
  • Compositonally graded AlGaAs emitter
  • HBTs have much stronger electric
  • fields present in the emitter
  • The electron density is dramatically
  • decreased due to the presence of a
  • drift velocity component in this region
  • of the emitter
  • GaInP conventional emitter HBTs do
  • not have a built-in electric field within
  • the emitter region, and the electron
  • density in this case is increased due
  • to slow transport of carriers and thus
  • carrier accumulation

Comparison of (a)electric field and (b)electron
density Profiles for GaInP conventional and
AlGaAs0GaInP composite emitter design HBTs.
10
Comparison of electron velocity
  • The figure focuses on the velocity
  • characteristics responsible for the
  • improved frequency characteristics
  • In the case of the composite emitter
  • design, the electron velocity is high
  • due to the drift velocity component
  • in the special emitter region
  • On the other hand, the electron
  • velocity of the conventional emitter
  • design is slower since diffusion
  • carrier transport is dominant in the
  • emitter region, which consists only
  • of GaInP
  • An estimate of ?E using simulation
  • to evaluate ?Qe/?Jc showed values
  • of 0.13ps and 0.57ps, respectively.

Comparison of electron velocity profiles for
GaInP conventional and AlGaAs-GaInP emitter
design HBTs in the composite emitter region
11
Comparison of CBE and fT
  • CBE for a composite emitter HBT
  • was found to be at least 3 times
  • lower than the conventional emitter
  • HBT under high IC operation
  • CBE for a composite emitter HBT
  • presents a weak Jc dependence
  • fT was improved from 44 GHz to
  • 62 GHz by using the composite
  • emitter in the HBT

Comparison of CBE and fT characteristics for
GaInP/ GaAs HBT (a)composite emitter and
(b)conventional emitter
12
InGaP/GaAs HBT with WSi/Ti Electrode and Buried
SiO2 in the Extrinsic Collector- decrease of
emitter size and CBC
  • The width of the base contact is reduced
  • by using a self-aligning process
  • The buried SiO2 reduces the parasitic
  • capacitance because the dielectric constant
  • of SiO2 is about 1/3 of that of GaAs
  • WSi/Ti is used as the base electrode instead
  • of conventional gold-based electrode. Both
  • WSi and Ti can be deposited by sputtering
  • with good step coverage and selectively
  • patternede on GaAs and SiO2 by RIE. A thin
  • Ti film inserted between WSi and GaAs
  • reduces the contact resistance, and made it
  • possible to reduce the width of the base
  • contact without the large increase in the
  • base resistance
  • The emitter size effect on current gain was
  • suppressed by using InGaP as the emitter

Schematic cross-section of device
structure (a)Conventional HBT and (b)small-scale
HBT with a WSi/Ti base electrode and buried SiO2
13
Device Performance
  • The DC current gain of 20 is obtained for an HBT
    with SE of 0.3 x 1.6 µm2 due to the suppression
    of emitter size effect by using InGaP as the
    emitter material
  • An HBT with SE of 0.6 x 4.6 µm2 exhibited fT of
    138 GHz and fmax of 275 GHz at IC of 4 mA
  • An HBT with SE of 0.3 x 1.6 µm2 exhibited fT of
    96 GHz and fmax of 197 GHz at IC of 1 mA

14
Motivation for work in InAs bipolar transistors
  • Historic trend Increased the amount of Indium
    in the base of a HBT
  • Higher electron mobility saturation velocity
  • ? shorter base transit time
  • Improved base resistance/base contact resistance
  • Faster device
  • Advantages compared to the traditional III-Vs
  • Lower electron effective mass (0.022 m0)
  • Higher electron mobility (up to 33000 cm2 V-1
    sec-1 at room temperature)
  • Higher peak velocity

15
Cracking study of AlxIn1-xAs on InAs
AlxIn1-xAs grown on an InAs substrate is tensile
stained, and there exists a critical thickness
for the epilayer to form cracks to relieve strain
  • Two spicific regions of interest
  • were studied, one with low Al
  • concentration (7-9) for the
  • HBT devices, and one with
  • higher Al concentration (40-
  • 50) for other devices.
  • For x9, maximum thickness
  • is around 450 Å
  • Samples were examined by
  • Normarski contrast interference
  • Microscopy to determine whether
  • they were cracked or crack free

AlxIn1-xAs epilayers on InAs substrates as a
function of Al composition
16
InAs HBT device structure and I-V
Room temperature common emitter J-V
characteristics of an InAs HBT
Device structure of InAs BJT and HBT devices
ßmax for BJT is 50, ßmax for HBT is 100
17
SUMMARY
  • Base collector capacitance reduced by as high as
    70 in BM-HBT
  • Base emitter capacitance reduced to one-third by
    composite InGaP/GaAs emitter
  • Parasitic capacitance reduced by 50 in
    InGaP/GaAs HBT using WSi base electrode and
    buried SiO2 layer
  • First results for InAs bipolar transistors (ß
    100)

18
Reference
  1. T. Arai, Y. Harada, S. Yamagami, Y. Miyamoto, K.
    Furuya, First fabrication of GaInAs/InP buried
    metal heterojunction bipolar transistor and
    reduction of base-collector capacitance, Jpn. J.
    Appl. Phys., Vol. 39 (2000), pp. L503-505
  2. T. Arai, S. Yamagami, Y. Miyamoto, K. Furuya,
    Reduction of base-collector capacitance in
    submicron InP/GaInAs heterojunction bipolar
    transistors with buried tungsten wires, Jpn. J.
    Appl. Phys., Vol. 40 (2001), pp. L735-L737
  3. T. Arai, S. Yamagami, Y. Miyamoto, and K. Furuya,
    Fabrication of submicron buried metal
    heterojunction bipolar transistor by
    EB-lithography, www.pe.titech.ac.jp/qee_root/symp
    osium/ PDF/araimiyamoto.pdf
  4. J. Park, D. Pavlidis, S. Mohammadi, J. Guyaux and
    J. Garcia, Improved emitter transit times using
    AlGaAs-GaInP composite emitter in GaInP/GaAs
    heterojunction bipolar transistors, IEEE
    transactions on Electron Device. Vol. 48, No. 7,
    July 2001, pp1297-1303
  5. T. Oka, K. Hirata, H. Suzuki, K. Ouchi, H.
    Uchiyama, T. Tanguchi, K. Mochizuki and T.
    Nakamura, High speed small-scale InGaP/GaAs HBT
    technology and its application to integrated
    circuits, IEEE transactions on electron devices,
    vol. 48, No. 11, Nov 2001, pp.2625-2630

19
Reference
  • T. Oka, K. Hirata, K. Ouchi, H. Uchiyama, K.
    Mochizuki and T. Nakamura,
  • Small-scale InGaP/GaAs HBTs with WSi/Ti
    base electrode and buried SiO2, IEEE
    transactions on electron devices, vol. 45, No.
    11, Nov 1998, pp.2276-2282
  • 7. K. Averett, S. Maimon, X. Wu, M. Koch and
    G. Wicks, InAs-based bipolar transistors grown
    by molecular beam epitaxy, Journal of vacuum
    science technology B, 20 (3), May/Jun 2002, PP.
    1213-1216
  • 8. S. Maimon, K. Averett, X. Wu, M. Koch, and G.
    Wicks, InAs-based heterojunction bipolar
    transistors, Electronics letters, vol. 38, No.
    7, pp. 344-346
  • 9. P. Dodd, M. Melloch, M. Lundstrom, J.
    Woodall, and D. Petit, InAs bipolar transistors
    a path to high performance cryogenic
    electronics, IEEE transactions on electron
    devices, Vol. 40, No. 11, Nov 1993, pp. 2141
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