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Design of a normally-off diamond JFET for high power integrated applications

MetadataDetails
Publication Date2017-08-12
JournalDiamond and Related Materials
AuthorsNazareno Donato, Dario Pagnano, Ettore Napoli, Giorgia Longobardi, F. Udrea
InstitutionsUniversity of Cambridge
Citations18
AnalysisFull AI Review Included

Technical Analysis & Product Recommendation: Normally-Off Diamond JFETs

Section titled “Technical Analysis & Product Recommendation: Normally-Off Diamond JFETs”

6CCVD provides the foundational MPCVD diamond materials necessary to realize high-power, normally-off Junction Field Effect Transistors (JFETs) as optimized in this research. The study highlights the critical role of precise doping control and thermal management in achieving superior breakdown voltage (BV) and minimizing specific on-state resistance ($R_{on_spec}$) in enhancement-mode diamond devices.


This documentation summarizes the optimized theoretical design and simulation of a high-power, normally-off (enhancement mode) p-type diamond JFET, addressing the challenges inherent in Wide Band Gap (WBG) diamond semiconductors.

  • Core Achievement: Theoretical identification of an optimized diamond JFET structure achieving a 2.7 kV breakdown voltage (BV) at high operating temperature (450 K).
  • Design Goal: To engineer a normally-off JFET with minimum specific on-state resistance ($R_{on_spec}$) while ensuring operation up to $T_{opt}$ (450 K) and avoiding Punch-Through (PT) breakdown.
  • Critical Challenge Identified: The incomplete ionization of boron and phosphorus dopants, coupled with temperature dependence, is the primary limiting factor in achieving stable normally-off behavior at elevated temperatures.
  • Thermal Performance: The optimal design sustains normally-off operation up to 600 K, confirming diamond’s capability for high-temperature power electronics.
  • Material Necessity: The optimization relies on highly specific, non-uniform doping profiles (N+ gates $8\times10^{19}$ cm-3; P-channel $5\times10^{16}$ cm-3) only achievable via high-purity MPCVD Single Crystal Diamond (SCD) layers.
  • High-Field Capability: The device exhibits a positive temperature coefficient for BV, confirming avalanche phenomenon as the breakdown mechanism, with maximum simulated electric fields exceeding 20 MV/cm.

The following parameters define the optimal device structure and its simulated performance targets, derived from TCAD modeling calibrated against experimental data.

ParameterValueUnitContext
Target Breakdown Voltage (BV)2.0kVDesign specification
Simulated BV (RT, $L’(d-g)=5$ ”m)2.1kVOptimized design performance (300 K)
Simulated BV (450 K, $L’(d-g)=5$ ”m)2.7kVOptimized design performance (high temp)
Optimal Operating Temperature ($T_{opt}$)450KChosen based on minimum resistivity window (450 K - 600 K)
Channel Doping (P-type)5×1016cm-3Optimized Boron concentration
Gate Doping (N-type)8×1019cm-3Fixed parameter for N+ Gate region
Channel Width ($W_{ch}$)0.4”mCritical dimension for normally-off operation
Channel Length ($L_{ch}$)1.0”mPrimary factor regulating Ronspec and PT breakdown
Drain-Gate Distance ($L’(d-g)$)5.0”mOptimized for BV maximization
Peak Electric Field (Simulated)>20MV/cmObserved at Drain-Gate junction during breakdown
Bulk SCD Breakdown Field7.7MV/cmReference state-of-the-art property
Boron Ionization Energy ($E_A$)0.37eVP-type acceptor (Incomplete ionization factor)
Phosphorus Ionization Energy ($E_D$)0.57eVN-type donor (Incomplete ionization factor)

The optimization utilized an extensive set of two-dimensional TCAD simulations, relying on updated models for mobility, incomplete ionization, and impact ionization, specifically tuned for CVD diamond.

  1. CVD Diamond Modeling: TCAD software utilized models incorporating the incomplete ionization of Boron (acceptor) and Phosphorus (donor) dopants, temperature dependence of saturation velocity, and impact ionization coefficients (Chynoweth model, calibrated to yield 2.1 kV BV at RT).
  2. Fixed Parameters: N-gate doping (8×1019 cm-3), Gate-to-Source distance ($L’(s-g)=1$ ”m), and Gate width ($W_N=0.7$ ”m) were fixed based on known technological limits for diamond JFETs.
  3. Step 1: Optimal Junction Temperature ($T_{opt}$) Selection: Identified 450 K as the optimal maximum operational temperature by analyzing resistivity ($\rho$) minimization without compromising the normally-off state (which becomes difficult above 600 K).
  4. Step 2: Channel Doping Limits ($P_1$ to $P_2$) Establishment: Set technological limits for p-doping between 1×1015 cm-3 (lower limit due to control difficulties) and 1×1017 cm-3 (upper limit due to breakdown and gate control weakening).
  5. Step 3: Channel Width Limits ($W_1$ to $W_2$) Evaluation: Determined the range for half-channel width ($W_{ch}/2$) to ensure full depletion at zero bias (normally-off) while preventing premature bipolar mode operation.
  6. Step 4: TCAD Parameter Sweep: Simulations varied the three critical parameters—Channel Length ($L_{ch}$), Channel Width ($W_{ch}$), and P-Doping—to target minimum $R_{on_spec}$ and maximized punch-through avoidance (>2 kV).
  7. Step 5: Final Selection and BV Tuning: The structure minimizing $R_{on_spec}$ (0.4 ”m $W_{ch}$, 1 ”m $L_{ch}$, 5×1016 cm-3 doping) was selected. The Drain-to-Gate distance ($L’(d-g)$) was then iteratively increased (optimized to 5 ”m) to fulfill the 2 kV BV specification.

6CCVD provides the high-quality SCD and custom engineering required to fabricate the advanced JFET structure proposed in this research, mitigating the technological obstacles related to precise geometry and doping control.

The device design requires two distinct, high-quality epitaxial layers: a heavily doped N+ gate region and a moderately doped P-channel region, both necessitating exceptional crystalline perfection for high-voltage integrity.

Device Requirement6CCVD Material SolutionRelevant Specification
High Voltage/Drift RegionOptical Grade Single Crystal Diamond (SCD)Thickness up to 500 ”m, essential for supporting the 2.7 kV BV and high electric fields.
N+ Gate LayerPhosphorus-Doped SCD (Custom Doping)Doping target of 8×1019 cm-3. 6CCVD offers high-concentration doping for N-type diamond layers.
P-Channel LayerBoron-Doped SCD (Custom Doping)Doping target of 5×1016 cm-3, within the technologically feasible range (1×1015 to 1×1017 cm-3).
Surface FinishUltra-Smooth Polished SCD WafersRa < 1 nm polish required for high-precision sub-micron lithography and minimizing surface defects which compromise BV.

Replicating the optimized JFET design requires micron-scale control over material dimensions and contact deposition, leveraging 6CCVD’s core capabilities:

  • Precision Doping Control: 6CCVD offers MPCVD diamond growth with highly tailored dopant concentrations (Boron and Boron-Doped Diamond—BDD) across required thicknesses (0.1 ”m to 500 ”m) to meet the precise $5\times10^{16}$ cm-3 and $8\times10^{19}$ cm-3 specifications.
  • Custom Dimensions: While the device requires small, post-processing features ($W_{ch}=0.4$ ”m, $L_{ch}=1$ ”m), 6CCVD provides the necessary large-area SCD substrates (up to 125 mm PCD) required for batch processing and integration.
  • Integrated Metalization: The device utilizes ohmic Source, Drain, and Gate contacts. 6CCVD provides in-house metalization services including refractory metals (Ti, W) and standard contact layers (Pt, Au), crucial for reliable high-temperature operation (up to 450 K).
  • Wafer Preparation: High-BV designs are highly sensitive to processing defects. 6CCVD ensures high-quality epitaxy and polishing (Ra < 1 nm SCD) essential for reliable operation at electric fields >20 MV/cm.

The research underscores that high-power diamond device performance is highly sensitive to the complex interplay of incomplete ionization, temperature, and specific geometry ($L_{ch}$, $W_{ch}$).

6CCVD’s in-house PhD team provides specialized engineering consultation to assist clients in selecting optimal material specifications (doping uniformity, compensation ratio, thickness, and surface orientation) for high-temperature Field Effect Transistor (FET) and wide band gap device projects. We support the transfer of optimized TCAD designs into physical MPCVD recipes.

For custom specifications or material consultation, visit 6ccvd.com or contact our engineering team directly.

  1. 2010 - Comparison of high voltage and high temperature performances of wide bandgap semiconductors for vertical power devices [Crossref]
  2. 2014 - Zr/oxidized diamond interface for high power Schottky diodes [Crossref]
  3. 2017 - Durability-enhanced two-dimensional hole gas of CH diamond surface for complementary power inverter applications [Crossref]
  4. 2014 - Diamond metal-semiconductor field-effect transistor with breakdown voltage over 1.5kV [Crossref]
  5. 2003 - Exceptionally high voltage Schottky diamond diodes and low boron doping [Crossref]
  6. 2013 - Electrical characterization of diamond PiN diodes for high voltage applications [Crossref]
  7. 2012 - High-voltage vacuum switch with a diamond p-i-n diode using negative electron affinity [Crossref]
  8. 2006 - High RF output power for H-terminated diamond FETs [Crossref]